Tag Archives: Best Buy Co Inc

Horizon Therapeutics, Coupa Software, Rivian and more

Take a look at some of the biggest movers in the premarket:

Horizon Therapeutics (HZNP) – The drugmaker’s shares surged 14.7% in the premarket after it agreed to be bought by Amgen (AMGN) for $116.50 per share in cash, with the deal valued at $27.8 billion. Amgen shares fell 2.6%.

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Coupa Software (COUP) – Private-equity firm Thoma Bravo agreed to buy Coupa, a specialist in business spending management software. The deal is worth $8 billion, or $81 per share in cash. Coupa shares soared 21.6% in premarket trading.

Rivian (RIVN) – The electric vehicle maker has paused talks with Mercedes-Benz on a planned joint venture to build electric vans in Europe. The move is part of Rivian’s effort to be more conservative with its cash outlays in the face of higher interest rates and economic concerns. Rivian fell 2.5% in premarket action.

Weber (WEBR) – The maker of grills and other outdoor cooking products agreed to be taken private by BDT Capital Partners for $2.32 billion in cash, or $8.05 per share. Weber shares closed Friday at $6.50.

Accenture (ACN) – Accenture fell 1.7% in the premarket after Piper Sandler downgraded the consulting firm’s stock to “underweight” from “neutral.” The firm expects Accenture to be negatively impacted by more cautious 2023 spending in the tech sector.

Under Armour (UAA) – Under Armour jumped 2.8% in premarket trading following a Stifel upgrade to “buy” from “hold.” Stifel praised the athletic apparel maker’s inventory management, which it said gives the company better profit margin certainty.

Best Buy (BBY) – The electronics retailer’s stock added 1.6% in the premarket after Goldman Sachs upgraded it to “neutral” from “sell.” It’s among retail stocks that Goldman feels has the ability to maintain prices as inflation moderates and to gain market share.

Gap (GPS), Tapestry (TPR), Levi Strauss (LEVI) – Goldman Sachs upgraded Gap and Tapestry to “buy” from “neutral” while downgraded Levi Strauss to “neutral” from “buy.” Goldman said its moves were based on which companies can thrive in an atmosphere that will see consumers become more discerning with their apparel spending. Gap added 2.7% in the premarket, with Tapestry up 2% and Levi Strauss losing 1.2%.

Brinker International (EAT) – The restaurant operator’s stock slid 3.7% after Goldman downgraded it to “sell” from “neutral.” Goldman said it was cautiously optimistic about the long-term results of the company’s effort to turn around its Chili’s chain, but thinks 2023 will be choppy in terms of sales and profit margins.

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Where Walmart, Amazon, Target are spending billions in slowing economy

A Walmart employee loads up a robotic warehouse tool with an empty cart to be filled with a customer’s online order at a Walmart micro-fulfillment center in Salem, Mass. on Jan. 8, 2020.

Boston Globe | Boston Globe | Getty Images

When the economy slows down, the classic response for consumer businesses is to cut back: slow hiring, maybe lay off workers, slash marketing, or even slow the pace of technology investment, delaying projects until after business has picked up again.

But that’s not at all what America’s troubled retail sector is doing this year.

With the S&P Retail Index down nearly 30% this year, most of the industry is boosting investment in capital spending by double digits, including industry leaders Walmart and Amazon.com. Among the top tier, only struggling clothier Gap and home-improvement chain Lowe’s are cutting back significantly. At electronics retailer Best Buy, first-half profits fell by more than half – but investment rose 37 percent.

“There is definitely concern and awareness about costs, but there is a prioritization happening,” said Thomas O’Connor, vice president of supply chain-consumer retail research at consulting firm Gartner. “A lesson has been taken from the aftermath of the financial crisis,” O’Connor said.

That lesson? Investments made by big-spending leaders like Walmart, Amazon and Home Depot are likely to result in taking customers from weaker rivals next year, when consumer discretionary cash flow is forecast to rebound from a year-long 2022 drought and revive shopping after spending on goods actually shrank early this year.

After the 2007-2009 downturn, 60 companies Gartner classified as “efficient growth companies” that invested through the crisis saw earnings double between 2009 and  2015, while other companies’ profits barely changed, according to a 2019 report on 1,200 U.S. and European firms.

