Have you ever had those moments when you wake up in the middle of the night, thirsty? You're in such a sleepy funk that you can't muster the strength to lift yourself up to fetch a glass of water, even if you know it's in your best interest?
Well, that's how I feel after watching Select Comfort
I mean, I saw this coming. This is what I wrote after rival Tempur-Pedic
Hooray for Tempur-Pedic. As a Select Comfort shareholder -- and Sleep Number bed owner -- I think I'm going to be sick.
It seems as if the market is willing to reward just one mattress maker at a time. Obviously, the bedding market didn't grow by 22% this past quarter. Retailers like Bed Bath & Beyond
(NASDAQ:BBBY) , Limited's(NYSE:LTD) Bath & Body Works, and Pier 1(NYSE:PIR) would be flying high if folks were splurging on home furnishings and feel-good knickknacks. They're not. Tempur-Pedic is in its own cool groove at the moment.If it's pulling in those kinds of numbers, its premium-mattress rivals are going to come in weak. So I'm braced for the worst when Select Comfort reports next week.
Like a chump, I let my own warning dangle like an inviting glass of water as I catatonically counted down the days to Select Comfort's report.
I guess I deserve what I got. Tempur-Pedic may have grown net sales by 22%, but Select Comfort's top line inched just 3% higher. Earnings took a similar baby step, up to $0.26 a share after last year's $0.25.
"Well, at least Select Comfort is growing," a bull would argue. Let's not even go there. For starters, a massive share buyback is why earnings held up on a per-share basis. Net income actually fell 15% during the period. Don't get too giddy about the top-line growth, either. The company continues to ramp up its outlets, but same-store sales fell by 6%. Healthy online sales (up 30%) and plans to enter new markets (g'day, Australia) aren't enough to offset the weakness that's about to get even worse. Even a stodgy mattress giant like Sealy
The maker of the Sleep Number air-filled mattress says that instead of earning $0.87 to $0.93 per share this year, it's now looking to earn $0.75 to $0.81. Its net sales targets are being slashed as well. In other words, the current quarter is going to be ugly.
So what am I doing craving water in the middle of the night? With the company unlikely to keep buying back enough shares to offset its bottom-line declines, I should be reaching for a harder drink.
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