With Sales Still Surging, Best Buy Raises Prospects for 2021

With Sales Still Surging, Best Buy Raises Prospects for 2021
A Best Buy store is seen in Los Angeles, Calif., on March 13, 2017. Lucy Nicholson/Reuters
The Associated Press
Updated:

NEW YORK—Best Buy raised its sales outlook for the year after breezing past Wall Street expectations in the second quarter.

The nation’s largest consumer electronics chain joined the slew of other major retailers like Walmart, Target, and Macy’s putting up banner numbers, suggesting that Americans have continued to be spend even as the delta variant spreads.

There have been concerns that consumer spending, which drives 70 percent of economic activity in the United States, would begin to slow again as it did early in 2020 when COVID-19 first hit the country.

There has been an impact from the spread of Delta, however, CEO Corie Barry said Tuesday. Younger shoppers who had begun to return to stores with the arrival of vaccines are now moving back to online shopping, particularly in urban areas. Foot traffic in stores outside of urban areas is stronger, Barry said.

The company, based in Richfield, Minnesota, was somewhat insulated from the economic fallout last year because so many people stuck at home stepped up spending on webcams, laptops, and other technology.

That pace, according to the numbers from Best Buy’s most recent quarter, has continued. Now the company is readying itself for potentially permanent changes in consumer behavior even as millions of people get vaccinated and plan a return to the office. Many will be adapting to hybrid work at home and at the office, and they’re embracing technology with similar gusto for their children even when they were learning online last year.

“Over the longer term, we are fundamentally in a stronger position than we expected just two years ago,“ said Barry in a prepared statement. “There has been a dramatic and structural increase in the need for technology.”

As with other retailers, online shopping that spiked in the pandemic has eased. Online revenue at U.S. stores fell 28.1 percent in the second quarter compared with the same period a year ago. Online sales accounted for 31.7 percent of all revenue compared with 53.1 percent last year. Two years ago, however, online sales made up only 16 percent of total revenue.

Best Buy earned $734 million, or $2.90 per share, for the three-month period ended July 31. Adjusted for one-time gains or losses, per-share earnings were $2.98, easily eclipsing per-share projections of $1.91 from Wall Street, according to Zacks Investment Research.

Revenue surged 20 percent to $11.85 billion, also better than industry analysts had expected.

Sales at established stores jumped 20 percent.

For the current quarter ending in November, Best Buy said it expects revenue in the range of $11.4 billion to $11.6 billion. Analysts surveyed by Zacks had been expecting revenue of $10.49 billion.

The company expects full-year revenue in the range of $51 billion to $52 billion. Analysts expected $49.39 billion for the year, according to FactSet.

Best Buy also said it now expects comparable sales for the year to rise 9 percent to 11 percent compared with the previous outlook of 3 percent to 6 percent.

Shares of Best Buy Co. jumped nearly 6 percent, or $6.56 per share, to $118.76 Tuesday.

By Anne D'innocenzio