Companies have taken that data to heart, with a recent Gartner survey of finance executives across industries showing that investments in technology and workforce development are the last expenses companies plan to cut as the economy struggles to keep recent inflation from causing a new recession. Budgets for mergers, environmental sustainability plans and even product innovation are taking a back seat, the Gartner data shows.

Today, some retailers are improving how supply chains work between the stores and their suppliers. That’s a focus at Home Depot, for example. Others, like Walmart, are driving to improve in-store operations so that shelves are restocked more quickly and fewer sales are lost.

The trend toward more investment has been building for a decade, but was catalyzed by the Covid pandemic, Progressive Policy Institute economist Michael Mandel said.

“Even before the pandemic, retailers were shifting from investments in structures to active investments in equipment, technology and software,” Mandel said. “[Between 2010 and 2020], software investment in the retail sector rose by 123%, compared to a 16% gain in manufacturing.” 

At Walmart, money is pouring into initiatives including VizPick, an augmented-reality system linked to worker cell phones that lets associates restock shelves faster. The company boosted capital spending 50% to $7.5 billion in the first half of its fiscal year, which ends in January. Its capital spending budget this year is expected to rise 26 percent to $16.5 billion, CFRA Research analyst Arun Sundaram said.

“The pandemic obviously changed the entire retail environment,” Sundaram said, forcing Walmart and others to be efficient in their back offices and embrace online channels and in-store pickup options even more. “It made Walmart and all the other retailers improve their supply chains. You see more automation, less manual picking [in warehouses] and more robots.” 

Last week, Amazon announced its latest warehouse robotics acquisition, Belgian firm Cloostermans, which offers technology to help move and stack heavy palettes and goods, as well as package products together for delivery.

Home Depot’s campaign to revamp its supply chain has been underway for several years, O’Connor said. Its One Supply chain effort is actually hurting profits for now, according to the company’s financial disclosures, but it’s central to both operating efficiency and a key strategic goal – creating deeper ties to professional contractors, who spend far more than the do-it-yourselfers who have been Home Depot’s bread and butter.

“To serve our pros, it’s really about removing friction through a multitude of enhanced product offerings and capabilities,” executive vice president Hector Padilla told analysts on Home Depot’s second-quarter call. “These new supply chain assets allow us to do that at a different level.”

The store of the future for aging retail brands

Some broadline retailers are more focused on refreshing an aging store brand. At Kohl’s, the highlight of this year’s capital spending budget is an expansion of the firm’s relationship with Sephora, which is adding mini-stores within 400 Kohl’s stores this year. The partnership helps the middle-market retailer add an element of flair to its otherwise stodgy image, which contributed to its relatively weak sales growth in the first half of the year, said Landon Luxembourg, a retailing expert at consulting firm Third Bridge. First-half investment more than doubled this year at Kohl’s. 

Roughly $220 million of the increase in Kohl’s spending was related to investment in beauty inventory to support the 400 Sephora shops opening in 2022, according to chief financial officer Jill Timm said. “We’ll continue that into next year. …We’re looking forward to working with Sephora on that solution to all of our stores,” she told analysts on the company’s most recent earnings call in mid-August.

Target is spending $5 billion this year as it adds 30 stores and upgrades another 200, bringing its tally of stores renovated since 2017 to more than half of the chain. It also is expanding its own beauty partnership first unveiled in 2020, with Ulta Beauty, adding 200 in-store Ulta centers en route to having 800.

And the biggest spender of all is Amazon.com, which had over $60 billion in capital expenditures in 2021. While Amazon’s reported capital spending numbers include its cloud computing division, it spent nearly $31 billion on property and equipment in the first half of the year — up from an already record breaking 2021 — even though the investment made the company’s free cash flow turn negative.

That is enough to make even Amazon tap the brakes a little bit, with chief financial officer Brian Olsavsky telling investors Amazon is shifting more of its investment dollars to the cloud computing division. This year, it estimates roughly 40% of spending will support warehouses and transportation capacity, down from last year’s combined 55%. It also plans to spend less on worldwide stores — “to better align with customer demand,” Olsavksy told analysts after its most recent earnings — already a much smaller budget item on a percentage basis.  

At Gap — which has seen its shares declined by nearly 50% this year — executives defended their cuts in capital spending, saying they need to defend profits this year and hope to rebound in 2023.

