Wal-Mart Stores Inc., the world’s largest retailer, set the stage for price wars Monday as it announced it’s cutting prices on more than 16,000 items starting this week in a bid to turn around sales for the critical back-to-school season.
Shares of key retailers such as Sears Holding Corp. and J.C. Penney Co. were down, as investors worried about how ensuing price wars would affect profit margins. Wal-Mart slipped 2 cents to $48.04.
Wal-Mart’s price cuts, which range from 10 percent to 50 percent, will be backed by a new ad campaign on how to save money as gas prices remain high and kids head back to school. The cuts are deeper and involve even more items than in the year-ago period and top the 11,000 items discounted in advance of last year’s holiday season, according to Melissa O’Brien, a company spokeswoman.
Wal-Mart has been playing up its low prices since late last year after getting hurt by a focus on trendy merchandise in an effort to get affluent customers to buy more than just groceries. While the upscale strategy worked in electronics, it failed in home furnishings and apparel, resulting in sluggish sales since last fall.
So far this fiscal year, Wal-Mart has averaged a same-store sales gain of a meager 1 percent, compared to rival Target Corp.’s 4.1 percent increase, according to Thomson Financial.
Same-store sales are sales at stores open at least a year and are considered a key indicator of a retailer’s health.
In April, Wal-Mart’s same-store sales dropped – the weakest performance since it began publishing monthly sales in 1980.
Last year, Wal-Mart’s same-store sales averaged a 2.1 percent increase, while Target had a 4.9 percent increase.
Wal-Mart did enjoy some improvement last month when it posted a better-than-expected same-store sales gain of 2.4 percent, indicating that its more aggressive discount strategy may be resonating with shoppers. (MORE)