Get Woke, Go
Broke? DICK'S Sporting Goods Warns Investors That Decision To Get Rid Of Guns
Cost Company Dearly
ByEmily Zanotti
@emzanotti
December 2, 2018
Dick's Sporting Goods is warning investors that its
decision to remove certain "assault-style" weapons from its Field
& Stream stores cost it dearly and may limit its future gains.
The sporting goods retailer was forced to confront angry
shareholders late last week after its stocks tanked more than 4.5% and
financial conglomerate J.P. Morgan Chase downgraded Dick's shares, from
"overweight" to "neutral."
"Gross margin-driven upside appears less probable
given 3Q's performance, changing comparisons, and rising inventory
levels," an analyst for J.P. Morgan told CNBC. The same
analyst noted that same-store sales for Dick's outlets are expected to grow
less than 1% even as the company's inventory rises.
"The analyst pointed out that Dick's same-store
sales growth for 2019 is expected to be less than 1 percent after averaging 2.1
percent between 2011 and 2015. He also noted that while the company's 25
percent Black Friday store discount will help boost sales, it will not boost
margins," the analyst continued. "Inventory levels, meanwhile, rose 1
percent in the third quarter after falling 5 percent in the first half of 2018
with inventory days estimated to return back to 2015-2017 levels."
Dick's says it can trace the downturn not just to an overall
retail downturn, but also directly to its decision to take action on "gun
control," banning the sales of "assault-style" rifles at its
Field & Stream affiliated retailer and discontinuing any gun sales to
people under the age of 21.
Speaking to USA Today,
Lee Bolitsky, Dick's chief financial officer, called out the company's gun
sales plan directly, but also pointed out that gun sales are down across the
board — not just at Field & Stream (largely the result of the Trump
administration, which is not the kind of pointed threat to gun rights its
predecessor was).
"In addition to the strategic decisions we made
regarding firearms earlier this year, the broader industry has decelerated and
remains weak as evidenced by most recent national background check data,''
Bolitsky told investors. "We believe this also contributed to the
decline.''
But while Bolitsky didn't come out and say it directly,
it seems that Dick's' decision to cut down on its gun sales had an impact in
other areas of its business. Gun owners and pro-gun consumers may not be ale to
buy their guns from Dick's any longer, but they also seem to have made the
conscious decision not to trust Dick's as an outfitter for any of their other
needs — particularly their hunting needs.
Dick's has seen a decline in sales of its hunting gear
overall — such a decline that they're considering removing hunting
and outdoors equipment from all of their stores in order to boost
their bottom line and cull some of their excess inventory.
"Months after Dick's Sporting Goods made the move to
stop selling assault-style rifles, the company is now considering removing all
hunting gear," a Texas ABC affiliate reported on Friday. "Dick's CEO
Edward Stack revealed during a conference call that they removed all hunting
gear from 10 stores as a test run."
Those stores — including stores in Texas — will
replace the hunting gear with more "traditional sporting goods," like
"baseball, licensed products, and outerwear."
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