Crossing Wall Street: Your Guide to Financial Success, Hosted by Eddy Elfenbein
spacer About Buy List FAQ Contact Links Home
spacer

« Market At 5-1/2 Year High | Main | The Fed Leaves Rates Unchanged »

September 20, 2006 Earnings Preview for Bed Bath & Beyond

Bed Bath & Beyond (BBBY) reports after the bell. The company has already said it expects 51 cents a share. The AP has a preview:

OVERVIEW: The company operates 819 stores nationwide under the names Bed Bath & Beyond, Christmas Tree Shops and Harmon selling home furnishings, food, gifts and health and beauty care products.

Consumers are being squeezed by rising interest rates, the slowing housing market and higher fuel prices. Rising energy costs have also lifted utilities costs, hurting some companies' bottom line. Furniture sales have been weak in recent weeks, as people cut back on big-ticket items amid the slowing housing market. However, analysts see Bed Bath & Beyond as a savvier merchandiser and better equipped financially to handle economic pressures, compared with Pier 1 Imports Inc. and other rival chains.

BY THE NUMBERS: Wall Street expects earnings of 51 cents per share, the mean estimate of 24 analysts surveyed by Thomson Financial, on $1.60 billion in sales. The company didn't provide any financial forecast in its last earnings release in June. (They said 51 cents a share in the conference call.)

ANALYST TAKE: "Given the company's historical top-line immunity to furniture sales fluctuations and housing turnover, we remain confident that planned 3 percent to 5 percent (same-store sales increases) are achievable," Goldman Sachs analyst Adrianne Shapira wrote in a client note. Selling, general and administrative costs could pose some risk, "but our gross margin assumptions should prove conservative." Shapira forecast quarterly earnings of 52 cents per share, which she said was a penny higher than management's guidance.


Posted by edelfenbein at September 20, 2006 1:53 PM

spacer
bottom of page image