Wal-Mart (WMT): Time For Scott To Go

17 May 12:11pm
World's biggest retailer Wal-Mart (WMT) said Tuesday quarterly profits rose 8% to $2.83 billion ($0.68/share) and revenue rose 8.5% to $86.41 billion -- hitting analyst estimates exactly. Wal-Mart said Sam's Club and international operations were its strongest areas, while food and generic drug sales were large growth sections. It expects domestic comparable-store sales to rise 1-2% in the coming quarter after a 0.6% first-quarter rise. It forecasts Q2 earnings from continuing operations of $0.75-0.95; analysts had been calling for $0.79. In the company's earnings press release, CEO Lee Scott shrewdly observed: "While these are record sales and earnings, we feel there was an opportunity to have done better,"

Thanks for the heads up Lee. Kind of like General Custard saying "we should have brought more guys"

It is time for Lee to go. It is not for the standard reason people give, the stagnant share price. Let's be honest here. If you were dumb enough at the turn of the century to pay 60 times earnings for a massive retailer growing at less than 1/2 that, you deserve the predicament you are now in. Given Wal-Mart's scale, it would have been impossible for ANY CEO to get performance out of the company to justify that high of a PE ratio and avoid the eventual share decline. The price of the stock had to fall.

Why should Scott go? I have been in 4 Wal-Mart the past 2 weeks and one thing sticks out. They have not changed at all the past 7 years. Everything feels the same, the look , the merchandise, the people, everything. The worst part is, there seems to be no plans to change anything. If you are struggling with earnings and growth because you have become stale, do something different. You just can't sit there, no matter who you are. How about this? Let's update the clothing. We have heard for years that Target has had great success with low cost brand name designer clothing. Wal-Mart's is just low cost and in an increasingly brand conscious world, it just is not cutting it. Let spruce it up a bit. Maybe we could take some of the $7 plus billion you are sitting on and buyback a meaningful amount of shares? Wal-Mart is increasing cash at an over a billion dollar a year pace and last year spent just over that on share buybacks. Let's take $3 billion and make a dent in the shares outstanding ( 1.5%) and give more back to shareholders if we are not going to put it work anywhere else.

Here is another issue. When I go into as Target, I can easily fins my way around because the layouts of the stores are very similar. It makes may shopping experience less frustrating. Are there any two Wal-Marts that are laid out the same? It makes it very difficult to "just run in" to a Wal-Mart to pick something up. Given the choice, I will choose a Target for thje convenience.

Wal-Mart's image has taken a hit. When people want something "cheap" they think Wal-Mart, when the want a value, they think "Target". Because Scott seems to have no desire to change that, it is time to go....

I hold no position in any company listed above.

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About

ToddSullivan

A Massachusetts based value investor, I look for companies whose current valuation is at a discount to their true value. When I purchase a stock, my typical holding period is several years. I consider buying a stock purchasing a piece of a business. I am confident once I make a decision to buy that eventually the market as a whole will recognize the true value of the business and value it accordingly. It may take 1 month, 6 months or a year, but if I buy it at enough of a discount to its true value my results will be (and have been) superior to the market as a whole. Of all the disparate investing disciplines, value investing has stood the test of time. The great investors of have all been value investors. Warren Buffett, Ben Graham, Bill Ruane (Sequoia Fund), Bill Miller and Wally Weitz, all have consistently outperformed the market for decades by using various forms of value investing. Currently I am a contributing writer to Seeking Alpha, Vinvesting.com, The Stock Masters and Value Investing News. Posts have been reprinted in The Wall St. Journal, Yahoo Finance, Google Alerts, Google Finance, TheStreet.com. 24/7 Wall St. and Topix.net.