After Best Buy Earnings, Shares May Look Like a Bargain After 45% Plunge

 | Nov 20, 2022 21:32

• Best Buy’s stock has lost more than 45% over the past 12 months as demand for electronic products has declined
• One notable difference between Best Buy and other big-box retailers is that the company has been able to manage its inventory levels quite well during this downturn
• Best Buy’s earnings report, due out Tuesday, will provide insight into whether the worst is over in its sales slump

It’s hard to feel excited about a retailer that sells computers and other electronic gadgets these days: Demand for products like these is waning as consumers face pressures on their wallets due to nearly four-decade-high inflation.

Consumers also have little appetite to buy laptops and gaming consoles after a two-year pandemic buying spree of products like these when they were confined to their homes.

These changing consumer preferences and a tough economic environment have hurt the largest U.S. brick-and-mortar electronic retailer, Best Buy (NYSE:BBY), whose stock has lost more than 45% during the past 12 months to underperform the S&P 500 Index. It closed on Friday at $72.05 a share.

The Richfield, Minn.-based retailer, which is scheduled to report its latest quarterly earnings on Tuesday, will again come under the scrutiny of investors, who will be looking for clues as to whether the worst is past for Best Buy’s sales slump.

As the below graph shows, sales estimates for Best Buy have fallen sharply over the past 12 months. Analysts have reduced this quarter's expectations by 53% for EPS, from $2.17 per share to $1.02 per share.