Earnings Results: Whirlpool slashes annual guidance, seeing demand slowdown

Daily Trade

Appliances maker Whirpool Corp. late Monday reported mixed second-quarter earnings and slashed its guidance for the year, saying the results came amid a “challenging environment” with rising costs and a demand slowdown.

Whirlpool
WHR,
-1.86%

said it lost $371 million, or $6.62 a share, swinging from earnings of $581 million, or $9.15 a share, in the year-ago period. It pinned the loss mostly on an one-off charge of $747 million related to losses from the sale of its Russia business.

Adjusted earnings came in at $5.97 a share “despite elevated cost inflation and demand slowdown,” the company said. Sales fell 4% to $5.1 billion from $5.3 billion a year ago, hit by supply-chain disruptions and demand cooling, offset in part by a favorable product price and mix, the maker said.

Analysts polled by FactSet expected adjusted earnings of $5.27 a share on sales of $5.2 billion. Shares of Whirlpool rose 2% in the extended session Monday after ending the regular trading day down 1.9%.

Whirlpool said it expects full-year 2022 revenue of about $20.7 billion, which would be a drop of about 6% from 2021 and contrasts with FactSet consensus calling for revenue of $21.8 billion for the year. When it reported first-quarter results in April, Whirlpool had called for 2022 net sales growth between 2% and 3%.

It slashed per-share GAAP earnings to between $9.50 and $11.50 for the year, from between $24 and $26, and to between $22 and $24 on an adjusted basis. Guidance had already been dialed down in April.

Shares of Whirlpool have lost 30% so far this year, compared with losses of 17% for the S&P 500 index
SPX,
+0.13%
.

Articles You May Like

Uber may use tech from Chinese autonomous-driving company Pony AI outside the U.S.: report
Activist Ananym has a list of suggestions for Henry Schein. How the firm can help improve profits
Data centers powering artificial intelligence could use more electricity than entire cities
Nvidia’s stunning 2024 return has all the makings of a stock-market dynasty
It’s time now to focus on Nvidia, Treasury bonds and a bullish finish to 2024