The economy’s “normalization process” after the COVID-19 crisis was never going to be “orderly,” as retailers’ inventories had dwindled in the pandemic amid excessive consumer demand for goods, according to Morgan Stanley Wealth Management.
Formerly soaring profits are now taking a hit.
“As inventories have recovered and consumer spending shifts toward services and away from merchandise goods, retailers’ operating margins have begun to plummet,” wrote Lisa Shalett, chief investment officer, in a note Tuesday. “This double-whammy may have further to run but this should not be a reason to fear a recession.”
Shalett pointed to the chart below to show how “even a little bit of inventory hits profits” in retail.
“The economic slowdown that we are experiencing should have been anticipated given one of the most spectacular V-shaped recoveries since World War II,” Shalett said. “Even so, it has led to negative economic surprises, a downward recalibration of corporate earnings and a decline in stock prices.”
Shares of Target Corp. TGT, -3.10% are down around 28% in May, on pace for their worst month since October 1987 and the second worst month on record, according to Dow Jones Market Data. Walmart Inc.’s WMT, -0.05% 15% drop in May has the company’s stock on track for the worst month since February 2018.
The S&P 500 index’s consumer discretionary SP500.25, +1.38% and consumer staples SP500.30, -0.55% sectors are each heading for a drop around 4.5% in May, according to FactSet data, at last check. Only real estate is on pace to fare worse, with losses of 5% Tuesday afternoon, the final trading session of the month.
“Like the rest of the economy, retailing is reverting to trend from excessive stimulus and overshoots,” Shalett said. “This normalization process may be lumpy but likely provides opportunities for stock pickers.”
The U.S. stock market was trading mostly down Tuesday afternoon, with the S&P 500 SPX, -0.62% and the Dow Jones Industrial Average DJIA, -0.67% each showing declines while the Nasdaq Composite COMP, -0.41% was about flat.