QAV America (free feed)
This week we dig into Kohl’s (KSS), the mid-range American department store chain that fired its CEO after just 15 weeks on the job for running a secret sweetheart deal with a former romantic partner. Tony and Cam work through the QAV scorecard, weigh up the enormous real estate portfolio sitting beneath the struggling retail business, and debate whether a Gordon Gekko moment is coming. Plus: Fed chair Kevin Warsh goes dark, the Strait of Hormuz tracker, and Willis Lease Finance announces a 3-for-1 stock split after a 383% run. This week’s full episode is for QAV Club members only. The free episode is available below. Also check out our podcast archives link and our pages on Apple Podcasts or Spotify or watch clips on TikTok [https://www.tiktok.com/@qavinvesting]. Or visit our homepage [https://qavamerica.com/home/] to learn more about QAV and how it works as a value investing system that you can learn and apply to beat the market. Free Podcast Archives [/listen/] TRANSCRIPTION QAV AMERICA 59 v2 Cameron: [00:00:00] Well welcome back to QAV America Tony episode 59 It’s the first day of the new financial year in Australia but Americans don’t care about that Tony Kynaston: No. Happy new financial year, Cam. Cameron: It’s it’s nearly the Fourth of July I said to my wife who’s an American uh Do you wanna celebrate the Fourth of July She’s like Yeah not really I was like Okay Tony Kynaston: She doesn’t wanna go to the MAGA concert on the reflecting pool. Cameron: I will I I was just looking for an excuse to make a pumpkin pie She goes Yeah the one pumpkin pie for Thanksgiving is enough You don’t need to get you know you know We’re going down the pumpkin pie slippery slope she says I do love making a pumpkin pie now Um well I haven’t checked It’s early morning here on uh Wednesday in Australia I haven’t checked what happened in the market in the US last night Oh it went up Tony Kynaston: Well up, yeah Cameron: It went up Well I did my market recap yesterday A few things going on in the [00:01:00] US over the last week that have affected the market There is um some uh concern I think now that probably aggressive rate cuts aren’t gonna happen Um with Kevin Warsh in at the Fed there was some optimism I think initially that uh he was gonna cut some rates But I think people are thinking yeah maybe that’s not gonna happen He seems to be signaling that gonna do the right thing despite the political expectations And uh they’ve got hotter inflation data three consecutive months of strong payrolls people seem to think that there might be a second rate hike by the end of the year Tony what are you reading in The Wall Street Journal and all that Tony Kynaston: Oh, s- the same. Um, I guess it’ll be very interesting because, [00:02:00] you know, he was appointed by Trump to specifically cut rates. The, the difficulty for him, for Warsh, is that he doesn’t. He’s not the only vote on the Fed, and the Fed still has other people who are, um, at least acting a little bit independently and making up their own mind on rates, and the data doesn’t support a rate cut at the moment. Um, but I think the other interesting thing with the Fed, uh, that I’m reading is that Ke- Kevin Warsh is really pushing the, the line that the Fed has been too transparent, too much in the market talking, jawboning, as it’s called, um, to try and influence what the market’s doing, what interest rates are doing without having to change rates, and he doesn’t like that, so he’s going dark. And I think that’ll be interesting because then the market’s gonna r- you know, probably react to every piece of data as it comes out without being told how the Fed interprets it. They’ll be jumping at their own conclusion. So may lead to some more volatility. Um, and we’re going back to the days prior [00:03:00] to probably Greenspan and Bernanke, where, um, it was just the Fed doesn’t release a dot plot, just comes out when it makes a move and tells you about it after the fact. So it’ll be very interesting Cameron: Indeed Tony Kynaston: Whether it’s good or bad, I can’t really say. I mean, the, the things evolved to being more transparent under the last couple of chairmen, so we’ll see, um, whether it’s better or, or worse by, uh, by not being as, uh, transparent going forward Cameron: Well the other thing of course that’s going on is the Strait of Hormuz I’ve got my Strait of Hormuz live tracker website open in front of me I love this website You ever looked at this Tony Kynaston: No. Mm-hmm. Does it show you where the s- where the mines are? Where the sea mines are? Cameron: sh Tony Kynaston: Oh Cameron: shows you where the ships are but not where the mines are I don’t think anyone knows where Tony Kynaston: I guess, I guess you can extrapolate that if the ships are there, the mines aren’t. Cameron: Well Tony Kynaston: It’s Cameron: ships aren’t going anywhere Tony Kynaston: It’s, like Battleship, it’s like a game of Battleship, isn’t it? Cameron: [00:04:00] battleship Tony Kynaston: D3. Cameron: Yeah Uh so according to the tracker the strait is still closed for the uh 122 days 23 hours and 29 minutes it’s been closed according to this Uh ships transiting now in the last 24 hours five it says Tony Kynaston: From where Cameron: It uh Tony Kynaston: Iranian or are they Western? Cameron: I don’t It doesn’t say Tony Kynaston: Right. Cameron: yes it does down here actually Uh no this is vessel seizures Um okay that’s different I don’t know Okay I don’t know Tony Kynaston: Little bit Cameron: are getting through but the point is that five is not a lot Um Tony Kynaston: and and the interesting thing was the oil price dropped overnight as well Cameron: That’s yeah it’s 73.42 according to this website Tony Kynaston: Yeah Cameron: Uh why Who knows There are 485 [00:05:00] vessels waiting tankers 147 bulk carriers and 118 other This tracks the uh tanker spot rate uh tracks the uh daily throughput It tracks the war risk insurance which it still rates as extreme yeah normally It says normal daily average is 60 uh ships I thought it was more like 90 to 100 ships is the daily average in normal times But way five is not a lot So Tony Kynaston: Hmm. Cameron: the current reality of the Strait Oil price is dropping but the ships aren’t moving Tony Kynaston: Yeah. How do you explain that? Cameron: Well I think reserves uh being released into the market um is probably part it The Tony Kynaston: I don’t think they’ve done that release for a while, and they must be getting very low on their reserves to release. So y- I would have thought the oil price should be rising, [00:06:00] but there’s, I mean, I know there’s discussions going on again in Qatar, but whether that’s to open the straits or whether it’s to release s-sanction held money back to Iran, it’s all very convoluted and underreported at the moment, so it’s hard. I don’t kn- I, I don’t, I don’t know how you, you could trade oil futures at the moment. It’s just highly speculative and, and surprising it’s going