Foreign stores drive Wal-Mart profits

Article Excerpt

WAL-MART STORES INC. $46 (New York symbol WMT; Conservative Growth Portfolio, Consumer sector; Shares outstanding: 4.2 billion; Market cap: $193.2 billion; WSSF Rating: Above average) is doing a good job expanding profits at its international operations. In its first fiscal quarter ended April 30, 2007, overseas sales rose 18.5%, while profit grew 19.3%. However, high gasoline prices, the slump in the housing market and bad weather hurt customer traffic at its stores in the United States, which account for 75% of its revenue and 80% of its profit. Same-store sales in the U.S. rose just 0.6% in the most recent quarter, compared with a 3.8% gain a year earlier. Still, Wal-Mart’s quarterly income grew 6.3%, to $0.68 from $0.64, while total revenue rose 8.4%, to $86.4 billion from $79.7 billion. Same-store sales will probably rise only slightly for the balance of fiscal 2008, as the company re-models many of its stores. But better inventory management, particularly for seasonal goods, should expand Wal-Mart’s…