on Tuesday signaled consumers will be pickier and more price-driven in the back half of the year, even as the retailer topped Wall Street's quarterly expectations.
The company's shares fell about 14% on Tuesday, as the department store operator stood by its conservative full-year guidance. It said it expects comparable owned-plus-licensed sales to fall 6% to 7.5% compared with the prior year. It anticipates adjusted earnings per share will range from $2.70 to $3.20, and sales will be between $22.8 billion and $23.2 billion for the fiscal year.
The retailer
In a CNBC interview, CEO Jeff Gennette said, "the consumer continues to be under pressure." The company has seen rising credit card balances in its own card data, he said. Plus, he said, people are spending on experiences and preparing for the return of student loan payments this fall.
But Gennette said that the company is focused on having the items consumers are still willing to buy, such as fragrances and other beauty products. and merchandise is also returning to Macy's after several years of being missing from its shelves.
"We're moving into areas of interest," he said. "We're pulling back on categories that aren't working. So we're ready for the back half [of the year] to respond to the consumer where and when they shop."
Here's how the retailer did for the fiscal second quarter that ended July 29 compared with what Wall Street expected, based on a survey of analysts by Refinitiv:
The company swung to a net loss of $22 million, or 8 cents per share, from net income of $275 million, or 99 cents per share
Net sales fell from $5.6 billion a year earlier. Sales at stores declined 8% and digital sales dropped 10% compared with the year-ago period.
Comparable sales on an owned-plus-licensed basis dropped 7.3%, a little worse than the 6.5% decline that analysts expected, according to Refinitiv.
As a retailer that sells a lot of clothing and accessories, Macy's has taken a deeper hit from a consumer pullback than those that sell staples. When the department store operator cut its full-year forecast early in the summer, it said it had seen sales weaken in the spring, even at its higher-end chains, Bloomingdale's and beauty chain Bluemercury.
Those sales patterns largely stayed the same in recent months, Gennette said. July was a strong month compared with the rest of the quarter, but consumers' purchases were "very value driven," he said.
Gennette added that the company has cleared through spring merchandise with markdowns and stocked up on the fresh items for the fall and holiday season. Inventory was down 10% year over year and 18% lower than it was in 2019.
Macy's namesake stores and website put up the weakest sales in the quarter. The chain's comparable sales fell 8.2% on an owned-plus-licensed basis, but bright spots included fragrances, prestige cosmetics and men's tailored apparel.
At upscale department store Bloomingdale's, comparable sales dropped 2.6% on an owned-plus-licensed basis as shoppers bought beauty items, women's contemporary and designer apparel, and shoes. Sales of handbags, men's apparel and dresses were softer in the quarter, the company said.
Bluemercury stood apart with year-over-year sales gains. Comparable sales rose 5.8% on an owned basis, as shoppers bought skin-care items and color cosmetics.
Consumers' financial pressures also showed up on Macy's balance sheet. Revenue from other areas of business, including credit cards, decreased by $84 million year over year. The company said it expected credit card delinquencies to rise, but said they shot up faster than anticipated.
As Macy's looks for ways to grow and refresh its image, it has opened up smaller stores in strip malls. The company announced Tuesday it will . So far, it has rolled out 10 of them.
Gennette said that new kind of store has outperformed Macy's legacy mall anchor locations. The smaller stores that have been open more than a year had sales growth in the second quarter, he said.
Shares of Macy's closed on Tuesday at $12.66, bringing the company's market value to $3.45 billion. It has underperformed the market so far this year. As its stock has fallen 39%, the S&P 500 has climbed about 14% during the same period.