A Daring and Risky Turnaround Strategy by DSW

March 19, 2019 by Jon C. Ogg

The world of corporate turnarounds never seems to run out of aggressive strategies. The case of DSW Inc. (NYSE: DSW) is one long-time turnaround when the actual turnaround just seems to be more and more elusive for its shareholders.

The backdrop for this story would seem to be the earnings report. There is far more to this story than just earnings. While the latest quarterly numbers were disappointing, DSW showed that it grew sales over the past year and the company’s earnings release and outlook to 2021 sound far more positive than the share price reaction has been.

There is a reason shareholders have some concerns here. The long-term plans for DSW come with big changes. That also means big risks.

DSW reported a quarterly loss of $45.7 million, or −$0.58 per share. That is down from a profit of $12 million ($0.15 per share) a year earlier and less than the Refinitiv (Thomson Reuters) consensus estimate for earnings of $0.04 per share.

DSW’s full-year adjusted earnings were reported as $1.66 per share, including $0.12 per share in items from the wind-down of operations of exited businesses. The company’s results also showed that it crossed the $3 billion revenue threshold for the first time ever, led by a 6% increase in comparable sales.

DSW is no new name for investors looking for “value stocks” in which the share price action looks worse than the underlying performance of the company. A double-digit percentage drop on this day is also only part of the story.

With shares at $25.36 ahead of earnings, DSW shares were barely positive from the $24.70 closing price on the last day of 2018. Its shares were also down almost 27% from the 52-week high of $34.63. The damage looks even worse considering that the stock’s highest price was above $47.00 in late-2013. Stocks have continued to soar since then, and what was almost a five-year bull market back then is now a 10-year one.

Being a discount retailer and wholesaler to the public has been a hard strategy for many companies. The threat of the continual migration to online sales and e-commerce, away from one store to an “unbricked” store, has been one issue for all brick-and-mortar retailers. Amazon owns Zappos, and every major retailer from Walmart and Target down to niche stores have been investing in their online and omnichannel models. Distributing the products of others, even if some of them may be bulk-buys and close-out deals, can have a limiting effect on margins with such strong competition for every available sales dollar.

DSW’s commentary in its earnings release has been far better than the share price would indicate. The company has seen five consecutive quarters of positive comparable sales, and it has seen seven consecutive quarters of positive footwear comparable sales. It has relaunched its rewards program and showed that digital demand grew by more than 30%. The company has also now completed two acquisitions that added two new segments (Canada Retail and Brand Portfolio) and has changed its in-store customer experience with the introduction of the W Nail Bar.

In a surprise move, DSW is planning an entire rebranding campaign. The company is changing its name to Designer Brands and is even changing its New York Stock Exchange ticker to DBI from DSW with an effective date of April 2, 2019. On top of the name change, the company plans to sell its own products to the public. DSW’s name change is taking place immediately.

DSW announced three-year strategic priorities and financial goals, and the name change is said to reflect its strategy along with what will be a unique business model. The company is targeting a 240 basis point gain in its gross profits over the next three years and is targeting adjusted earnings of $2.65 to $2.75 per share in 2021. It is also targeting approximately 5.5% revenue growth (CAGR) and $800 million cumulative cash flow over the next 3-year period.

The company plans to build exclusive brands and products for DSW and The Shoe Company through Camuto Group. On top of the expanding services of its W Nail Bar in stores, the company will offer custom insoles, shoe repair and shoe concierge services.

CEO Roger Rawlins said of the plan:

The long-term plan we announced today represents a new chapter for our Company as we take greater control of our destiny in today’s changing retail landscape. Over the next three years and beyond, we will leverage our integrated enterprise to continue delivering differentiated products and experiences while significantly expanding our gross margin by bringing the production of our private brands in-house through our industry-leading Camuto Group and increasing the sales penetration of all of our produced brands across our retail channels. We look forward to continuing to drive innovation and increase market share by delivering positive comp sales while also growing complementary categories and markets.

For fiscal 2019 (ending Feb. 1, 2020) the company’s guidance is for low double-digit revenue growth (after $3.2 billion over this last year), sees increasing comparable store sales in the low single-digit range and is targeting adjusted earnings to be between $1.80 to $1.90 per share. The company’s outlook assumes a tax rate of approximately 27%, and approximately 81 million shares outstanding.

DSW’s capital plan in the past year took its cash and investments down to $169 million from $301 million the prior year. Its debt also rose to $160 million from having no debt outstanding at the end of the prior year, after two acquisitions and share repurchases. Year-end inventories were up to $645 million from $502 million at the end of the prior year.

Again, this turnaround strategy comes with big risks. It’s one thing to sell other designers products for a profit in a highly competitive environment. By launching its own products the goal is to increase margins.

The risks here are huge for DSW’s shareholders. Even after considering its existing brand partnerships that are in place, along with stakes of certain brands and companies, the effort of going in-house comes with huge risks. Design costs can get out of control, manufacturing issues can occur from the start, input and labor costs can get in the way and a few dozen other items. Perhaps the biggest risk is if the products miss the mark with consumers, and then there is a growing worry that a recession will hit by 2021.

As the risks are huge, there is also an incredible opportunity. Rawlins is still considered to be fairly new to running the company, and there is of course a chance that this strategy could outperform the company’s (and investors’) expectations.

DSW shares were last seen trading down more than 13% at $21.91, and the 7.7 million shares that had traded hands as of 12:30 p.m. were more than six times a full normal day’s trading volume. After trading as low as $21.32 earlier in the day, its 52-week range is $20.99 to $34.63. The Refinitiv consensus price target from sell-side analysts was listed as $29.33, but that figure is likely to change after the results have been seen.

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