Motley Fool Money - Walmart Warns, Shopify Stumbles
Episode Date: July 26, 2022Retail (physical and digital) is squarely in the spotlight. (0:22) Jason Moser discusses: - Walmart cutting guidance for the quarter and full fiscal year - The ripple effect for shares of Amazon, ...Costco, and Target - Shopify CEO Tobi Lutke's memo to employees about layoffs - Whether Shopify's falling stock, close to a 3-year low, looks like a buying opportunity (14:41) Robert Brokamp talks with financial psychologist Dr. Brad Klontz about why we're all a little crazy about money. Stocks mentioned: WMT, TGT, AMZN, COST, SHOP Host: Chris Hill Guests: Jason Moser, Robert Brokamp, Dr. Brad Klontz Producer: Ricky Mulvey Engineers: Dan Boyd, Rick Engdahl Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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Walmart went down and took a bunch of retailers with it.
Motley Fool Money starts now.
I'm Chris Hill joining me today.
Once again, back by Popular Demand,
Motley Full Senior Ambulance, Jason Moser.
Thanks for being here.
I don't know about the popular demand,
but thank you for having me.
How about this?
Coming out of the bullpen, Jason Mozor.
Whatever it takes, right?
We got to talk about retail
because that is the story.
of the day and we'll start with Walmart. Walmart doesn't report earnings until mid-August,
but shares are down 8% this morning, which for a company of its size is an enormous move.
Walmart cut guidance for the current quarter and the full fiscal year. They say higher prices
are causing customers to buy less. So Walmart is cutting prices to reduce inventory.
And it's not just Walmart, Jason. This is a retailer of such size and important.
that it is dragging other major retail stocks down with it, Target, Amazon, and Costco,
just to name three.
Yeah. I mean, I think this really does speak to the pernicious nature of inflation, right?
I mean, it's something that we talked for a long time, many, many years, right?
I mean, it just felt like, I mean, at some point or another inflation was going to have
to rear its ugly head, and then it just kind of sneaks up on you.
And now all of a sudden, it's what we've been talking about here for most of the year.
And it doesn't look like it's a discussion that's going to be ending anytime soon, right?
I mean, the interesting thing here in regard to Walmart is they're actually calling for U.S.
comp sales to clock in a little bit higher than initially guided for, right?
So they're seeing positive action on the sales side, right, the revenue side of the business,
but the costs involved are weighing more and more on the overall business, right?
operating margin is expected to clock in at around 4.2 percent now for the second quarter,
and somewhere in the 3.8 to 3.9 percent range for the fiscal year.
And I mean, this is Walmart, right?
I mean, it's a company that operates on razor-thin margins already.
So when you see any sorts of cost pressures like this, I mean, it's understandable the reaction
from the market, although I would argue it feels to me like it's a bit short-sighted.
But, you know, we're at a period now where uncertainty is high.
And we know that when uncertainty is high, you typically see reactions like this from investors
and that puts us to where we are today.
And you have to assume that somewhere in the back of management's mind is what happened
recently with Target, where Target came out and was forced to say, we completely blew the inventory
mix and we saw the huge reaction downward for target stock.
And with Walmart, it's not so much about the inventory mix, but just the inventory piling
up.
And so clearly they wanted to get out ahead of this because when they reported mid-August,
they're going to be understandably a lot of questions about back-to-school shopping, about
early indications around the holidays.
And they're taking a hit today, and I guess the calculus is, better we take this hit now
and get out ahead of it.
Yeah, and I think that makes perfect sense.
And I think if there is a silver lining to this, I mean, they continue to gain share in the
grocery space.
And I think a lot of folks, they don't think about Walmart through that lens.
But really, I mean, Walmart being one of the nation's leading grocers, and that's something
that looks like it is continuing to become more and more of the case.
So, they run into a situation. Food inflation at double digits. It's higher now that
it was at the end of the first quarter. No surprise, I think we're all feeling that. Every
time I go to the grocery store, I'm a little bit taken back by how much it costs just
to buy stuff to make one dinner now. It is something that's impacting everyone. But it forces
us as consumers to make different choices. And that's, when we talk about inflation, how to deal
with recessionary times, there is no silver bullet, right? Sometimes it really just boils down to,
Sometimes you have to make different choices.