down. But Cameron: Well Tony Kynaston: anyway Cameron: the market’s like highly speculative Tony I don’t know if you’ve uh picked this up Did you pay attention to the SpaceX flight Tony Tony Kynaston: Yeah, I also saw a graph of, uh, companies that make no money and their performance versus companies that make money, and the, the, the losers are winning, if that makes sense. The companies that make no money have done better. Cameron: Yes Uh uh so speaking of SpaceX it’s uh risen again a little bit yesterday it’s uh [00:07:00] still below where it was its peak but it’s coming back up What else have I got The yield cushion Despite rate anxiety and geopolitical noise the US 10-year treasury yield held relatively steady tracking at 4.37 down from the 4.56 highs seen earlier in June So you know go figure Um not really sure that makes any sense uh but there it is What else is going on in the US Uh big tech took a brutal beating last week It sort of There was a big tech drawdown uh across the market over the last week since we last recorded And as I mentioned to you on our Australian show yesterday it looks like OpenAI is talking about pushing its float back after the uh in some perspectives uh what happened with [00:08:00] SpaceX after its float The price sort of dipped again after the initial there was a big selloff and people sort of ran away from it So there is some talk that OpenAI might kick theirs down the road a little bit But they also announced their own in-house inference chip So there was a little bit of excitement around that They’re gonna build their own chips Everyone’s building their own chips No one wants to be tied to NVIDIA Tony Kynaston: Right. Yep. Cameron: is interesting Tony Kynaston: Mm-hmm Cameron: Uh and you mentioned something yesterday about the Korean market being shut down again Tony Tony Kynaston: Yep, another 8% trading halt. So the market was shut for twenty minutes. That occurred last week, and that, that helped to drive down some of the AI stocks in, in the US. Um, but there’s also. You know, we’ve seen plenty of commentary we talked about yesterday on the Australian show. Uh, Jeremy Grantham’s come out calling it, uh, the AI boom a bubble. Um, the clearing bank, this, this [00:09:00] central bank’s clearing bank, um, which is based in Europe, came out saying the same thing that, um, there was a boom in data centers, there was a boom in AI chips and that the, in AI, in AI stocks, and there was a circular economy going on. They claimed it was as, you know, the, the situation looked as bad as before the GFC. So there’s lots of people who are feeling a bit edgy about where the market is in the US at the moment Cameron: Well speaking about the market uh let’s do a sort of portfolio update Let me bring up our website so I can get the latest see how we did overnight Talk about our US portfolio So our US model portfolio that’s been running since September 2023 is up 127% over that period of time the S&P 500 which is up 68.8% So and twice 136 would be double So we’re not quite double the S&P 500 but just shy of double the S&P 500 over [00:10:00] that period of time Tony Kynaston: Oh, with little old value stocks throwing off lots of cash. Cameron: boring value stocks Yesterday when we talked I said that our American light portfolio which has been running just since December last year was back above the S&P 500 It slipped overnight by the looks of it up 7.5% December versus the S&P 500 up 9% It’s just peaked above that But that’s okay Tony Kynaston: Mm-hmm. We often see that. We often see that when we establish a portfolio. It can take tw- six to 12 months before it starts to find its feet, so to speak, and perform Cameron: But uh I tell you the stock that is doing the best in that light portfolio let me just make sure this is still true it was true yesterday was the one I mentioned to you uh last week I think Leslie the pool company Tony Kynaston: Mm-hmm. Cameron: Um oh they dropped a [00:11:00] bit Oh okay They came off a bit yesterday They were up 10% in a month when I looked at them but they’ve dropped a bit uh overnight But they’re still doing quite well Um everything’s all of our stocks seemed to come back a little bit yesterday though the market jumped up Might be a bit of profit-taking Don’t know what’s going on there Um Card of Bank shares is doing well It’s up 2% since we added it last week Tony So there you go It’s off to a good start Tony Kynaston: Well, if, if we were a stockbroker, we would claim an annualized return of, uh, 52 times two, 100, 100% on, on that stock purchase Cameron: Of course one of our best stocks in the model portfolio is the Willis Lease Finance company that we’ve uh talked about probably every week we’ve done this for the last year Uh we added them uh quite a while ago [00:12:00] Um up 383% since we added them I’ll tell you exactly when we added them I bought them in November 2023 so very early uh buy Tony Kynaston: Mmhmm Cameron: And uh they just announced a stock split last week Uh three-for-one stock split is gonna go through Now remind me what are the implications for existing shareholders of a stock split like that Tony Is it a good thing or a bad thing generally Tony Kynaston: Well, it, there’s a little bit of psychology going on that, um, that the board of the, of Willis must think that the price is now high enough so that it’s, it’s deterring people from buying it. Um, I, I’m not sure what Willis is trading at, at the moment, but, you know, of-oftentimes it’s. You know, think of Berkshire Hathaway. If, if someone sees a stock worth s-three hundred thousand dollars or five hundred thousand [00:13:00] dollars, first of all, they may not be able to afford to buy it. Um, so that’s, that’s an issue. Uh, but secondly, it’s kind of a psychological barrier as well that, you know, it, it must be an expensive stock because the stock price is so high. Um, so there’s a bit of psychology going on there. But there is a practical reason for a stock split and why it can work, is that, uh, if, if I wanted to buy and sell a little bit of my share portfolio, I, I’ve now got a, a way of doing that without, uh, exerting as much price pressure. So in the past, if I wanted to sell one share of Willis Lease Financial, it’d be like selling three shares today. So I can still sell one share, and it doesn’t have as much impact on the share price. Um, so that, that can be of benefit as well. Um, but you know, it’s, it’s oftentimes largely psychological Cameron: Right Well they’re currently trading at about 228 so not Berkshire level prices Tony Kynaston: No, but still some people kind of mentally tune out when something gets above a hundred [00:14:00] dollars. Cameron: Yeah right Tony Kynaston: yeah. They think it’s expensive even though it, as we’ve shown, it’s, it may not be Cameron: Well the share prices continue to tick up after this announcement came out It was trading at uh 190 bucks Um oh no let’s say a week ago it was trading at 222 it’s now 228 So the market seems to