Wall Street debates if better days ahead at Starbucks

Published Tuesday November 11th, 2008

NEW YORK - Despite optimism from Starbucks Corp. that it has felt the worst of the tough economy, analysts were divided Tuesday on whether there was more trouble brewing after the chain disappointed Wall Street with a steep drop in fourth-quarter profit and sales.

Click to Enlarge
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS/Amy Sancetta
A man pulls a cart passed the Starbucks store inside the Beachwood Mall in Beachwood, Ohio on Monday, Nov. 10, 2008. Starbucks will release quarterly earnings after the market close.

The company's chairman and CEO Howard Schultz tried to strike a cup half-full mentality with investors Monday night, saying he had "a renewed sense of optimism" and added that the fourth quarter "may have represented a bottoming-out milestone for our company."

"I am confident we are on the correct course for these challenging times," he said. "Starbucks can and will weather the current economic storm."

Many observers, though, don't see that storm letting up. With consumer confidence dismal, spending on discretionary items - like $4 lattes - has slowed and the prospect of a prolonged recession has sparked even more fear.

"We find nothing at all in results to suggest that a bottom is at hand," Deutsche Bank North America analyst Marc Greenberg wrote in a Tuesday note to investors. "On all meaningful indicators, performance is only weakening further."

And if the economy worsens more than the company expects, "then Starbucks hasn't hit a bottom," said Morningstar analyst John Owens.

"I think the company has positioned itself to deliver better results in 2009 but they're still at the mercy of the macroeconomic environment," he said.

That could be tough to stomach for investors, who have already seen Starbucks shares drop more than 50 per cent in the past year.

The company's fourth-quarter report didn't do much to bolster investors' confidence. Profit fell 97 per cent, hurt by hefty charges for closing about 600 U.S. stores and 61 locations in Australia. Same-store sales, or sales at locations open at least a year, dropped eight per cent in the U.S. as fewer consumers came in and those that did bought less.

Starbucks has been trying to offer consumers more value without losing its premium brand status by using rewards programs and a new "gold card" that costs $25 a year and offers a 10 per cent discount on all drinks.

The chain, though, has also been hurt by its own earlier success. After growing quickly in the 1990s and early 2000s, the company has spent the past year curtailing its growth plans, eliminating corporate positions and shutting underperforming stores.

But those changes have yet to reverse the downward trajectory of the company's profit and same-store sales, and Starbucks is expecting a same-store sales decline in 2009 - albeit not as steep.

Greenberg said investors should not be expected to "make a leap of faith" that earnings will grow in 2009 even as same-store sales in the U.S. fall.

Other analysts, meanwhile, trimmed their expectations for profit and sales for the upcoming year while either offering words of caution or encouragement.

Oppenheimer & Co. analyst Matthew DiFrisco said the company has taken the needed steps to improve its operating model to be able to increase profits, while RBC Capital Markets analyst Larry Miller called the company "a show-me story" in an analyst note Monday night.

Investors may be waiting to judge until at least Starbucks reports its fiscal first-quarter results early next year. If same-store sales improve, that may offer investors hope that a turnaround is in the works, Owens said.

"I think they're making the right decisions," Owens said. But, he added, "there's an expectation that they should be making progress."

Starbucks shares fell 38 cents, or 3.7 per cent, to US$9.82.

 

Disabled

Commenting has been disabled for this item. Existing comments appear below but you may not add a new comment at this time.
Advertisement
Advertisement

Search Articles