“We also believe there’s an opportunity to slow down more meaningfully the pace of our technology and digital platform investments to better optimize our operating profits,” chief financial officer Katrina O’Connell told analysts after its most recent earnings.

And Lowe’s deflected an analyst’s question about spending cuts, saying it could continue to take market share from smaller competitors. Lowe’s has been the better stock market performer compared to Home Depot over the past one-year and year-to-date periods, though both have seen sizable declines in 2022.

“Home improvement is a $900 billion marketplace,” Lowe’s CEO Marvin Ellison said, without mentioning Home Depot. “And I think it’s easy to just focus on the two largest players and determine the overall market share gain just based on that, but this is a really fragmented marketplace.”

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Walmart lays off corporate employees after slashing forecast

Exterior view of a Walmart store on August 23, 2020 in North Bergen, New Jersey

VIEW press | Corbis News | Getty Images

Walmart confirmed on Wednesday that it has begun to lay off corporate employees about a week after the company slashed its profit outlook and warned consumers had pulled back on discretionary spending due to inflation.

In a statement to CNBC, the retail giant described the layoffs as a way to “better position the company for a strong future.”

Anne Hatfield, a Walmart spokesperson, declined to say how many workers will be affected and what divisions have experienced cuts. She said Walmart is still hiring in parts of its business that are growing, including supply chain, e-commerce, health and wellness and advertising sales. 

“Shoppers are changing. Customers are changing,” she said. “We are doing some restructuring to make sure we’re aligned.”

The corporate layoffs were first reported by the Wall Street Journal.

Walmart is the largest employer in the country with nearly 1.6 million workers in the U.S. The company, seen as a bellwether for the nation’s economy, spooked investors last week when it cut its outlook for quarterly and full-year profit guidance. That warning had a chilling effect on the retail sector, dragging down the stocks of companies including Macy’s and Amazon and sending up a flare about the health of the American consumer.

Walmart said at the time that as shoppers spent more on necessities like groceries and fuel, they were skipping over high-margin merchandise like apparel. It said it would have to cut prices to sell more of those items, especially as a glut of inventory piled up in its stores and at those of competitors like Target and Bed Bath and Beyond.

Later that same week, Best Buy cut its profit and sales forecast, saying it was seeing softening demand for consumer electronics — big-ticket, discretionary purchases that some shoppers can postpone.

This story is developing. Please check back for updates.

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Amazon (AMZN) Q2 2022 earnings

Amazon shares climbed more than 11% in extended trading on Thursday after the company reported better-than-expected second-quarter revenue and gave an optimistic outlook.

  • EPS: Loss of 20 cents
  • Revenue: $121.23 billion vs. $119.09 billion expected, according to Refinitiv

Here’s how other key Amazon segments did during the quarter:

  • Amazon Web Services: $19.7 billion vs. $19.56 billion expected, according to StreetAccount
  • Advertising: $8.76 billion vs. $8.65 billion expected, according to StreetAccount

Revenue growth of 7% in the second quarter topped estimates, bucking the trend among its tech peers, which have all reported disappointing results.

Amazon said it expects to post third-quarter revenue between $125 billion and $130 billion, representing growth of 13% to 17%. Analysts were expecting sales of $126.4 billion, according to Refinitiv.

Amazon recorded a $3.9 billion loss on its Rivian investment after shares of the electric vehicle maker plunged 49% in the second quarter ended June 30. That resulted in a total net loss of $2 billion, and brings its loss for the year to $11.5 billion on the Rivian investment.

Because of the Rivian writedown, analyst estimates varied dramatically, making it difficult to compare actual results to a consensus number.

Amazon’s ad business is a bright spot in an otherwise gloomy quarter for online advertising, and shows the company is picking up share in one of its fastest-growing businesses.

Ad revenue climbed 18% in the period. Facebook, meanwhile, recorded its first ever drop in revenue this week, and forecast another decline for the third quarter. At Alphabet, advertising growth slowed to 12%, and YouTube showed a dramatic deceleration to 4.8% from 84% a year earlier.

This story is developing. Check back for updates.

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Why deal experts say you might want to skip it

Prime Day prices may not be Amazon’s best-ever offer

Just because something is discounted on Prime Day doesn’t mean it’s the best deal you’ll see anywhere, or even all year.