have positively or at least not responded negatively to this Tony Kynaston: There was a, there was a time when, you know, probably maybe 15, 20 years ago where just the announcement of a stock split would send the share price rising dramatically, and there was no real logic for it. It’s just that people jumped on the bandwagon of stock splits being good for business. And I remember that scene in The Sopranos where, um, Edie Falco wants to buy a share ’cause a broker’s told her it’s gonna split Cameron: Right Tony Kynaston: And there’s no other reason Cameron: Yeah just Tony Kynaston: But she’s had the tip. Yeah Cameron: Yeah Well uh [00:15:00] unless you’ve got anything else to talk about newswise I’m gonna jump into my deep dive for the week Tony Tony Kynaston: No, I haven’t, and I’m looking forward to this one. Uh, one, because of my retailing background, but two, because it’s a very interesting, interesting situation Cameron: Well interestingly too I just noticed that when I did my analysis on it over the weekend it was trading around 19.26 and then it dropped to 17.21 uh yesterday and has climbed back a little bit uh overnight to 17.72 I don’t know what led to the overnight drop of a couple of bucks That’s a big drop Their results weren’t due out Let me just Tony Kynaston: happening on the announcement front or Cameron: doing now I’m looking Tony Kynaston: or dividends. Yeah Cameron: Hmm News Tony Kynaston: Well, Jo- we should tell people which, what the name of the stock is too while we’re doing that Cameron: The name of the stock is [00:16:00] uh KSS this ticker is KSS It’s Kohl’s So Tony Kynaston: Kohl’s in Australia, which is a supermarket, but, um, I’m sure US listeners are very familiar with Kohl’s Cameron: Yeah every American listener probably knows what a Kohl’s is and my funniest aside is that my wife Chrissy who’s lived here for 17 years but whenever she says Kohl’s to Siri it spells it K-O-H-L-‘-S and not C-O-L-E-S as it is in Australia Well I don’t know what happened to them overnight but probably just makes them a better deal Um I can’t see any news Tony Kynaston: No, I can’t either. Hmm Cameron: that would justify this Uh I do know they they have some shorts which I’ll get to in my story so maybe something to do with that But anyway um there are d for people for Aus I know we have a lot of Australian listeners to the show as well So for people who don’t know what Kohl’s is they’re a department [00:17:00] store chain based in Wisconsin Uh and they basically sell mid-priced clothing shoes towels kitchen stuff There’s the the shop in the strip mall your mum takes you to when you’re a kid Uh kind of mid-range They’re not the top They’re not the bottom They’re sort of in the middle Uh when I was trying to understand it from an Australian perspective it said it’s somewhere between Target and Myer Tony Kynaston: Mm-hmm. Cameron: you know not bargain basement but not Myer level either So somewhere in the middle The um but the interesting thing about this story is last year they hired a new CEO beginning of 2025 a new CEO who was gonna be the turnaround guy Uh cause as you can imagine retailers are doing it tough for a variety of reasons And he’d been in the job 100 days when they fired him for cause that’s always story We’ll get into the [00:18:00] story of that as we go They’re on the New York Stock Exchange Market cap’s around $2.2 billion Their own blurb calls them a leading omni-channel retailer Omni-channel I could find two uh Tony Kynaston: Yeah. Yeah. Cameron: know what the omni bit is Tony Kynaston: Buy channel. Yeah Cameron: Uh yeah bi-channel Omni Sounds good Combining great brands incredible value and convenience they’ve got more than 1,100 stores in 49 states And they carry you know huge brands like Nike Levi’s and Sephora has been a relatively new thing It’s a skincare makeup brand I’ll talk a little bit more later on gonna be a big deal for them and hasn’t really worked out so far So yeah as I said they uh in Australia they sit somewhere between like a Target and a [00:19:00] Myer Little bit more upscale than a Target but not quite as upscale as a Myer or David Jones history is they started off as a grocery store There was a Polish immigrant in the 1920s in Wisconsin Maxwell Kohl KOHL obviously set it up built it into a grocery tra uh grocery chain Then in 1962 opened their first department store in Brookfield Wisconsin Went public in 1992 Ride ro rode the great American suburban boom era of the shopping mall uh Mallrats K great Kevin Smith film from the early 90s Do you like Mallrats Tony You ever see Mallrats Tony Kynaston: I haven’t, no Cameron: Really Not a Kevin Smith fan Tony Kynaston: Uh, little bit. Um, it’s a lot like Clerks, but I haven’t seen Mallrats Cameron: Oh Mallrats is a great film Big flop It was a big budget His his first big budget film and it flopped Tony Kynaston: Right Cameron: loved it Check it out If you like Kevin [00:20:00] Smith era style humor Tony Kynaston: Mm-hmm. Cameron: which I do Very silly very rude and crude A lot of nerdy geek stuff in it I think Mark Hamill might have been in Mallrats I know Stan Lee was in Mallrats did a cameo in it Anyway um shopping department stores I’m sure you know a little bit about the history of department stores the department store concept Tony Tony Kynaston: Yeah Cameron: of uh Le Bon Marché Le Bon Mar Tony Kynaston: Well, I mean, uh, uh, in broad terms, it was basically the emporium. So the idea was, uh, before shopping malls, they were the shopping mall. They would bring you a little bit of everything that you couldn’t get locally from specialist retailers. And, uh, you, you know, you if they were very good, they might get the finest Paris fashion or the latest cosmetics from overseas and then, um, sell them to people in the suburbs. So that was the, the business model for the shopping– for the, uh, department store. And they do it on. [00:21:00] Like, they do all their purchasing on bulk, so they give you a good price as well. Um, that kind of has been killed, uh, since the rise of the Westfields and the other department stores, um, around the world, because that’s what a shopping mall is these days. It’s basically instead of having a department store aggregate all that, um, material for you and then sell it to you, it’s you’re actually getting the cosmetics from Paris, the brands to take out a, um, to rent a site in your location and sell directly to the retailer. So department stores have been reasonably disintermediated. They, they kind of try different things to, um, combat that. So, uh, you know, they’ll try and do their own brands, home brands or house brands, as they’re sometimes called. They’ll try and do special deals with big companies. You mentioned Levi’s and Sephora before. That’s another way, the kind of, um, house of brands strategy where they become a mini shopping mall again. Um, but, but generally they’re, they’re struggling and they’re in decline. Um, and [00:22:00] online retailing has also