You have to sacrifice a little bit here and there during the tougher times.
So, food obviously be a need as opposed to a lot of the other things that Walmart sells,
which are oftentimes considered just wants, right?
We learn about that in grade school.
You got to make those choices between the needs and the wants.
And right now, the needs are clearly winning out.
And I agree with Walmart's decision here to go ahead and take the hit on the pricing to keep
inventory moving because at that scale, I mean, number one, Walmart, we mentioned they operate
on such a razor-thin margin. So what comes with that is they rely on volume. They just need
to keep moving stuff, right? They keep that inventory turn rate going. The longer they let
inventory sit on the shelves, the more they play into that inventory becoming obsolete,
and then they have to write off even more. So take a little pricing now because they know
that still people are shopping. It's just they're having to change the mix of that basket,
so to speak. Again, this is a timing thing. It's not something that will last forever,
but it is something that's going to be playing out here over the course of the next
several quarters. I do think it's really interesting to think now the implications of what's
going on in regard to inflation and how that is going to play out this holiday season.
Because, I mean, we're knocking on August tour here. The holiday season is right around
the corner. So we're going to start having more and more of these conversations.
It's going to be really interesting when they report, when we hear from Target, cost,
all the bricks and mortar retailers, it's going to be really interesting to hear what they all
say about traffic. Because part of the calculus for Walmart is we're going to cut prices
and maybe that affects the average ticket, but we got to make sure the traffic stays the same
or increases. We have to continue to be the place that our customers come to for value.
Yeah. And I think that's a great point. That's something to remember. When we focus on these
retailers. I mean, you look at restaurants as well, but I mean, anywhere from Walmart
to Home Depot and anything in between there, you focus on not only the size of the ticket,
right, the amount of money each ticket represents, but how many tickets, right? The number
of transactions. So you look at the size of that ticket, the number of that tickets,
and that gives you an idea of how traffic is going and how people are spending. Because
if you remember back a year and a half, two years ago, with a lot of stockpiling going, I don't
going and a lot of pantry stuffing going on. You would see lower numbers of transactions
with far larger tickets. People were going in there and just buying a lot at once, which was
a bit abnormal. So definitely something to pay attention to in the coming quarters is both the
number of transactions and the dollar value of those transactions.
Shopify reports Wednesday morning, but it's in the headlines today because CEO,
Toby Lukie sent a memo to employees saying the company will be laying off 1,000 people,
10% of the workforce. He wrote that he misjudged the boost that Shopify got from the pandemic.
And I'm quoting from the memo here, we bet that the channel mix, the share of dollars that
travel through e-commerce rather than physical retail, would permanently leap ahead by five or
even 10 years. It is now clear that bet did not pay off. As a Shopify shareholder, I genuinely
appreciate Lutki saying,
I blew this, the buck stops with me. This is also a pretty astonishing and rapid fall from grace
that this business has had when you think about where it was a year ago in terms of its share
price and the planning that they made. Lukie went on Twitter, posted the memo after this story
was reported, even went so far as to say, we've got some really great people at our company,
And unfortunately, we have to say goodbye to them.
And he included an email address saying, if you're hiring, drop an email to us and we can put
you in touch with some of our employees.
All of that is great, but I'm really sort of stunned at how quickly the tide has turned
for Shopify.
Yeah.
I mean, I guess given what we've seen with so many of these other stay-at-home stock names,
I'm not as surprised as perhaps I would have been if Shopify was one of the first shoes
to drop, right?
But really, we've seen this play out with a number of these businesses over the last several
quarters here where this stay-at-home stock mania has sort of fizzled out.
And ultimately, a lot of growth gets pulled forward, but that doesn't necessarily imply a new
standard going forward, right?
it's just growth that's pulled forward and then things start to normalize a little bit.
And that's what we're seeing now. I definitely cannot blame them for a decision that didn't
work out. I too, I'm a Shopify shareholder and have recommended the stock in one of my services.
