3rd UPDATE: TJX 2Q Profit Rises 31% On Sales, Margin Growth
August 18 2009 - 1:36PM
Dow Jones News
TJX Cos.'s (TJX) second-quarter earnings rose 31% amid stronger
sales and margins, and the off-price retailer indicated it sees
more strong results ahead as it expands its number of stores and
customers.
TJX, which buys fashion brands and home furnishings at prices
below wholesale and sells them at steep discounts, said its
back-to-school season is off to a solid start and anticipates the
momentum will continue.
"We believe we have more opportunities in front of us than ever
before," said Chief Executive Carol Meyrowitz during a conference
call.
Meyrowitz said TJX is opening more stores than expected this
fiscal year, about 90, and even more in the next fiscal year
because of real estate opportunities and customer demand.
The parent of T.J. Maxx, Marshalls and other chains is building
its vendor base to offer more varied merchandise, and even though
its average sale is down, customer traffic is accelerating pretty
much across the board, positioning TJX for a big boost as consumer
spending picks up, Meyrowitz said.
Still, shares were off 3.6% to $34.12 as investors respond to
the retailer's earnings and outlook.
TJX reported a second-quarter profit of $261.6 million, or 61
cents a share, up from $200.2 million, or 45 cents a share, a year
earlier. Wall Street was expecting 59 cents. Lower interest expense
and tax rates added 3 cents to the earnings, taking away from their
"quality," said Morgan Stanley retail analyst Michelle Clark in a
research note.
Other analysts were impressed and said TJX cannot only hold, but
can expand upon its gains. TJX is often thought of primarily as a
retailer that does well in a down economy, "but conventional wisdom
is wrong," said Todd Slater, retail analyst at Lazard Capital
Markets. "TJX performs equally well in an improving environment as
comps accelerate while TJX's price and value advantages widen when
department stores promote less."
TJX's second-quarter revenue increased 4% to $4.75 billion.
Analysts polled by Thomson Reuters most recently were looking for
revenue of $4.73 billion.
TJX also offered outlooks that could miss expectations,
projecting earnings of $2.26 to $2.38 per share for the full year,
while analysts were looking for $2.36.
For the third quarter, TJX expects earnings of 62 cents to 68
cents on same-store sales growth of 2% to 4%. Wall Street was
looking for 63 cents.
The outlook continues the conservative guidance that many
retailers have been providing as they post second-quarter results
and TJX executives during the conference call did not rule out the
prospect of upside to their projections.
Same-store sales rose 4% during the second quarter, while
discounter Target Corp. (TGT) saw comparable-sales fall 6.2% and
luxury retailer Saks Inc. (SKS) experienced a 15.5% drop.
TJX earlier this year slashed costs and inventories. The company
last month also unveiled a $400 million notes offering to help
refinance debt coming due in December.
The company in July projected earnings at the high end of its
raised estimate of 56 cents to 59 cents.
Gross margin rose to 25.6% from 24.3% on strong merchandise
margins.
-By Karen Talley, Dow Jones Newswires; 212-416-2196;
karen.talley@dowjones.com
(Tess Stynes contributed to this story.)