been the other battle, other battlefront for them. Uh, if you don’t have a store network and the costs that are associated with that, you can sometimes sell things cheaper to people by just, um, doing a one-off like Amazon and putting it in a cardboard box and mailing it to them. So, uh, you know, they, they’ve faced a lot of battles in, in the last decade or so, maybe twenty years, and, and they’re really struggling. Cameron: Well the story that I read is it goes back to Paris 1838 The brothers Paul and Justin Videau set up Au Bon Marché The Good Market to sell lace ribbons sheets mattresses buttons umbrellas and various other assorted goods Originally had four departments 12 employees in a floor space of 300 square meters or 3200 square feet And then years later uh they brought in a partner [00:23:00] Aristide Bou Bou Bou Boucicaut think BOUCICAUT And he changed the business plan and introduced The big thing was introducing fixed prices because up until then you just sort of bartered you haggled for whatever you were gonna pay for He was like Nah fixed price That’s it Take it or leave it guaranteed exchanges or refunds Those were his big innovations and a wider range of merchandise as well But interesting to think about a time fixed prices wasn’t a thing Tony Kynaston: Yeah Cameron: you haggled for everything So but this blew up It became a hu huge hit fixed prices and guaranteed refunds Uh their revenue went through the roof Uh they absolutely dominated and then other retailers around the world picked up this idea [00:24:00] Macy’s Marshall Field’s in the US copied the business model So it was the French that invented the whole idea And uh these guys I guess have been part of that Kohl’s over the decades the core business for these guys today is selling family apparel footwear a little bit of everything As I said pitched to the value end not up at the top but they’re not Walmart down the bottom in the US somewhere in the middle Budget conscious families year they did about 148 billion in sales and they have their own store credit card the Kohl’s Card which I know you’ll like Tony Kynaston: Yeah. Cameron: a an old card guy Tony Kynaston: Yep. And loyalty program guy, and they’ve got a loyalty program as well. Cameron: Yeah Tony Kynaston: Mm-hmm. Cameron: So every time somebody buys a jumper and puts it on the card they take a slice of the credit economics Uh that line uh was about $752 million last [00:25:00] year Tiny next to sales but very high margins It’s uh does a lot of the profit lifting for the business the cr the the store card side of it Tony Kynaston: Mm-hmm. Cameron: The thing that was supposed to be the growth avenue for them was Sephora Now don’t know about you you’ve got a wife and a daughter uh you might know more about Sephora than me I’d heard of it but Chrissy’s not a Sephora customer But apparently a French multinational retailer of personal care and beauty products has about 340 brands inside of it along it with its own private label the Sephora Collection with the young ladies the teenage girls apparently Cosmetics skincare fragrances nail polish beauty tools body care products hair care items Launched in Paris in 1970 named after the wife of Moses Zipporah but in French it’s Sephora [00:26:00] And so they put a Sephora beauty shop inside a Kohl’s store back in 2021 and then started rolling it out to their other stores Supposedly was gonna drag younger shoppers through the door hasn’t actually worked Um in the last quarter when they did their quarterlies it uh was actually a bit of a drag on their numbers so they’re looking at other skincare brands as an alternative But beauty did over 1.8 billion for them last year so it is a big part of their business They also have their Kohl’s signature line option tell you a funny thing I was talking about Chrissy’s Siri So I dictate my notes as I’m you know preparing Tony Kynaston: Right Mmhmm Cameron: dictation engine is spelled as C-O-L-E-S all the way through and not K-O-H-L-‘-S so I’m having to fix it as I go Um they have their signature line option which is actually doing quite well for them but [00:27:00] we’ll see that when we get into the quarterly numbers But let’s get into the fun bit the fired CEO So as I said January 2025 they bring in this new boss Ashley Buchanan um gonna come in and turn around the business Fix 15 weeks later they had to fire him so it’s a great story Soon after taking over he brokered a deal for several Kohl’s stores to sell products from a coffee startup called IncrediBrew I looked up IncrediBrew They seem to be pods but they’re like boutique pods like coffee and mushroom You were talking about coffee off air this morning Tony Kynaston: Yes. Cameron: your coffee beans are getting smaller Tony Kynaston: Mm-hmm Cameron: They sell like you know your your your boutique uh brand coffee things uh you know fancy fancy coffees for I don’t know [00:28:00] modern age coffee snobs who like fancy stuff in their coffee Anyway it’s it’s headed by a former Bed Bath Beyond CEO a lady by the name of Chandra Holt And somebody on the Kohl’s side of things when this deal was done expressed some concerns over the terms of the deal that IncrediBrew were getting how they hadn’t gone through the normal vendor vetting process and made some complaints about it They got ignored took it up to the board The board launched an internal investigation and it emerged that the new CEO Mr Buchanan and the of IncrediBrew Chandra Holt had worked together at Walmart and had been in a secret romantic relationship for several years Tony Kynaston: Is this all proven, Cam, or is this alleged? Cameron: Uh he confessed to it Tony Kynaston: Oh, okay. All right Cameron: Yeah and when the investigation happened he admitted it [00:29:00] which is why he was fired Um had also crafted a consulting agreement with Boston Consulting where Chandra Holt was an advisor So got fired the next day after all this came out And the chairman Michael Bender stepped in as the interim CEO and then they made him permanent CEO in November last year They also got a brand new COO who’s just come in in the last Tony Kynaston: Mmhmm Cameron: or two from Foot Locker Like you and I wrote a book on the psychopath epidemic uh five or six years ago Tony and one of the things that led to that book and me thinking about psychopaths was why do we always hear these stories of people in positions of authority and power whether it’s in business or government or the military or leading religions or you name it who just do really really stupid shit Like like really really stupid shit [00:30:00] where you would think you should know better Tony Kynaston: Mm-hmm. Cameron: You you know you’re not 20 I don’t know how old Mr Buchanan was but I’ve seen photo of him He looks like he’s you know middle aged guy obviously had some success run companies brought in to you know run one of the largest retailers in the United States This is a really rookie amateur mistake Like how did he not think that was gonna