And I remain optimistic with where the company is headed. I appreciate Toby's transparency,
his honesty, his empathy. I mean, he really did get out in front of this. And I think that's
That's what you want to see with a leader, particularly a leader that continues to tout that the
company is so mission-driven, right?
I think he sees well beyond just the financials.
At least that's the message he communicates.
I think it was reasonable to think at the time that the acceleration in e-commerce was real and
would continue.
And again, I think that that acceleration is real.
still likely to a degree, but again, we go back to this normalizing. He published a chart,
a graph in the letter on their investor relationship site, which I encourage anyone to go read
it because I think it's just very well written, and it gives you just kind of an idea of
what kind of leader he's trying to be. But it just shows sort of this nice, smooth line-up
of e-commerce capturing retail share over time. And then you see this little blip over the past
couple of years, this little mountain that just sort of forms on that line. And that is what
we've seen with a lot of these businesses, right? They just, they saw this unique stretch
of time over the last couple of years where they pulled a lot of success forward, but that
wasn't necessarily normal, right? So we're getting back to this sort of normalization.
And they are far from the only company to over hire during this stretch. And I think, you know,
in their line of work, it's very reasonable to make that mistake of overhire.
I mean, there are a lot of businesses out there where overhiring was not the best idea in the world, right?
Depending on what market you're pursuing, it's understandable in their case.
And I also look at a company like Amazon as a comparable here to think, well, you know, Amazon's dealing with this to an extent as well.
Not necessarily the same way, but, I mean, Amazon overbuilt, they're dealing with all of that excess warehouse capacity.
We've discussed that on these shows before where they felt like a lot of that traffic was going to kind of be the new normal.
That turned out to not be the case.
So now they're stuck with all of the success capacity that they're looking to sub-lease out for
a time until they can grow into that capacity, which they undoubtedly at some point will.
The difference between Amazon and Shop-Fine is you can't fire warehouses, right?
So that's the difference.
Shop-fying a little bit of a different position. They do have to right-size the workforce as the economics demand.
And it's unfortunate, but I also do appreciate the angle from which Toby is approaching this.
I'm holding on to my shares of Shopify.
I think there are enough questions for me personally that I don't see this as a buying opportunity.
I understand anyone who thinks that way, because particularly in the context of the stock has
fallen, let's call it, 80 percent from where it was a year ago.
For me personally, not now.
Yeah.
I want to see some things turn around.
I'm with you.
I mean, as a shareholder, I mean, it's not my largest position by a long shot.
It's just a, it's a position I hold in the context of a well-diversified portfolio.
I sleep well at night.
This 15% hit today isn't going to make me lose a wink of sleep.
I do think there is plenty of opportunity for the business, but I also think you have
have to keep in mind, even with the pullback, even with this fall from grace, I mean, Shopify
is far from what we would call conventionally speaking a cheap or even reasonably priced
stock. It's still just a very expensive looking stock. I think part of that is based on the
market opportunity that it pursues. But I do think you need to keep that in mind, as we
like to say, price does always matter. So I too am hanging on to my shares. But yeah, I'm
I think I'd want to give this one a little time to kind of see how they're going to be approaching
the next several quarters with this business and how they're going to reassess the growth
strategy going forward as e-commerce's gain in the overall retail market starts to normalize.
Jason Moser, appreciate you being here and again. Thanks.
Thanks, thank you.
You could have all the right information and still make bad financial decisions. Robert Broke
I've talked with Dr. Brad Klontz, a financial psychologist, about the fundamental reasons behind
why we're all a little crazy when it comes to money.
Have you ever looked back at your life and wondered why you make less than ideal financial
decisions? You quite possibly knew better, but you just couldn't do better.
Here to explain why almost everyone isn't perfect when it comes to money is Dr. Brad Klontz.
He's an associate professor of practice at Creighton University, the co-founder of the Financial
Psychology Institute, managing principle of your mental wealth advisors.
and the author or co-author of six books, including Mind Over Money and Mammoth Money.
Dr. Brad, welcome to Motley Fool Money.
Thanks so much for having me.
So let's start with you explaining one of the main lessons of your research,
and that is when it comes to people making better financial decisions,
information is often not enough.
