1 / 28

Discount Variety Stores Industry Module 2 Kate Johnson

Discount Variety Stores Industry Module 2 Kate Johnson. “Save Time. Save Money.”. Largest discount retailer in the US by number of stores Goodlettsville , Tennessee 11,000 stores 40 States Southern, Southwestern, Midwestern, Eastern US Merchandise is typically $10 or less

shayla
Download Presentation

Discount Variety Stores Industry Module 2 Kate Johnson

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Discount Variety Stores Industry Module 2 Kate Johnson

  2. “Save Time. Save Money.” • Largest discount retailer in the US by number of stores • Goodlettsville, Tennessee • 11,000 stores • 40 States • Southern, Southwestern, Midwestern, Eastern US • Merchandise is typically $10 or less • Founded in 1939 • Stock publicly traded in 2009

  3. Product Types • Two brands: 1)High quality nationalbrands from leading manufacturers 2)Comparable quality privatebrand selections 10,000 SKUS/store 10$ or less

  4. How are they profitable? • Convenient Locations • Time Saving Shopping Experience • Everyday Low Prices on Quality Merchandise • Key items in a broad range of general merchandise categories • Most basic shopping needs are met in one trip

  5. Step 1Original Balance Sheet

  6. Step 2: NEANELNEA

  7. NEA

  8. NFL

  9. Check

  10. Uncertainties • 1) Cash and Cash Equivalents • 2) Income taxes receivable • 3) Redeemable common stock

  11. Cash and Cash Equivalents • Goal: estimate amount of cash required to fund normal enterprise operations -collecting from customers - paying bills and employees - buying inventory • Threshold for necessary cash: (1/52 times sales) • Historically, Dollar General carries less than one week of sales in cash (with the exception of 2010)

  12. Cash and Cash Equivalents Two things to contemplate: 2009, 2011, 2012 less than a weeks sales in cash is on the balance sheet? Why is there over 2% in 2010 and higher than usual in 2009?

  13. Cash and Cash Equivalents Continued • Less than 2% is normalfor this industry! • These companies tend to have excellent cash management • Average for the past 4 years: • Target • Wal-Mart 1.4% • Costco 1.5% • Dollar General 1.85% • Curiously, however, Dollar Tree 5.4%

  14. 2009 and 2010 explanation: During the recession, consumers went downward regarding retail shopping. Therefore, Dollar General experienced higher than average profits, particularly in 2010 (2009 too). -Thus, cash was higher than normal -Registers kept more full of cash -Massive amounts of additional projects in 2011 and 2012 Therefore, I didn’t separate enterprise/financing cash for 2010*

  15. Income Taxes Receivable

  16. Redeemable Common Stock

  17. Step 3 Original Income Statement

  18. Step 4 Calculate EPAT

  19. Tax Rate in computing EPAT

  20. FEAT

  21. Investigate Further • Interest Income (and lack thereof) • Interest expense for 2012 changes when compared • No comprehensive income from 2011 • Other income/expense • Why in 2010 were expenses so low? • Unrealized net gain on hedged transactions

  22. Interest Income and Changing Interest Expense

  23. Comprehensive Income-sometimes not included on I/S

  24. Other (Income) Expense • Despite Module 2 telling us to wait until Module 10 to figure this out • “Notes” and “Interest” make this sound like financing, so it was eliminated from EPAT calculation

  25. Unrealized net gain on hedged transactions A security whose price is dependent upon or derived from one or more underlying assets. The most common underlying assets include stocks, bonds, commodities, currencies, interest rates and market indexes. Assumption: This is used in the computation of FEAT, not EPAT Why this needs to be investigated further: -Hedging can be either a financing or enterprising activity. -Oftentimes, discount retailers hedgefuel cost. Fuel is core to their operations (diesel moves the product) and EPAT. -DG could also be hedging interest rates on their variable rate debt which could be financing and FEAT.

  26. Tax Benefit Allocated to Financing Activities • Is this an example? Even though not on I/S?

More Related