Naturally, Amazon will offer the best prices on its own gear like the Kindle, Fire TV streamer and private-label clothing. For example, the e-commerce giant is already advertising a 24-inch Fire TV for only $90, nearly half the retail price, while other early deals include up to 55% off the second-generation Echo Show, Kindle Paperwhite and Eero Mesh Wi-Fi routers.

Keep in mind that some items will be reduced further down the road. Prices on mattresses and outdoor furniture are likely to be lower around Labor Day, toys get marked down the most on Black Friday and Cyber Monday, and TVs generally hit their lowest price point ahead of Super Bowl Sunday.

Even Amazon is looking beyond its own Prime Day with a second sales event now slated for the fall.

Competing sale events are upping the ante

Other bargains are not exclusive to Amazon at all. Walmart, Target and Best Buy, among others, are holding competing deals events — as they have in previous years — to coincide with Amazon Prime Day 2022.

This time, Target’s 72-hour “Deal Days” kicks off earlier and runs for longer, starting on July 11, one day ahead of Prime Day. Plus, Target will price match select Prime Day deals and take an additional 5% off for RedCard members.

“Every year, they become a little bit more competitive,” Burrow said.

Also expect to find equally worthwhile deals at Walmart on kitchen appliances, vacuums and Nintendo Switch accessories, he said, and count on Best Buy to compete on electronics and Apple devices.

Meanwhile, other retailers, including Bed, Bath & Beyond, Kohl’s, Overstock, Samsung and Saks Fifth Avenue, will offer their own major markdowns, according to Rakuten’s retail and shopping expert Kristen Gall. 

How to make sure you’re getting the best deals

To find the lowest prices overall, start crunching the numbers now, advised Kristin McGrath, a shopping expert at RetailMeNot.

Price trackers are the easiest way to monitor just how good a deal really is, especially for big-ticket items.

Kristin McGrath

shopping expert at RetailMeNot

McGrath recommends a price-tracking browser extension like Camelcamelcamel or Keepa to keep an eye on price changes and get price-drop alerts. “Price trackers are the easiest way to monitor just how good a deal really is, especially for big-ticket items,” she said.

At some retailers, you can even stack deals by using a promo code or digital coupon and then pay with a rewards credit card for extra savings, said Rakuten’s Gall.

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Cramer’s week ahead; Market needs obstacles resolved before a rally

CNBC’s Jim Cramer warned investors on Friday that a market rally has no chance of sustaining until the causes of the turmoil are resolved.

“If we want the market to stage a meaningful comeback, we need China to reopen, Russia to withdraw from Ukraine, and the [Federal Reserve] to curb-stomp inflation with a 100-basis point rate hike,” the “Mad Money” host said. “Unfortunately, only one of those three is within America’s control.”

His comments come on the heels of a volatile week of trading spurned by missed earnings quarters from retail behemoths, mounting investor concerns about inflation and global geopolitical tensions.

The S&P 500 closed around 19% below its record while the Nasdaq Composite reached 30% off its highs, in bear market territory. The Dow Jones Industrial Average recorded its first eight-week losing streak since 1923.

In addition to giving his take on the current market, Cramer looked ahead to next week’s slate of earnings and gave his thoughts on each reporting company. All earnings and revenue estimates are courtesy of FactSet.

Monday: Zoom

  • Q1 2023 earnings release after the close; conference call at 5 p.m. ET
  • Projected EPS: 96 cents
  • Projected revenue: $1.23 billion

Zoom stock will stay down unless the company innovates or acquires another company that helps it do so, Cramer said.

Tuesday: Best Buy, AutoZone, Toll Brothers

Best Buy 

  • Q1 2023 earnings release before the bell; conference call at 8 a.m. ET
  • Projected EPS: $1.59 
  • Projected revenue: $10.45 billion

Cramer noted that while he’d normally urge investors to buy shares of Best Buy at its current price, buying anything lately has felt risky.

AutoZone

  • Q3 2022 earnings release before the bell; conference call at 10 a.m. ET
  • Projected EPS: $26.20
  • Projected revenue: $3.71 billion

Cramer said that the company’s stock is a winner.

Toll Brothers

  • Q2 2022 earnings release after the close; conference call at 8:30 a.m. ET
  • Projected EPS: $1.50
  • Projected revenue: $2.08 billion

“Most skeptics … think the earnings will be cut in half in the future, if not more,” Cramer said.