That's right.
I mean, we all are crazy when it comes to money.
This is the diagnosis I'm giving everybody, all of our listeners.
And what's strange about financial behaviors when it comes to psychological terms is that anyone
is doing anything right to begin with.
We are just not wired to manage money appropriately.
And a lot of this comes from just conceptualizing how we have spent 99.9% of our time
on the planet.
And we were doing that in a cave person sort of mentality in a small group of 100 to 150
people banded together, fighting for survival. And so all of our natural instincts are related to
increasing our survivability in that environment, not in modern society, especially around
something that is so abstract as money. Right. So we're not designed to delay gratification.
We are designed to make sure that we have a certain standing within the tribe, because if we don't,
we could be kicked out of the tribe, which is essentially a death sentence, you know,
a thousand years ago.
That's absolutely right.
And so we're wired to respond to threats immediately, not to delay taking action,
because that would have picked off your ancestors.
So we didn't get those genes.
It's sort of trite and funny when I hear people say, oh, you shouldn't care about what
other people think.
Well, all of the people who didn't care about what other people thought, they died out a
long time ago, getting expelled from the tribe.
Even the concept of saving would have been frowned upon because it would have been seen as
being a selfish activity because we needed to share everything with the entire tribe to survive.
And so just the mere act of saving goes against some of our hardwiring. And for those of us who
grew up in lower income environments, it is sort of hardwired into that even now where it's like,
hey, you need to share what you have. It's an expectation. Yeah. So when you look back on our
suboptimal habits and decisions and, you know, surprise, surprise, they come from our childhoods.
There could have been things our parents taught us deliberately or accidentally or other experiences we had.
You call the most significant experiences financial flashpoints. Explain what those are.
Right. So built on this craziness that everybody has, we have our own individual craziness, if you will,
based on our experiences we have around money. And so financial flashpoints are those typically early life events that have a
profound impact on our psychology around money because we're trying to make sense of what happened to us.
And these things can be anywhere from things that are quite traumatic. Like, for example, I found out
in looking into my family psychology around money that my grandfather lost all of his money in the
Great Depression, that is a financial flashpoint experience. He goes to the bank one day. All his money
is gone. And so that shaped his entire psychology around money the rest of his life. And big surprise,
he walked away with this belief you can't trust banks.
your money. And so these things go from dramatic and traumatic to being very simple things.
Another example is a client I had who I asked him why he didn't go to college. I was teaching at
Kansas State at the time. And his wife went to Kansas State, his parents went to Kansas State,
his siblings went to Kansas State. So I was like, what year did you graduate? He's like,
I didn't go to college. And I thought this was curious. I was like, why didn't you go to
college? He's like, well, I wanted to be an entrepreneur. I said, hold on a second. I'm not going to
let you off the hook. I'm a psychologist. Where did you get that belief and that understanding? And
He thought about it for a while, and he traced it back to playing the game of life.
Do you remember the game of life where you take a little blue and pink pegs?
That's right, that's right.
And he learned as an 11-year-old, if I skip the little college track, I can go straight to making
more money.
He built his entire approach to education and business around the game of life.
That is a financial flashpoint, one that he didn't even remember, but it had a profound
impact on the rest of his life.
That is quite something.
So, you know, we all have these experiences. You mentioned Kansas State. I first came across your work by getting my graduate certificate and financial therapy at Kansas State. And one of the assignments was to talk to our parents and grandparents, if they were still alive, about their money histories, their earliest money memories and things like that. And you say that from these experiences, we create our money scripts. So what are those and what are the four types?
In our attempt to make sense of those financial flashpoint experiences, and quite frankly,
the experiences of our parents, our grandparents, sometimes our great-grandparents, we develop a set
of beliefs around money, and really we're just trying to make sense of things. So for my
grandfather, the belief is you can't trust banks around money. Now, he passed that down to my
mother to you can't trust financial institutions around money, so my mother never invested,
which is one of the reasons why we were low income and low net worth for much of my life.
We have these set of beliefs that we get based on those experiences.
