Costco Wholesale Corporation (NASDAQ: COST) is scheduled to release third-quarter results this week. The market will be closely following the event as it is expected to provide insights into the health of the broad retail industry. Currently, shares of the Issaquah-headquartered big-box retailer are trading slightly above the levels seen a year ago, after a series of ups and downs.
Weak Comps
The recent weakness in the company’s comparable sales performance reflects the pressure on people’s spending power. Going by Costco’s past performance, it is likely to recover from the temporary challenges once market conditions improve. The volatility in fuel prices and unfavorable exchange rates are also affecting comparable sales. Meanwhile, investors will be keeping a tab on the downtrend experienced by a market leader like Costco, which delivered accelerated comps growth consistently in almost every quarter in recent years.
The main reason cited by the company for the sales slowdown is the cooling demand for discretionary items. All major retailers are facing such a situation, and that should improve when macro uncertainties and inflation pressure ease. Moreover, Costco’s unique business model is focused on providing quality products at reasonable prices, while offering customers the best shopping experience. If sales of a particular product category drop, the diversified merchandise model helps the business stay unaffected.
Q3 Results Due
Over the years, Costco has maintained a healthy subscriber base that keeps growing, even as the company enjoys good customer loyalty. It will be publishing third-quarter results on Thursday, after regular trading hours. On average, analysts estimate that earnings increased 8% from last year to $3.29 per share in Q3, aided by an estimated 4% increase in revenues to $54.57 billion.
Commenting on the Q2 results, Costco’s CFO Richard Galanti said a few weeks ago, “Regarding capital expenditures, our second quarter fiscal ’23 capital spend was approximately $900 million. Our estimate for the year remains in the range of $3.8 billion to $4.2 billion based on timing. In terms of e-commerce, as I mentioned, e-commerce sales in Q2, FX decreased by 8.7%. This weakness was driven mostly by our online mix of sales. Big-ticket discretionary departments like majors, home furnishings, small electrics, jewelry, and hardware.
Mixed Q2
For the second quarter, the company reported mixed results, with earnings beating the Street view and the top line missing. At $55.2 billion, revenues were up 6% from last year. That resulted in a 13% growth in net income to $1.46 billion or $3.30 per share. Comparable sales growth decelerated during the three-month period, continuing the recent trend, while e-commerce sales declined.
After experiencing volatility in recent months, Costco’s shares remained below their long-term average this week. On Tuesday, the stock had a weak opening and traded lower in the early hours of the session.