Wednesday: Nvidia

  • Q1 2023 earnings release after the close; conference call at 5 p.m. ET
    Projected EPS: $1.30
  • Projected revenue: $8.12 billion

“The action ahead of the quarter has been horrendous. … I actually think the print will be a good one, I just don’t know if anyone will care,” Cramer said.

Thursday: Macy’s, Costco

Macy’s

  • Q1 2022 earnings release before the bell; conference call at 8 a.m. ET
  • Projected EPS: 82 cents
  • Projected revenue: $5.33 billion

Macy’s has a similar product line-up to Target, which reported worse-than-expected earnings this quarter, Cramer noted.

Costco 

  • Q3 2022 earnings release at 4:15 p.m. ET; conference call at 5 p.m. ET
  • Projected EPS: $3.04
  • Projected revenue; $51.32 billion

Cramer said that while the company is performing well, its stock is down so much that a huge special dividend and buyback might be the only thing that could make it rally.

Friday: Canopy Growth

  • Q4 2022 earnings release before the bell; conference call at 10 a.m. ET
  • Projected EPS: $10.70
  • Projected revenue: $130 million

“Canopy needs national legislation promoting use of marijuana, not just flat out legalization, but subsidies” for its stock to rally to its previous highs, Cramer said.

Disclosure: Cramer’s Charitable Trust owns shares of Costco and Nvidia.

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Best Buy adds beauty gadgets and outdoor furniture to product lineup

Electric bikes. Patio furniture. Beauty gadgets.

Best Buy is adding merchandise that might surprise shoppers who typically think of its stores and website as a place to buy smartphones, laptops and TVs.

The company said Friday it has begun to carry about 100 skin-care devices, including a facial steamer and at-home tool for microdermabrasion, at nearly 300 stores and on its website.

Best Buy is making a broader push into categories such as fitness and furniture as it looks to propel growth beyond the Covid pandemic. The company benefited from early pandemic trends, as people sought computer monitors for home offices, kitchen appliances for more at-home cooking and theater systems or giant TVs to pass the time.

Now, however, the retailer faces a more challenging landscape. It cautioned in March that it expects a same-store sales decline of between 1% and 4% in the coming year after a period of very high demand.

There are already signs of softening electronics sales, as consumers direct dollars toward vacations and social events. Major appliance maker Whirlpool missed on estimates and saw sales drop 8.3% in North America in the most recent quarter versus the year-ago period, the sharpest decline since the pandemic began. Microsoft, which produces Xbox video game consoles, gave a negative outlook for the coming quarter with projected declines in the gaming category.

The NPD Group, a market researcher, projected that revenue from consumer electronics in the U.S. will fall by 5% in 2022, 4% in 2023 and 1% in 2024 — but said total sales will remain higher than pre-pandemic levels. The declines follow a record-setting year for the industry in the U.S. with consumer tech sales hitting almost $127 billion, a 9% jump over the elevated sales in 2020, NPD Group said.

Read more: Surging prices force consumers to ask: Can I live without it?

Some of the new items cater to consumers’ going out and getting social again — such as electric scooters, according to Best Buy’s chief merchandising officer, Jason Bonfig.

The retailer has expanded its merchandise offering in recent years. Best Buy debuted connected fitness products from exercise brands including NordicTrack and Hydrow in summer 2019. It rolled out outdoor grills from Weber and Traeger in June and a line of electric bikes, scooters and mopeds in August. It acquired Yardbird, a direct-to-consumer outdoor furniture company, for an undisclosed sum in November.

Best Buy has also bought health-care companies, including GreatCall, which sell devices and services that help older adults age in their own homes. It is testing services related to new products, too, such as a pilot program to offer repair services for e-transportation products.

Bonfig said in an interview with CNBC that the company has taken cues from customer and employee feedback — and clicks and searches on its website. For instance, he said, some shoppers would ask employees about outdoor furniture when buying a TV or audio equipment for the backyard.

“Our answer in the past has been ‘No, we actually don’t have an assortment of that,'” he said.

Now, with Yardbird, it does. This month, Best Buy added displays at one of its namesake stores and a handful of locations under the Best Buy subsidiary, Pacific Sales Kitchen & Home in Southern California. Customers can also buy outdoor sofas, wicker chairs and more on Best Buy’s website.