And in our studies, and we've studied, I think, upwards of 100,000 people at this point,
we have found distinct patterns of money scripts.
And they drive our financial behaviors for most of us, since money is somewhat of a taboo topic,
we don't talk about these things.
But we found four main categories.
Three of them are bad for you.
One of them is good for you.
The first category, money avoidance.
This is where we think money is bad.
Rich people are greedy.
there's virtue in having less money. No big surprise that that's not great for your financial health
and people have lower income, lower net worth. And the problem with these money scripts is we can
identify right now. We can even name names of people who are rich and wealthy and are terrible human
beings. That's the problem. There's an element of truth in all of these money scripts,
but they become problematic when we don't see the subtleties and the context and realizing that
they're only partially true. The second belief we found in our studies we call money worship or
focus. This is where we think more money, more stuff's going to solve all of our problems.
Probably no big surprise that leads to overspending, higher credit card debt, because we're trying
to fill this emotional need around with money and stuff that we really can't fill that way.
The third category we found is money status, which is the keeping up with the Jones's psychology.
So this is where if people ask us how much money we make, we say we make more than we actually do.
We won't buy something unless it's new. This is our design.
to show our status to other people so that they will love and accept us. This is also associated
with terrible financial outcomes, and growing up lower income is actually associated with that.
And then the fourth category is the good one. This is money vigilance. This is where you believe
that it's important to save for a rainy day. Ironically, these individuals will actually
downplay how much money they have. And this is something that I really ring the bell on a lot on
social media, trying to educate people on what actual self-made millionaires, how they actually
live their lives, how they describe themselves. And they describe themselves as frugal, and they
sort of downplay how much money they have. They do the opposite of what young people are seeing
on Instagram. So those are the four categories we found in our studies. Now, you took a look at the
differences between ultra-high net worth people and more of sort of middle wealth people. And you found
the ultra-net worth people have like 20 times the wealth, but they only spend maybe twice as much.
That's exactly right. I'm impressed with your knowledge of that study. I was shocked. I was absolutely shocked. We looked at a group that had $11 million in net worth on average, and we compared them to a group that had about $500,000 in network. You would expect them to be spending at a multiple compared to what they have, but that's not at all what we found. It was only twice as much. It's pretty shocking.
And by the way, if you want to get an idea what your money script might be, you could take the Clant's MoneyScript inventory at MoneyScripts.com. Okay, so from our money scripts,
That's sort of our attitudes, our history.
And then there's our behaviors.
And some behaviors aren't so good.
And you call those money disorders, which you define as persistent, predictable, often rigid patterns
of self-destructive financial behaviors.
So in your experience, what are some of the most common money disorders?
So there are money disorders.
I kind of look at them on a continuum.
They're the really severe ones that would require you, frankly, to get into psychotherapy
to fix.
Like we're talking about gambling disorder or hoarding disorder or compulsive buying disorder.
So those actually affect significant portion of the population around 6% roughly for each one of those categories.
But I think the average American tends to have a money disorder in terms of our savings rates,
our relationship with credit card debt, our lack of planning for the future.
This is something that we struggle with.
And I think that's what most Americans historically have been struggling with undersaving and overspending.
So some of the disorders are you term as.
relational. And a couple that I found particularly interesting are financial dependency and financial
enabling, which I think a lot of people wouldn't think of. They're probably familiar with
compulsive buying and all that, but the relationship you have with money in regarding to your
other relationships can have a big impact on your net worth as well as their net worth.
That's right. And so some of our studies have suggested that people who are most vulnerable
to giving money away in ways that hurt themselves and perhaps hurt the other person,
a lot of those individuals tend to be higher income but come from lower socioeconomic environments.
And this goes back to that tribal sort of mindset, which is certainly where I came from
growing up lower income, it's where you're supposed to share everything.
And so we feel this real desire.
And by the way, this is a beautiful thing, actually, too, this concept that I want to share
what I have with other people.
It becomes enabling when it's financial help that actually hurt.
So there's financial help that can help. Financial enabling is when it hurts. And this is when
we're giving away money that we can't afford to give away. So it's hurting ourselves and our family.
But more importantly, perhaps, it's creating possibly dependence in the recipient of that money.
