Kohl's says late back-to-school sales start and tax holidays hurt 2Q results; stock slumps
Shares of Kohl's sank 10 percent Thursday after the department store operator said state sales tax holidays hurt its sales in the second quarter and said back-to-school sales got off to a slow start.
Kohl's said back-to-school sales started later than it had expected, and the company took a bigger-than-expected hit when shoppers in some states stayed away from its stores in July so they could take advantage of sales tax holidays in August. Kohl's said that hurt sales of children's clothing. The company said it expects sales to bounce back in the current quarter, but Kohl's said it expects to reach the low end of its annual profit guidance.
Kohl's Corp. shares fell $6.10 to $55.40 in midday trading. The stock traded as high as $79.60 earlier this year, but slumped after the company reported disappointing first-quarter results in May. It is now trading close to 52-week lows.
The Menomonee Falls, Wisconsin-based company said its net income dropped 44 percent on costs related to debt extinguishment. Kohl's reported net income of $130 million, or 66 cents per share. The company said it earned $1.07 per share excluding one-time items, and Kohl's said its revenue rose less than 1 percent to $4.27 billion.
Analysts expected net income of $1.14 per share and $4.31 billion in revenue, according to Zacks Investment Research.
Kohl's still expects to report an annual profit of $4.40 to $4.60 per share, but says its results will probably be at the low end of that range.
FactSet says analysts expected $4.52 per share, on average.
Kohl's had 1,164 stores in 49 states on Aug. 1, the end of its fiscal second quarter.
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Elements of this story were generated by Automated Insights (http://automatedinsights.com/ap) using data from Zacks Investment Research. Access a Zacks stock report on KSS at http://www.zacks.com/ap/KSS
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Keywords: Kohl's, Earnings Report