This year, the retailer plans to add Yardbird and e-transportation displays to about 90 stores, nearly 10% of its approximately 1,000 U.S. store footprint. More than 250 of its stores currently have fitness equipment and Best Buy plans to add a larger, more premium experience for those products in about 90 stores.

Best Buy does not break out revenue by merchandise category, but emerging areas have been a powerful driver of sales, the company has said. At an investor day in March, Bonfig said most of Best Buy’s over $12 billion in sales growth in the past decade has come from large established products like computing, TV and appliance, but one-third has come from newer groups such as wearables and virtual reality headsets.

Bonfig declined to tell CNBC specific growth numbers, but said the younger categories are resonating. And he said one of the skin-care devices it started to offer, the TheraFace Pro, has been a “breakout hit.” It sells for about $400, with features for cleansing and infrared light therapy. He said the products cater to consumers’ interest in health and wellness.

Michael Baker, an equity research analyst for retail at D.A. Davidson, said adding merchandise groups fits with the company’s history. With the moves, he said Best Buy can stay on the leading edge, expand its total addressable market and capture a larger share of consumers’ disposable income.

His price target for the company is $135, about 46% above where shares are currently trading.

The biggest risk, he said, is Best Buy could buy the merchandise only to see it linger and wind up marked down.

Baker said moderating sales may free up time and allow Best Buy to get creative in how it merchandises and promotes different kinds of items.

“There was such a focus on being able to fulfill demand for work from home, learn from home, play from home type products,” he said. “With those slowing, it gives them a chance to see where they can go from here.”

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Best Buy, BJ’s, Snowflake and more

Take a look at some of the biggest movers in the premarket:

Best Buy — Shares of the retailer climbed 5% in premarket trading after the company announced it was raising its quarterly dividend by 26%. The move comes despite an underwhelming fourth-quarter report from Best Buy, with adjusted earnings just matching analyst expectations, according to Refinitiv.

BJ’s Wholesale — The wholesale retailer saw shares sink 13.8% premarket after missing Wall Street expectations for quarterly revenue. BJ’s reported revenue of $4.36 billion, compared with $4.4 billion expected by analysts, according to StreetAccount.

Big Lots — Big Lots shares fell 6.4% in premarket trading after a weaker-than-expected earnings report. The retailer posted earnings of $1.75 per share versus the Refinitiv consensus estimate of $1.89 per share.

Burlington Stores — Shares of the off-price retailer sunk 12.1% premarket after Burlington missed Wall Street estimates on the top and bottom line. Burlington reported quarterly adjusted earnings of $2.53 per share on revenue of $2.60 billion. The Refinitiv consensus estimate was $3.25 per share earned on $2.78 billion in sales.

Kroger — Kroger shares gained 5.8% in premarket trading after the grocery chain beat on earnings. The company reported fourth-quarter adjusted earnings of 91 cents per share on revenue of $33.05 billion. Analysts had expected a profit of 74 cents per share on revenue of $32.86 billion, according to Refinitiv.

Snowflake — Shares of Snowflake are down more than 18% premarket after the data-analytics software company forecasted slowing product revenue growth. The company reported an adjusted loss of 43 cents per share. Revenue came in at $383.8 million, beating analyst estimates of $372.6 million.

Box Inc. — Shares of Box gained 5.7% premarket after the company reported better-than-expected quarterly results. The company earned 24 cents per share excluding items on $233 million in revenue. Analysts surveyed by Refinitiv were expecting the company to earn 23 cents on $229 million in revenue.

American Eagle Outfitters — Shares of the retailer declined 4.6% premarket after American Eagle’s quarterly report. The company warned higher freight costs would weigh on earnings in the first half of 2022.

Intel — Shares of Intel fell 1.3% in early morning trading after Morgan Stanley downgraded the stock from equal-weight to underweight. “Downgrades of value stocks … will let us focus on more actionable situations that offer relatively more attractive risk-reward going forward,” Morgan Stanley’s Ethan Puritz said.

Southwest — Southwest shares gained 1.9% premarket after Evercore ISI upgraded the airline stock to outperform from in-line. “Greater relative financial strength + margin focused planning lead us to raise our rating on Southwest,” the firm said.

—CNBC’s Jesse Pound and Samantha Subin contributed to this report.

