After taking the holiday shopping season off, Goldman Sachs is reinitiating coverage of Best Buy
Goldman Sachs analyst Matthew Fassler is offering up a neutral rating on the beleaguered consumer electronics retailer, though a lot of the points raised seem to suggest a more bearish stance.
- U.S. government data show that consumer electronics sales are lagging most of the other consumer segments.
- Best Buy may not only be in the wrong place, but it may also be doing it wrong. Internet sales continue to eat Best Buy's lunch as showrooming -- where window shoppers of local chains see what they want before buying it cheaper online -- shows no signs of going away.
- Fassler sees negative sales growth for the industry and expects Best Buy to post negative comps this year.
- The boom in tablet sales may offset his projected 7% drop in PC sales, but margins will suffer.
If this is a neutral argument, one can only wonder what would make an analyst outright bearish!
It's easy to feel skittish when it comes to Best Buy. It may have outlasted Circuit City, but it has not overcome the problems that did Circuit City in. Consumers continue to gravitate to online stores. Best Buy's pricing is out of whack. Shoppers don't want to get hounded about a zillion different insurance and protection plans that are high-margin endeavors for Best Buy.
Best Buy reports next week. Shareholders must be freaking out.
This was probably not a good holiday quarter for Best Buy. RadioShack
When you factor in the market's disappointment with Best Buy's previous report and the way it dropped the ball with many holiday pre-orders, there's little reason to get excited here.
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Obviously, this is the kind of meandering that's already baked into the share price, but just remember that Best Buy fell woefully short on the bottom line in its two previous quarters.
This trend is definitely not your friend.
Best Buy is not a good buy
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