get found out And one and I’m not claiming that Mr Buchanan is a psychopath but one of the things that we learned in researching and writing the book is one of the characteristics of psychopaths is they have a very high appetite for risk They believe that they are superior to mere mortals And quite often if they’ve got to a certain point in life where they have taken enormous risks gotten away with it they seem to think that they will always get away with it They [00:31:00] can just do stuff and it’ll just work out Donald Trump fits this uh archetype Just does Oh I’m gonna just put tariffs on everything Uh I’m just gonna start a war Uh I’m just gonna do stuff and it’ll it’ll be fine It’ll work out It’ll be great And then it doesn’t Eventually sometimes it bites him on the ass but you know if they if they’ve gotten away with it for 10 20 30 years they think they’ll always get away with it So uh Tony Kynaston: I mean, it’s, in some respects it’s human nature writ large, isn’t it? I’m sure there are lots of situations about people being in secret relationships and helping each other out at every level of society. It just becomes the focus, the focus of attention when it’s a CEO involved. But you’re right that you’d, you’d hope that the CEO who was running a company would have the probity to. Yeah, if he’s, if they’re in a secret relationship, good luck to them, but, but why, why do sweetheart deals when [00:32:00] you know that there are, I mean, it’s a department store. Their whole IP is around screwing suppliers and getting the best deal for their customers. Why, why did they think they wouldn’t get found out? Cameron: Yeah it’s astonishing but Tony Kynaston: It is, yeah. Cameron: So uh I think that had probably a little bit of an impact on their share price at the time but it doesn’t really explain why it’s turning up on our value buy list today If actually if you look at their share price it was uh 14 at the beginning of January last year When this all went down it dropped down to 613 by Tony Kynaston: Hmm Cameron: of 2025 then got back up to 2471 by the end of last year has struggling um in the last six months but it’s getting back up It’s climbing back up yesterday it fell again but you know it’s sort of is still recovering So um [00:33:00] another couple of things before I get into the financials and some of the story from their Q1 Um early 2025 they also cut their dividend by 75 50 cents a quarter to 12 and a half cents So that would’ve had an impact on their share price People that owned it for the dividend wouldn’t have been happy about that Management called it balance sheet flexibility which I think translates as We probably need the cash Tony Kynaston: Yeah Cameron: of course you gotta remember that this is uh Liberation Day time as well This is a retailer that probably very large chunk of its stuff is getting made in China and Tony Kynaston: Mmhmm Cameron: and places like that were gonna attract a huge chunk of tariffs under the Trump tariff regime Tony Kynaston: I did know this when I was doing my research that they’ve just, um, submitted legal claims in June of this year to have $140 million US refunded for tariffs [00:34:00] that they paid, um, now that the tariffs have been questioned, uh, their legality’s been questioned Cameron: Yeah well I I’ve got more on that later on Um it’s murky Um all of this tariff stuff is still murky and they call that out in their latest Tony Kynaston: Hmm Cameron: They don’t really know they’re supposed to be paying what they might get back and so they c It’s all big question marks um in their official reporting which is fair enough cause it’s still in play There’s still you know stuff going on through the courts Tony Kynaston: Mm-hmm. Cameron: The other interesting story that happened last year is they borrowed 360 million at a 10 interest rate and had to provide security Tony Kynaston: Mm-hmm. Cameron: had to pledge the furniture in order to get it So a 10 secured bond is uh my analysis of that was sort of it’s the bond market [00:35:00] telling you they don’t think you’re a great credit risk Um that’s a pretty high interest rate to be paying in the current market and particularly if you have to secure it So the the you know the the bond market thinks that they’re uh you know some challenges which is understandable being a bricks and mortar retailer in the current Tony Kynaston: Mm-hmm. Cameron: Plus they closed 27 stores in 2025 and some distribution centers 27 out of 1100 is not a big deal um but it tells you a little bit about how business is going and we’ll see that when we get into the numbers as well Numbers have been going backwards for quite a few years but there’s also some stuff turning around which might be some sign of hope But another thing that you’ll like uh is that they own their own real estate Tony Kynaston: Yeah, that’s what I wanted to focus on. That’s the ex- the interesting part of the story for me, I think Cameron: Yeah I’ve I got a rough valuation of about 6.8 billion [00:36:00] of property Tony Kynaston: Hmm Yep Cameron: And activists have been pushing them to Gordon Gekko it for uh quite a few years There’s corporate raiders circling There was a group called The Franchise Group had a deal at 60 a share in 2022 before it fell apart Don’t know why it fell apart didn’t drill down into that It’s a bit uh too long ago but 60 a share right now sounds pretty good I think Tony Kynaston: Yes. Cameron: the Tony Kynaston: It does Cameron: trading at 61, 63 at at its peak in March of 2022 I guess you know probably had Ukraine war going on then I don’t know how that impacted But there was also trade wars going on with China I don’t know what else was happening then but yeah out of COVID maybe they were some good online shopping during COVID stimulus Their share [00:37:00] price went up a lot during COVID Anyway um still a lot of chatter bubbling up around this uh and they it does seem like that’s a lot of of a huge asset base that could be sold off We’ve we’ve done a couple of was it we were talking about some months ago Was it um was it Kodak, somebody like that we talked about that had a lot of real estate that they had spun off Tony Kynaston: I think it was, yeah. Mm-hmm Cameron: So there there seems to be a lot of opportunity for them to do something good with this to to offload this real estate and you know use the money to do other things in the business Tony Kynaston: Well, that, that’s the, that’s the really interesting point for, um, a company in this situation, whether it’s a. It happens a lot with department stores or historically it has. But, um, [00:38:00] you know, if you look at their net profit number, their most recent net profit number, um, I think it was about two hundred and seventy odd million dollars, and their forecast numbers are lower than that, a hundred and sixty. Um, I think you said that they had a property portfolio of over six billion dollars. Um, Cameron: 6.8 Tony Kynaston: yeah. So if that’s the case, then, you