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MSFT   399.46 (-1.19%)
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GOOGL   153.68 (-1.49%)
AMZN   173.91 (-2.96%)
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NVDA   771.66 (-8.86%)
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BABA   69.04 (+0.23%)
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PFE   25.93 (+2.13%)
PYPL   61.76 (-0.55%)
XOM   119.81 (+1.09%)
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QQQ   414.27 (-2.16%)
AAPL   164.93 (-1.26%)
MSFT   399.46 (-1.19%)
META   480.21 (-4.30%)
GOOGL   153.68 (-1.49%)
AMZN   173.91 (-2.96%)
TSLA   147.04 (-1.93%)
NVDA   771.66 (-8.86%)
AMD   145.95 (-5.89%)
NIO   3.81 (-4.75%)
BABA   69.04 (+0.23%)
T   16.51 (+1.10%)
F   12.08 (+0.17%)
MU   106.25 (-5.07%)
GE   148.23 (-3.08%)
CGC   7.96 (+1.66%)
DIS   112.17 (-0.23%)
AMC   3.18 (+8.90%)
PFE   25.93 (+2.13%)
PYPL   61.76 (-0.55%)
XOM   119.81 (+1.09%)
S&P 500   4,960.48 (-1.01%)
DOW   37,914.86 (+0.37%)
QQQ   414.27 (-2.16%)
AAPL   164.93 (-1.26%)
MSFT   399.46 (-1.19%)
META   480.21 (-4.30%)
GOOGL   153.68 (-1.49%)
AMZN   173.91 (-2.96%)
TSLA   147.04 (-1.93%)
NVDA   771.66 (-8.86%)
AMD   145.95 (-5.89%)
NIO   3.81 (-4.75%)
BABA   69.04 (+0.23%)
T   16.51 (+1.10%)
F   12.08 (+0.17%)
MU   106.25 (-5.07%)
GE   148.23 (-3.08%)
CGC   7.96 (+1.66%)
DIS   112.17 (-0.23%)
AMC   3.18 (+8.90%)
PFE   25.93 (+2.13%)
PYPL   61.76 (-0.55%)
XOM   119.81 (+1.09%)

Foot Locker And The Ebbing Tide Of Discretionary Spending 

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Foot Locker store and stock price forecast

Key Points

  • Foot Locker implodes on weak results and poor guidance. 
  • Markdowns cut into the top and bottom lines and are impacting the outlook. 
  • Inventory remains high and will weigh on results through the end of the year. 
  • 5 stocks we like better than Foot Locker

Foot Locker NYSE: FL is down 25% after reporting a horrible quarter. Repositioning efforts impact the results, but other details overshadow them. The takeaway is that the tide of discretionary spending is receding. Results were weak, and the guidance was cut meaningfully due to trends reported by other major retailers. Names like Target NYSE: TGT and Walmart NYSE: WMT issued decent reports because they are diversified retailers. Their customers are shifting away from discretionary items like shoes in favor of food and well-being products, sustaining business and even providing some growth. 

The scary fact is that pullbacks in discretionary spending and shifting to staples are not resulting in a general retail recession because of inflation. You can’t save money by cutting out discretionary spending if the cost of everything else is through the roof and still rising. The detail of Target, Walmart’s, and The Home Depot’s NYSE: HD reports investors should note is the weak Q2 guidance that Foot Locker echoed. If that weakness persists into the 2nd half, the big box diversified retailers will also cut their guidance.

Foot Locker’s Q1 Is Nothing But Ugly

Foot Locker embarked on a transition at a bad time, no fault to them, but it and the times cut deeply into results. The company reported $1.93 billion in revenue for a decline of 11.5 compared to last year, 10% on an FX-neutral basis, which missed the consensus by 300 basis points. The decline is driven by a 9.1% decline in comp sales that Champs Sports led. Champs Sports declined 24% YOY compared to single-digit declines in all other channels. Champs is about 17% of the net, which is a significant headwind to business. 


Markdowns are a problem that hit the top and bottom lines impacting revenue and margin. The markdowns are intended to help manage inventory which is still up 25% compared to last year. What was once a tailwind for business is now a liability that will impact results later in the year. Gross margin fell by 400 basis points, including the impact of shrinkage, a problem also reported by Target and not for the 1st time. SG&A expenses also rose due to deleveraging and higher costs, and both led to a significant shortfall in the bottom line. The adjusted $0.70 in EPS is $0.08 or 1000 basis points below consensus and down 56% YOY. 

The guidance is worse. The company expects these headwinds to persist through the end of the year and lowered guidance for revenue and earnings. Revenue is expected to fall -from 6.5% to -8.0%, 300 basis points worse than the prior guidance, and the margin news is the worst. The adjusted EPS is expected to range from $2.00 to $2.25 compared to $3.35, which is the low end of the analysts' target range. 

How Safe Is Foot Locker’s Dividend? 

Foot Locker’s dividend is safe for now. The company is paying about 80% of the low-end guidance, which is high but manageable given the balance sheet. Investors should not expect repurchases to continue; none were listed for Q1 other than what was required for tax purposes. 

The chart isn’t pretty, but there is an opportunity for new money. Foot Locker is on the rocks but should be able to bounce back from these lows. The stock is trading at a significant support zone marked by lows in the pre, pandemic, and post-pandemic periods. Assuming this low produces support, shares of Foot Locker will likely move sideways from here if in a wide range. 

Foot Locker Stock Chart

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Should you invest $1,000 in Foot Locker right now?

Before you consider Foot Locker, you'll want to hear this.

MarketBeat keeps track of Wall Street's top-rated and best performing research analysts and the stocks they recommend to their clients on a daily basis. MarketBeat has identified the five stocks that top analysts are quietly whispering to their clients to buy now before the broader market catches on... and Foot Locker wasn't on the list.

While Foot Locker currently has a "Hold" rating among analysts, top-rated analysts believe these five stocks are better buys.

View The Five Stocks Here

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Companies Mentioned in This Article

CompanyMarketRank™Current PricePrice ChangeDividend YieldP/E RatioConsensus RatingConsensus Price Target
Home Depot (HD)
4.82 of 5 stars
$333.75+0.3%2.70%22.10Moderate Buy$375.96
Target (TGT)
4.7996 of 5 stars
$167.95+0.8%2.62%18.81Moderate Buy$181.85
Walmart (WMT)
4.2619 of 5 stars
$59.49+0.4%1.40%31.09Moderate Buy$61.75
Compare These Stocks  Add These Stocks to My Watchlist 

Thomas Hughes

About Thomas Hughes

  • tmhughes.writeon@gmail.com

Contributing Author

Technical and Fundamental Analysis

Experience

Thomas Hughes has been a contributing writer for MarketBeat since 2019.

Areas of Expertise

Technical analysis, the S&P 500; retail, consumer, consumer staples, dividends, high-yield, small caps, technology, economic data, oil, cryptocurrencies

Education

Associate of Arts in Culinary Technology

Past Experience

Market watcher, trader and investor for numerous websites. Founded Passive Market Intelligence LLC to provide market research insights. 


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