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Best Buy could cash in from rise of the metaverse, analyst says

A near empty parking lot in front of a Best Buy store in Montebello, California on April 15, 2020 as the electronics nationwide chain store remains closed to customers but open for pickups.

Frederic J. Brown | AFP | Getty Images

As companies and consumers grow more interested in the metaverse, Best Buy could cash in by selling more virtual reality headsets and pricier computers, an analyst says.

A research note published Monday by Loop Capital Markets said the consumer electronics retailer is well-positioned to tap into enthusiasm for nonfungible tokens, gaming and socializing in a virtual world. Best Buy is the largest PC retailer in the country, has big-box stores where shoppers can try on different headsets and has a team of tech experts who charge for helping consumers with setup, said Anthony Chukumba, the equity research firm’s managing director.

He reiterated Loop’s buy rating and price target of $150, about 52% higher than where Best Buy is currently trading. Best Buy’s shares are up about 1% as of midday Monday. They have fallen about 9% over the past 12 months.

A growing list of retailers from Nike to Ralph Lauren have dipped their toes into the metaverse. Nike bought virtual sneaker company RTFKT for an undisclosed sum in December. Ralph Lauren has experimented with ways that people can visit or shop at virtual stores on gaming platforms like Roblox and Zepeto.

For Best Buy, the financial opportunity is even simpler, Chukumba said: Consumers may need to upgrade computers to higher-resolution displays and buy extra equipment from monitors to microphones. That could drive a “massive PC upgrade cycle” and one for smartphones, too, he said.

Loop based its views on a conversation with an unnamed CEO and venture capitalist who specializes in NFTs, blockchain, decentralized finance, gaming and the metaverse, Chukumba said. He added, the person has worked in the tech industry since the late 1990s.

With the metaverse, two other merchandise categories — virtual reality and artificial reality devices and videogame consoles— may also gain steam, Chukumba said. Best Buy already has relationships with the major manufacturers that sell those devices, including Meta (formerly known as Facebook and the owner of Oculus), Sony and Apple. Apple is expected to have a VR/AR product coming soon.

Best Buy also has stores where consumers can try on and compare different headsets in person.

Another aspect of the metaverse could help Best Buy, too, Chukumba said. The technology could make it quicker and cheaper to run warehouse simulations that inspire more efficient ways to operate.

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Best Buy could offer investors ‘gift’ if it continues pullback: Trader

Investors may soon get their best chance to purchase Best Buy, Inside Edge Capital Management founder Todd Gordon said.

Nearly 40% of the S&P 500’s components including Best Buy, Disney, Biogen and a number of travel stocks are trading below their 200-day moving averages, a key indicator that tracks long-term price changes.

Best Buy could be close to a unique buying opportunity, however, Gordon told CNBC’s “Trading Nation” on Tuesday.

“The stock … has been a solid outperformer relative to the S&P since, like, 2013,” he said, citing the company’s digital expansion.

“A pullback to that $90 breakout level I think would be a gift. I don’t know if we’re going to get it. I’m certainly eyeing it.”

Best Buy traded 1.4% lower Wednesday afternoon to around $105.35.

The stock is likely to regain momentum after sustaining losses tied to its November earnings report, in which gross margins contracted and management pointed to a projected decline in fiscal fourth-quarter sales, Gordon said.

“The main reason … the stock was hit so hard in this earnings report was the margins, and I think once supply chain issues start to ease, demand increases, perhaps we go back to normal, I think Best Buy might come back, so I’m certainly watching this stock,” he said.

Boeing’s stock could also be on a path to recovery, Sanctuary Wealth’s Jeff Kilburg said in the same interview.

“It was encouraging over Thanksgiving weekend that TSA data said 20 million people traveled in the United States,” the firm’s chief investment officer said. “That’s optimism. It’s not represented in the chart.”

Boeing trading under $200 a share “does present an opportunity” given that around two-thirds of the company’s profit comes from manufacturing commercial airplanes, Kilburg said.

The stock fell nearly 2% on Wednesday to around $193.98 a share.

“At the end of the day, we have not seen Boeing really recover” from the crisis around its 737 Max airplane model, he said.

“I do think omicron, the new [coronavirus] variant that we have right now, will potentially be a waning situation which will allow more and more holiday travel,” he said. “This is an opportunity under $200 that I think you have to own.”

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