know, if they just said, “Well, let’s just lease out the six billion dollars of property that we have,” what kind of yield would you expect on good commercial property and shopping malls and good locations in suburbs and things? You’d probably get at least five percent, maybe even. Yeah, at least. Uh, so, you know, ten percent on six point eight billion is six hundred and eighty million, half of that, three hundred and forty. It’s more than what they’re making from the department stores. And they could do it, you know, with next to a very small staff [00:39:00] footprint to manage the commercial real estate. So I don’t, I don’t begrudge them for saying, “Look, you know, we’ll turn things around, and we’ll get back to a stage where we’ll earn more money from being a department store than we do from renting out our real estate portfolio.” But, you know, how many chances do you give them, um, given that department stores are in decline? And y- at what stage do they get another private equity company bidding and saying, “You know, we’re gonna shut you down. You’re just a, you’re just a waste of space. Cameron: Yeah Tony Kynaston: take the commercial real estate over and rent it out”? Cameron: Yeah Tony Kynaston: you know, it’s g- it’s gotta happen. And the obvious play for Kohl’s would then be to do what’s called a sale and leaseback strategy, which has been used a lot in the past by retailers where they’ll sell off their property arm or spin it off into a real estate investment trust and then get a guaranteed lease for a long period of time so they don’t get shuttered. Um, that I don’t think will work in Kohl’s case because if you think about it, the reason why they’re not doing that is because the [00:40:00] rental was, is more than what they’re making in profit. So it’s g- it’d probably send them bankrupt. And there has been cases in the States in the past where that sale and leaseback strategy sunk department stores. I, I think it may have contributed to Sears going under. So. But yeah, I mean, if you’re a department store retailer and you can’t make rent, then why are you in business? I mean, really that’s the question, isn’t it? So unless they come up tomorrow with some fantastic offering, whether it’s Sephora or whatever else they can do, um, you know, I’d, I’d be inviting people to come back and bid for the real estate property and get out of the department store business really. Cameron: Yeah Tony Kynaston: That’s the interesting dilemma, I think, if you’re a shareholder Cameron: It’s a bit like being an active fund manager and you can’t beat the ETFs Like Tony Kynaston: You can’t beat the index. Yeah. Yeah. Well, and you own a, a portfolio of ETFs, right? So yeah, shut[00:41:00] shut down and sell the ETFs and you’re in front or shut down and run the ETFs and you’re doing better off. Same thing. Cameron: Hmm Tony Kynaston: Mm. So that’s what I find interesting about this and I, I’m surpr- you know, I, I wasn’t surprised to see they got an offer of 60 bucks a share. If that’s the valuation of the real estate business, you know, uh, you, you. I’d be voting the board off, you know, directors off the board and saying, you know, inviting someone to come back in and give me a, a, a, another $60 offer really Cameron: Yeah cause at the end of the day you’re looking I mean this classic Gordon Gekko stuff Tony Kynaston: Yeah Cameron: at the value of the assets and what the return on the assets is and what it could be Tony Kynaston: Correct. Cameron: the lot of employees are gonna lose their jobs if you shut down the business and there’s Tony Kynaston: Mmhmm Cameron: side of it as well the impact of all of that But Tony Kynaston: Yeah. It’s not an easy thing to shut it down, but, but, but, um, yeah, I mean, and there’ll be lease liabilities ’cause I, I, I don’t think their property network isn’t 100% of the store network, so they’ll still have lease liabilities to get out of and all of that. But, [00:42:00] but at some stage, there’s a tipping point here where you’re better off shutting the department store and leasing out the real estate or even selling the real estate, really. Cameron: Mmhmm Tony Kynaston: Mm. Cameron: Anyway getting back to their actual business today Um some of the things that are affecting retail particularly their target demo sort of middle class value buyers had the impact of tariffs we’ve had inflation gas prices et cetera Their most recently recent quarterly report says expect that our operations will continue to be influenced by general economic conditions including food fuel and energy prices higher unemployment wage inflation and costs to source our merchandise including tariffs Um a, only a fifth of their stuff comes from China I thought it would’ve been a lot higher but Tony Kynaston: Mm Cameron: you go So even though the Supreme Court issued a ruling that struck [00:43:00] down certain tariffs back in February there are still some tariffs from the first trade war using a different you know um mechanism that are still standing And as soon as the Supreme Court knocked down the ones from last year the Liberation Day ones Trump slapped fresh tariffs on using a different power The Court of International Trade ruled those unlawful too but it’s pending appeal So Kohl’s is I think still paying them and waiting for the lawyers to fight it out As you said they’ve also put in a claim for getting tariffs paid back, clawed back but still not sure whether or not that’s gonna happen No one Tony Kynaston: Mmhmm Cameron: So it’s a complete mess They’re paying tariffs they’re not sure they should be paying but they’re paying them anyway They’re trying to claw back stuff They don’t know if they’re [00:44:00] gonna get it back Anyway so it’s a complete shemozzle as Tony Kynaston: Yeah Cameron: times before which is what you get when you put a reality TV star in charge of the government In their most recent earnings call the Q1 2026 earnings call they said net sales declined 17 comparable sales declined 11 sales grew 4 Gross margin improved by four basis points over year so that’s good Tony Kynaston: Mm-hmm. Cameron: net loss was 14 million for Q1 2026 They’re sitting on cash and cash equivalents of 429 million But the good news is they achieved their best quarterly comparable sales performance in over four years driven by a significant stabilization of the core Kohl’s card customer That’s a mouthful And who reached a flat comp versus [00:45:00] a mid single digit decline in Q4 So there’s some turnaround news in that and I think that’s why Tony Kynaston: Mmhmm Cameron: price did tick up a little bit in the last couple of weeks Proprietary brands outperformed with a 6 comparable sales increase which is good for them opening different price points for customers that are struggling with inflation pressures Sephora I mentioned underperformed It had a low single digit decline especially in makeup and skincare So they’ve said that doing a full rollout of the MAC skincare brands and Korean skincare brands Do