UPDATE:Best Buy CEO Rejects Notion Co Driving Share Via Discounting
September 30 2009 - 1:24PM
Dow Jones News
Best Buy Co. (BBY) President and Chief Executive Brian Dunn on
Wednesday rejected the notion that the consumer electronics
retailer is driving its market-share gains by discounting.
Speaking during a holiday preview for the media in Manhattan,
Dunn said that Best Buy intends to "bet on price points" for
specific items, and stock inventory according to demand. But he
said the company's emphasis on service through its Geek Squad
business will help differentiate it among shoppers.
Concerns that aggressive promotions will weigh on Best Buy's
profits in coming quarters have pressured shares since the retailer
reported second-quarter results Sept. 15. Shares recently traded
down 0.5% at $37.67.
But Dunn said Wednesday he is "very confident" that Best Buy
will achieve the $2.70 to $3 a share per-share earnings that the
company outlined two weeks ago when it raised its fiscal 2009
guidance.
Dunn also said Best Buy will hire more holiday workers this year
than in 2008, though he didn't provide specific figures. The need
is likely to be driven, in part, by demand for mobile phones and
internet-connected flat-panel televisions, he said. Best Buy sold
more flat-panel TVs in July than last December, and Dunn expects to
sell more this holiday season.
A recent survey by human resources consulting firm Hay Group
Inc. found nearly half the nation's 25 biggest retail chains expect
to hire fewer holiday workers this season than they did last
year.
Toys "R" Us on Wednesday said it plans to hire 35,000 seasonal
workers nationwide, the same number as the past two holiday
seasons.
Best Buy's Dunn named several products he expects will be hot at
the largest U.S. electronics retailer by sales this holiday season:
Blu ray disc players, netbooks, smartphones and ultra-thin LED TVs.
Gift cards, too, should prove popular, and electronic book readers
could be "very interesting," he said.
And despite industry concerns that netbook sales will steal away
business from notebook computers, Dunn said the two are really more
"companion" pieces.
"It's (the netbook) not a piece I bring to Europe, because I
need more horsepower with me," Dunn said.
(Mary Ellen Lloyd contributed to this story.)
-By Veronica Dagher, Dow Jones Newswires; 212-416-2261;
veronica.dagher@dowjones.com