Online Journal for the Moose Pond Investors Club

Kohl’s Corporation

PFE Logo Here is one of several stocks for consideration. Kohl’s Corporation (KSS) keeps popping up on screens for quality growth companies. Kohl’s operates 669 family-oriented specialty department stores in virtually all areas of the U.S. except the Pacific Northwest and Florida. It sells name-brand merchandise with emphasis on value pricing. The fundamentals look good for Kohl’s with a projected average return over the next five years of 16.2%. Value Line rates Kohl’s financial strength “A” and earnings predictability 85 (out of 100). Value Line also projects revenue growth at 17%. Kohl’s has an RQR quality rating of 80.4. See annotated stock selection guide.

Different analysts have different expectations for Kohl’s. For example, the First Call analysists’ consensus for the 5-year earnings growth rate is 19.2%. In contrast, Morningstar only gives Kohl’s a mediocre rating. MS rates Kohl’s with three star and puts it’s fair value at $51.00 (below its current price of $55.63.) MS has assumed 12% revenue growth. The attached SSG assumes 17% based on the Value Line estimate. (Note: PAR on the SSG would drop to 11.2% with 12% sales growth.) More interesting are MS’ bull and bear comments.

Bulls Say

  • Kohl’s has recovered after its 2003 missteps. Although revenue growth continues to be a little disappointing, margins and inventory levels recovered nicely.
  • Kohl’s still has plenty of room to expand into new and existing markets, so it should be able to open stores at a brisk pace over the next few years.
  • Earnings have grown faster than sales, thanks to widening margins. MS expects the company to continue to leverage its SG&A spending as the store base expands, but increasing competition may make it tougher to expand gross margins.
  • Kohl’s off-the-mall format distinguishes it from the rest of the department-store industry, which is dominated by mall-based stores that consumers have found less convenient in recent years.

Bears Say

  • Recent lackluster same-store sales results illustrate that Kohl’s is not immune to slowdowns in consumer spending.
  • Some traditional department-store chains have copied elements of the firm’s strategy in an effort to regain lost share, so competition may continue to heat up.
  • Retail powerhouse Wal-Mart is coming on strong in apparel retail. Wal-Mart’s operational efficiency trounces that of Kohl’s.
  • The company stumbled in late 2003, cluttering stores with excessive inventory and creating a less-pleasant shopping environment. Management is correcting the problem, but this shows that smart executive teams can still falter.

Bottom line. KSS is a quality growth stock. Whether it falls into the buy zone depends on the assumed revenue growth. Based on the Value Line estimates for growth and net profit margins, KSS is a buy up to $62.

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