Best Buy Raises Full-Year Profit Outlook After Beating Earnings and Revenue Expectations
Best Buy raised its profit forecast for the fiscal year after reporting stronger-than-expected earnings and revenue for the recent quarter. The company now anticipates full-year adjusted earnings per share (EPS) between $6.10 and $6.35, an increase from its previous range of $5.75 to $6.20. This comes as Best Buy works through an ongoing sales slump amid softer consumer demand following the pandemic-era tech boom and high inflation pressures.
For the quarter ending August 3, Best Buy exceeded Wall Street’s expectations, posting an EPS of $1.34 compared to the expected $1.16, and revenue of $9.29 billion against the anticipated $9.24 billion. Despite a year-over-year decline in net sales from $9.58 billion to $9.29 billion, the company’s net income grew to $291 million, up from $274 million last year.
While comparable sales fell by 2.3%, this marks a significant improvement from the 6.2% decline seen during the same period last year. The retailer has faced challenges with declining consumer electronics sales, which have been forecasted to drop another 2% in 2024 according to Circana.
Best Buy is positioning itself for recovery through several key initiatives. The company is focusing on boosting sales in computing, appliances, and home theater by deploying trained sales teams to these areas, and it is also launching a marketing campaign to engage consumers, including YouTube videos to highlight tech products.
The retailer is banking on new technology rollouts, such as Apple’s new iPads and AI-enabled laptops from Microsoft, to reignite interest and spur spending as the replacement cycle for pandemic-era tech products begins to take shape. Best Buy anticipates increasing stabilization in the industry as 2024 approaches, despite the ongoing challenges in the consumer electronics market.