Looking for Resiliency in Q4 Retail Results

The leftovers are gone, the must-have toys have been lost, and resolutions lie broken. There's just one more holiday event to go, and that's fourth quarter earnings reports from large U.S. retailers. Overall expectations reflect energetic consumer spending, but the markets will be paying more attention to the outlook for tariff management and consumer sentiment volatility as 2025 continues.

In the coming weeks, investors can expect earnings reports from some big-box retailers: Walmart (WMT), Home Depot (HD), Lowe's (LOW), Target (TGT), and Costco (COST). Because holiday retail sales were strong, revenue and earnings numbers may be good and in line with expectations throughout the sector. Instead, the focus will be on expectations for 2025.

Amazon (AMZN) set the tone with its earnings report on February 6. Sales climbed 10% to $187.8 billion in the fourth quarter, compared with $170 billion a year earlier. "The holiday shopping season was the most successful yet for Amazon," said Andy Jassy, Amazon's President and CEO, in the earnings release. Of course, claims of success by CEOs do not always translate into results.

Along with the good news about the December quarter, Amazon's management signaled concerns about the first quarter, primarily due to exchange rates. The strong dollar is likely to affect other retailers with international operations, such as Walmart and Home Depot.

Amazon's earnings came out shortly after the February 2025 release of the Michigan Surveys of Consumers, which showed continued declines across the board. The Index of Consumer Sentiment for February is below where it was a year ago, and consumers are gearing up for inflation. Meanwhile, the federal government has been enacting some tariffs, especially against imports from China, and had earlier been discussing others including against goods from Mexico and Canada.

"Tariffs could stifle growth and weigh on margins, in general, but companies with consumer staples or popular brands might weather the storm," said Alex Coffey, senior trading strategist at Schwab.