Family Dollar Misses on Q3 Earnings in Slow-Moving Economy

Family Dollar Stores Inc. (FDO) posted third-quarter fiscal 2014 earnings of 85 cents a share that missed the Zacks Consensus Estimate of 90 cents, and plunged 19% from $1.05 earned in the prior-year quarter. Management blamed the quarter’s debacle on economic headwinds and stiff competition. The disappointing results led to a 2.5% decline in the share price of this Zacks Rank #4 (Sell) stock during pre-market trading hours.

To bring itself back on the growth trajectory, this self-service retail discount store chain had announced a slew of measures last quarter to improve its operational and financial performances. Management reduced prices of approximately 1,000 basic items and disclosed plans to invest $50 million annually to add value-based products, optimize the cost structure by lowering headcount, close about 370 underperforming outlets and being more rationale on new store opening to reap higher return on investment. The company, in fiscal 2015, plans to extend its cooler facilities, roll out products such as wine and beer to draw traffic, and undertake initiatives to enhance store productivity.

Including restructuring charges, the earnings came in at 71 cents a share, down 32.4% year over year.

Let’s Dig Further

Family Dollar, which competes with Dollar General Corp. (DG), posted a 3.3% increase in net sales to $2,659 million from the prior-year quarter, reflecting sales growth across Consumables (up 4.4%), Apparel and Accessories (up 2.1%) and Seasonal & Electronics (up 1.6%), offset by decline witnessed in Home Products (down 1.6%). Total revenue also came ahead of the Zacks Consensus Estimate of $2,363 million.

The strength witnessed in the Consumables category came on the back of robust growth across refrigerated and frozen food and tobacco. Strong focus on consumables helped Family Dollar to drive business from budget-constrained consumers.

The economic recovery is still patchy, and bargain hunters are choosing the best deal, with their primary focus being on consumables. The Consumables category accounted for 73.3% of third-quarter fiscal 2014 sales compared with 72.5% in the prior-year quarter.

However, comparable-store sales for this Matthews, NC-based company fell 1.8% due to a decline in customer transactions, partly offset by a rise in average consumer transaction value.

Adjusted gross profit increased 2.2% to $912.3 million, whereas gross margin contracted 40 basis points to 34.3%. The lower-margin carrying consumables, increased markdowns and lower markups, were partly offset by fall in inventory shrinkage. Management expects gross margin to decline in fiscal 2014.