you know anything about Korean skincare My wife is, is Tony Kynaston: I do not– Cameron: skincare Tony Kynaston: bit about MAC, Makeup Artists of Canada, because that’s the one that Alex went to. Cameron: I Tony Kynaston: Yeah. Yeah. Big in Toronto where we used to live. But, um, yeah, don’t know about Korean makeup. Cameron: So [00:46:00] Korea uh so my wife Tony Kynaston: In case you can’t tell, I don’t use makeup. Cameron: you know or skincare Tony Kynaston: Yeah Cameron: Um my wife is an American uh but has lived here for 17 years Um teaches Tony Kynaston: Wow, has it been that long? Cameron: Yeah Tony Kynaston: Gosh. Hmm Cameron: This week is our um 18th when we met in um Corsica It was this week 18 years ago Tony Kynaston: Gosh Cameron: Yeah I know that’s what we say Wow Tony Kynaston: Hmm. Cameron: where was I going with this Oh she’s a violin teacher and she has had a lot of Korean students over the years and they always bring her When they go back home they come back and they bring her Korean skincare and she loves Korean skincare Koreans apparently are obsessed beauty and skincare and all this kind of stuff South Koreans obviously North Koreans not so much Uh Kim Jong probably has his Tony Kynaston: Well they [00:47:00] Cameron: you Tony Kynaston: they, they’re concerned with their skin, but for a different reason. Trying to keep it. Yeah Cameron: Um so anyway they’re they’re rolling out Korean skincare brands which are hot Tony Kynaston: Hmm Cameron: The hottest thing The hottest thing in New York nightclubs is Korean skincare brands So we’ll see if that helps Tony Kynaston: Mmhmm Cameron: when the results came out their share price jumped 10, 9 and then it came back As I said yesterday might have been a bit of profit taking uh seeing as I can’t see anything in the news But there’s this other funny thing They had this weird meme stock thing happen about a year ago as well After the whole Buchanan thing happened um it looks like there was this massive short squeeze that happened So Tony Kynaston: Run Cameron: we talked about this I think it was last week we talked about the gamma squeeze Tony Kynaston: We did. Cameron: The Tony Kynaston: me angry. You wouldn’t like me when I’m angry. [00:48:00] Yeah. Cameron: Bruce Banner Oh man speaking of that YouTube must have heard me talking about that cause it showed me a clip of from the uh uh the the Hulk TV series the Tony Kynaston: Mmhmm Cameron: um TV series Thor which I’d I’d never remembered Apparently he met Thor at one point the Hulk fought with Thor uh was just glorious to watch Tony Kynaston: Right. Cameron: Bill Bixby Tony Kynaston: Yep Cameron: me angry You wouldn’t like me when I’m angry And then Thor is like being this complete dick to him and and turns into they go at it Oh Lou man it was insane looking at it Like uh obviously crazy compared to what we’re used to with the Marvel Hulk these days but body was insane Tony Kynaston: Mm-hmm. Cameron: The muscles that he had on the back of his neck and [00:49:00] whatever these deltoid quad things I don’t even know what they were But anyway it’s Tony Kynaston: Competed with Arnold Schwarzenegger for Mr. Universe titles. Cameron: Yeah And but he looks bigger than Schwarzenegger Like Schwarzenegger looked like proportionally great but Lou just looked just at this point anyway early 80s I guess just massive Oh anyway back to the back to gamma squeeze So July 22nd 2025 the stock doubled when it opened I told you it sort of hit this crazy uh peak Let’s go Tony Kynaston: Hmm Cameron: uh yeah so it was 9.39 and it leapt to 14.34 Um and then it it well it went up 100 then it closed up 39 Volume was 25 times normal on that day No earnings no [00:50:00] news apparently it was a short squeeze So 49 of the float had been sold short Tony Kynaston: Wow Cameron: N Tony Kynaston: another vote against the board Cameron: Well yeah I guess And then retail traders piled in and the shorts had to buy back to cover Tony Kynaston: Mm-hmm. Cameron: and it went vertical So another one of these gamma squeeze things Crazy crazy stuff Anyway the price today probably has some of that squeeze residue still baked into it still quite a bit of shorting going down but from what I can tell it’s down about 28 of the float But that’s still Tony Kynaston: A lot. Cameron: a lot right A Tony Kynaston: Yeah Cameron: the stock to be involved So we don’t factor that in in our checklist and I don’t know if we should but Tony Kynaston: Well, we’ve had that, I’ve had the debate myself in the past and, you know, I’m happy to fight [00:51:00] the shorts. They think it’s going lower, and we think it’s going higher. Um, Cameron: Yeah right Tony Kynaston: in, in this case, you know, you’ll go through the numbers, but with all that real estate backing it, it’s. I think it’s a reasonably safe bet Cameron: Yeah like the business, you know it seems to be, may I mean at least for one quarter seems to be turning around doing well It’s cheap on our metrics I’ll run through the um where I put my analysis here Do do do do do I’ve got so many notes here I can’t even find the bit that I need Tony Kynaston: Maybe it’s under K-O-H-L-S Cameron: No I’ve got like four versions of the notes here cause I consolidate all these things and then I do another thing and another thing and uh um digital sales scorecard Oh yeah Oh this is it Okay [00:52:00] Um so me see What did I score it So the share price as I said was about 19.26 when I did my analysis so now it’s down a couple of bucks This will have changed in some respects but at the end of the day not that big a deal Market cap was um 2.2 billion roughly Average daily trade about 103 million so big enough Um Tony Kynaston: So you’re sure the real estate value is 6.8 billion? Cameron: I’m not sure but that’s the number I came up with in my research Tony Kynaston: And the market cap’s 2.8 billion Cameron: Yeah right It doesn’t make any sense does it Tony Kynaston: No. Cameron: Hmm Tony Kynaston: But again, another reason why I, I would think private equity is looking at this one Cameron: Hmm Uh so Stockopedia rank of 97 Tony Kynaston: It’s very high, isn’t it? Cameron: Yeah Sorry your typing was very loud Tony Kynaston: Oh, I’m sorry. Cameron: It’s all right Tony Kynaston: No, I’m just checking that real estate [00:53:00] backing. It’s, uh, yeah It’s six point eight to seven billion. Yeah. Cameron: Yeah Tony Kynaston: Um, and also too, I think I noticed in my research that it’s down in their books at cost. It’s not even, you know, the current value of it. Cameron: Really Tony Kynaston: the case. I’d have to double-check that, but yeah. Cameron: Hmm Tony Kynaston: yeah, so it’s saying here that, uh, it could be worth as high as eleven billion Cameron: Hmm And the market cap’s Tony Kynaston: Yeah. Mm-hmm. Cameron: Uh so the Stockopedia stock rank was 97 it for that Stockopedia quality rank was 74 scored it for that The Piotroski F-score is a seven so it’s scored for that Its price is not less than our IV1 or our IV2 To