I came to that conclusion in Myer many years ago!
Not a desirable retail experience, IMO.
I actually went to the boxing day sales.. and compared to last years, there was virtually no difference in pricing.
Even though they claimed this would be the biggest year for discounts ever!
I'd rather shop online lol.
Unless I try something on I can rarely tell what the thing is going to look like, so clothing shops should be OK unless you try on then go home an buy online.
But if the shops become extinct not even that will be possible.
They need to create gimmiks to get young people in stores.
I never buy pop corn at the supermarket but I buy a bucket load when I go to the movies at rip off prices!
No pls.
Holding long @ $12 looking for an exit!!
watching JBH drop to $11 made it buy for me today, although i am watching it very closely.
jb's increased its online sales by about 87% last time.. still retail is being hammered.
It sounds cheap and there are few bullish on it, but its too long a wait until retail kicks off again.
I think the bricks and mortar type stores have the advantage when it comes to larger consumer goods, ie white goods, large tv's or other long term purchases.
Reason being is that theyre hard to get online due to size, delivery etc.
Having said that, these items probably wouldnt make more than 20% of their sales im guessing.
Its the smaller everyday type items I bet that stores like JB Hi-Fi were doing so well in, ie ipods, cameras, movies, etc
I think the bricks and mortar type stores have the advantage when it comes to larger consumer goods, ie white goods, large tv's or other long term purchases
Here are a few comparison (from WebIress).
Code / Trailing PE / Div yield / Price to Assets
DJS / 8.36 / 10.14% / 2.03
MYR / 8.47 / 9.7% / N/A
HVN / 8.84 / 5.71% / 0.96
JBH / 14.74 / 5.13% / 26.32 (before today)
I agree that PE compression was needed, however of those businesses with P/E listed in the post that you quoted do you think any of the others are close to having a 'competitive advantage'? It remains to be seen whether JBH is a true low cost competitor, the blackest times are probably still ahead, but if it does have such a competitive advantage it may be worth watching the margins (and possible recovery) over the next 12-18 months. Another wave of capitulation selling might make it compelling.Our old friend PE compression is alive and well. It made no sense for JBH to be on that multiple, as if it was somehow immune to the retailing downturn. JBH reporting today that profit will be up to 9% lower than last year.
I am tempted to open a CFD account to start taking a leveraged long position on this stock. Div yield > PE ratio, everybody is down on JBH and apparently it is the most shorted stock on the ASX. What more do you need to know?
Still can't believe it dropped to ~$11 tbh
I agree that PE compression was needed, however of those businesses with P/E listed in the post that you quoted do you think any of the others are close to having a 'competitive advantage'? It remains to be seen whether JBH is a true low cost competitor, the blackest times are probably still ahead, but if it does have such a competitive advantage it may be worth watching the margins (and possible recovery) over the next 12-18 months. Another wave of capitulation selling might make it compelling.
We anticipate that this level of discounting will continue over the next quarter but we do not believe that this is a long term structural change
I am tempted to open a CFD account to start taking a leveraged long position on this stock. Div yield > PE ratio, everybody is down on JBH and apparently it is the most shorted stock on the ASX. What more do you need to know?
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