And by the way, this is the same psychology around multi-generational welfare families as
multi-generational trust fund families. There's a dynamic around being dependent on non-work
income that can be really destructive.
In our studies have found that it leads to a lack of creativity, a lack of passion, a lack
a drive, and resentment towards the source of the money.
And so that's what we want to avoid, is that financial dependence.
We've touched a little bit on the role of trauma.
And people think of trauma.
Think of something like really violent, like an assault or you were in a war.
But it doesn't have to be that.
It could be something just very emotionally charged, especially to a kid.
And in some of your work you discussed about how trauma actually can physically change the brain.
And what's interesting about that is a lot of these monies disorders, if you see them and other people,
you kind of just want to shame them and blame them and say it's just a matter of willpower or weakness.
But there's actually could be some sort of physical component going on there.
That's absolutely right.
And what's frightening is that some of this trauma can get passed down from your grandparents and your great-grandparents and from your culture.
and you might not even know the story.
All you know is you have this intense anxiety or mistrust or you have some emotional response
to a financial situation and you're not even sure why.
And that's what trauma does.
Like trauma is anything where you're feeling that your life is threatened.
You're not sure if you're going to be able to care for yourself.
And I mean, growing up poor, like especially in poverty, is just a series of traumatic events
where you're constantly worried about your own survival.
And that has a profound impact on our relationship with money.
And as a financial advisor, I work with a lot of ultra-high network individuals.
And some of them who are self-made and really, really driven, when you look back into their
past, they come from a poverty background.
And they have this mindset, like, I am never going to be poor again.
And it has so much energy associated with it, that it becomes somewhat dysfunctional.
And so they're really, really good at saving money and accumulating assets.
But they live a life, like Ebenezer Scrooge, of almost like a poverty-type.
lifestyle where they're denying themselves, like, you know, they're basically eating gruel,
not heating their house. I mean, it's just sort of that Ebenezer-Skrooge mindset,
which is not healthy either. But yeah, trauma can have a profound impact on our lives.
Also in the markets, too. We did a study back in 2008 where we saw financial planners
were having post-traumatic stress symptoms based on the market declines. And that's another
thing we need to watch out for because people will then approach investing in harmful ways in the
future based on this emotional experience they're having right now.
So let's say someone does some research, does some reflection, they've determined their money
scripts, maybe identified their disorders, or at least just ways they could be better about money.
Now what? How does someone go about actually changing?
What's so fascinating is that sometimes just connecting the dots can radically change your life.
So you're struggling with, for example, too much credit card debt, and you realize that you're
starting to pay attention to your thinking because you just listen to this podcast.
You're like, what are my money scripts?
And you might have this fear that there'll never be enough money.
And you can connect that to, oh, well, that's because I grew up poor or my parents grew up
poor.
And I can just objectively kind of look at my situation and be like, well, you know, I'm okay
now.
Maybe I can enjoy some of my money.
That's part of it, right?
Part of it is saving for the future and enjoying today.
You need to have both to have financial health.
So sometimes just being aware of your money scripts and your financial flashpoints, you can sort
of like, dishame yourself.
And it's like, of course I made this boneheaded mistake around money.
It's based on where I came from and now I know better.
Sometimes, however, you have really strong emotion connected to it.
And I'll use my grandfather's example that you can't trust banks with your money.
That was such a deep wound for him.
He died at age 94.
He never put a dollar in the bank the rest of his life.
I mean, that's when it becomes dysfunctional.
And so if you know better and you understand why you're doing what you're doing and you have
that sort of awareness, but you just can't change this behavior, then it's time, I think,
that you should consider seeing a therapist who can help you with probably some trauma
and working through some of the emotions related to either financial flashpoint you experienced
directly or something that your ancestors went through. Well, this has been fascinating. Dr. Brad,
thank you for joining us. Thanks for having me. My pleasure.
As always, people on the program may have interest in the stocks they talk about,
and the Motley Fool may have formal recommendations for or against. So don't buy ourselves
stocks based solely on what you hear. I'm Chris Hill. Thanks for listening. We'll see you tomorrow.