you an indication my IV intrinsic value number one is 830 My intrinsic value number two is 1481 so it’s above both of those Tony Kynaston: Mm-hmm. Cameron: Um double the share price [00:54:00] at the time would’ve been 3852 obviously um doesn’t score for that either Um the price is less than the book value though The book value I have is 3548 equity per share it scores for that Obviously it also scores for the price being less than book plus 30 Uh it had positive growth Um the dividend yield is not higher than the benchmark right I’ve got the dividend yield down at 26 But uh I Oh oh I didn’t score it for a new three point upturn even though it of It was This is funny So code said no When I looked at the bread later which for new listeners is a Sheet tool that we’ve had for years it said it was just above it [00:55:00] When I tried to un figure out the difference um my when my uh code ran it was one cent Tony Kynaston: Yeah, right. Cameron: buy price the buy line So anyway but it should’ve got a point for that Wouldn’t have made much difference but um yeah At the end of the day I gave it a QAV quality score of 6923 which is Tony Kynaston: Mmhmm Cameron: high but it got Oh its PropCaf was 156 price to operating cash flow 156 so it ended up with a QAV score of 0443 is pretty pretty high Tony Kynaston: Ish. Cameron: it well It’s making Tony Kynaston: Mm-hmm. Mm-hmm Cameron: kind of you know turning around maybe but even if it’s not So it’s you know it’s sort of a cigar butt in a way Tony Kynaston: Oh yeah, it’s a dinosaur Cameron: It’s a yeah it’s a cigar [00:56:00] butt but it’s got sort of a turnaround operation dr bolted on a little bit with the makeup and the skincare and the online stuff which is doing okay maybe Um best quarter that they’ve had in four years so maybe facing a lot of headwinds tariffs and Tony Kynaston: This remind, this re- Cameron: and Tony Kynaston: this reminds me of the original Berkshire Hathaway, right? The, the cotton, cotton, uh, mill that didn’t make any money but Buffett had managed to buy all these assets that made a lot of money with the cash flow from the cotton mill, and eventually he shut it down. Cameron: Yeah Tony Kynaston: where’s, where’s Buffett or where’s Gordon Gekko when you need them to just give this stock a shake, a cleanup? Cameron: there’s they’re they are circling it Like there’s a Tony Kynaston: Hmm Cameron: going on as far as I can tell So yeah it’s it’s throwing off a lot of cash while it shrinks at roughly half of book value [00:57:00] has a very low price to operating cash flow and as as we’ve dis as we’ve figured out is sitting on a ton of real estate that has enormous value So somebody’s gotta Tony Kynaston: Yeah. Cameron: and Tony Kynaston: And I know the board, Cameron: with it Tony Kynaston: the board have argued that the real estate’s a, uh, is of value to them because they can shrink or grow their footprint, um, without having to change the rental that they pay. Um, and that makes sense. That’s, that’s good. Or they can bring in subtenants, which, um, might be the latest trend like Korean makeup or whatever, and that’s good too. But they’ve had a long time to perfect that strategy, and it’s not really working for them, and they’re in a declining industry. Um, I’d, I’d much rather see them just shake it up and say, “Oh, maybe we should be a, a thousand stores, not 11,000, 1,100. And maybe we should– or maybe we should be selling 100 stores rather than 1,100, and we’ll sell off our real estate and return some money to the shareholders.” Something like that. [00:58:00] Mm-hmm. Cameron: I do wanna point out though that it is not a buy today because the share price has gone down So my current buy price is 1886 It’s now down to 1772 So it’s slightly below the buy price as of today It was a buy yesterday and I did add it to our portfolio yesterday and I sent out an email to our Lite subscribers Um so if you got in quick you you’ve lost money Uh but Tony Kynaston: Mmhmm Cameron: really have it in your portfolio So uh we’ll see what happens with it But uh yeah if if if if you didn’t buy it yesterday know maybe wait until it gets back over the buy price Um but it it’s ticking back up again uh today so I I think it will get back up But I don’t know why it dropped yesterday It’s uh very strange Tony Kynaston: Yeah, who knows? Could have been a short position taken out. Who knows? Yep. Maybe, Cameron: [00:59:00] I’ll Tony Kynaston: maybe Korean mar– maybe Korean makeup’s attracting extra tariffs overnight. Who knows? Cameron: Who But I like it It’s again as you Tony Kynaston: Yeah Cameron: of a it’s a classic value stock boring dying generating cash lot of assets Tony Kynaston: Mm-hmm. Cameron: Just smells like a good deal So Tony Kynaston: does, doesn’t it? Cameron: hmm Tony Kynaston: I’d be– I mean, I don’t wanna predict, but I’d be forecasting that if we can see value in this, there’s gotta be an institution out there which is seeing value in it too, and they’ll put it in play somehow. Yeah Cameron: And that happens so often in my experience with QAV over the years that uh if if we think it’s a good deal somebody else is gonna figure that out and take advantage of it Tony Kynaston: Yep, absolutely. Cameron: Well that’s QAV America for this week Tony Tony Kynaston: Yeah, very interesting. It’s a really. It, it’s a, it’s a good stock to analyze because a lot of people will have an opinion about Coles in the US, and our listeners will be thinking, “Oh, I don’t go there,” or, [01:00:00] “I’ve got a card and I always go there.” And it’s, it can, it can be very polarizing when you talk about something which is, you know, used every week by, uh, by investors Cameron: I’ll I’ll throw it up on the value investing subreddit and see what people say I threw up a I threw up a thing about Carter Bankshares last week and people seemed to like that They they they liked that story so Tony Kynaston: Okay Cameron: it was a good story too the whole uh Jim Justice Tony Kynaston: Yes. Cameron: And as Tony Kynaston: Yeah. Cameron: subreddit uh said um know uh credit to the current management at Carter for unpicking that unholy mess because Tony Kynaston: Hmm Cameron: yeah they they did a good job Came out of it on top so good for them Tony Kynaston: Yeah, a bit. I mean, that Greenbrae situation is a bit like Coles, isn’t it? It’s a, an asset that can be spun off and realize [01:01:00] some value for it to support the underlying business. Or to help shareholders, yeah Cameron: Yeah I mean being yeah wasn’t really core business They didn’t have to shut down a branch to sell that Tony Kynaston: Hmm Cameron: uh yeah similar right Thank you TK Have a good week Tony Kynaston: Thanks Cam. Well done PREVIOUS PULLED PORKS Here’s the performance of the “pulled porks [https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/16WHwMalQodhxUO9h1T-7suVtfwjrXq057fFHhcLXFWk/edit?gid=0#gid=0]” (eg deep dives) we’ve done on the show in the past.
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