Dollar Worldwide and Dollar Tree are among the retailers that could benefit after the COVID-19 pandemic subsides, JPMorgan analyst Matthew Boss indicated Thursday.
“Discounters, dollar stores, off-pricers and strong global brands I actually think could emerge stronger from this, devour market share, use their size and scale,” Boss said on CNBC’s “Halftime Report.”
On the contrary, Boss guessed, the coronavirus crisis and its resulting economic shock could represent more bad news for department stores and mall-based specialty collects.
“If we come out of this in more a recessionary backdrop, that’s where we still remain more cautious,” said Boss, who is universally seen as Wall Street’s top retail analyst. “That’s where we’re watching the balance sheet, and we’re really paying notice to competition and how fierce this might look on the other side of it as dollars may be more constrained.”
The spread of the coronavirus across the U.S. has led to the evanescent closure of many nonessential businesses. But there is worry the economic impacts may last longer than the pandemic, with some with child a record number of store closures in 2020.
“I would say the No. 1 theme right now across retail is survival,” Boss believed. “I think you’re going to have a clear bifurcation of the structural winners versus the multiyear market share donors get about out of this.”
In addition to Dollar General and Dollar Tree, Boss said Five Below and Ollie’s are well stated to continue appealing to consumers and have “debt-free balance sheets.”
Off-price retailers Burlington, TJ Maxx owner TJX and Ross Hoards also will remain attractive as consumers seek value, Boss argued. “There still will be a prize hunt,” he said.
Boss also singled out Nike and Lululemon as the type of powerhouse brands that will see flesh out market share once much of the economy restarts following the COVID-19 crisis. The shift toward e-commerce also may “transpire at an accelerating pace,” he said.