Why The Pantry Shares Fell

Updated

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What: Shares of The Pantry were down as much as 15% today after the convenience-store chain posted a second-quarter loss and missed Wall Street estimates.

So what: The southeastern U.S. retailer's profits were improved from a year ago, but The Pantry still posted an adjusted loss of $0.28 a share. Revenue was down 8% to $1.89 billion. Analysts had been eyeing a per-share loss of $0.26 and sales at $1.90 billion. Same-store sales were down 2%; however, the category improved 0.1% when cigarette sales are factored out. CEO Dennis Hatchell blamed the poor results on a 4.6% drop in customer traffic, bad weather, and low consumer confidence.


Now what: The January-March quarter is a seasonally weak one for The Pantry, so the results need to be looked at in that context. The Pantry also closed 35-40 stores, which accounts for the larger drop in revenue. While the company didn't miss estimates by that much, it's disconcerting to see same-store sales and overall traffic down, indicating that the company seems to be headed in the wrong direction. The Pantry saw improvement in fuel margins, the item that makes up the vast majority of its sales, and analysts are still expecting a per-share profit of $0.73 for the year, but with key financial indicators moving in the wrong direction and no competitive advantage, there seems to be little reason to invest.

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The article Why The Pantry Shares Fell originally appeared on Fool.com.

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