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Bed Bath & Beyond (BBBY) Q1 2022 earnings

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A pedestrian walks by a Bed Bath and Beyond store in San Francisco, California.

Justin Sullivan | Getty Images

Bed Bath & Beyond is replacing CEO Mark Tritton in a leadership shakeup after the retailer struggled through another quarter of declining sales and posted a steeper loss.

The company said Wednesday that Sue Gove, an independent director on the board, will step in as interim CEO. The change comes after a multi-year push to revive Bed Bath’s brand, grow online sales and win back customers. Tritton, a Target veteran, had led the effort after joining in 2019.

Shares were down more than 22% in morning trading.

But along with company challenges, Bed Bath is facing a tougher economic backdrop.

“I step into this role keenly aware of the macro-economic environment,” Gove said in a statement, citing steep inflation and shifting buying habits.

Still, Gove said the company needs to improve its performance and that its first quarter results are “not up to our expectations.” In addition to working to fix supply chain problems, reduce costs and improve its balance sheet, Gove said Bed Bath & Beyond will embrace a “back to basics mantra” to win back customers.

Bed Bath & Beyond said it expects same-store sales to recover in the second half of the fiscal year, but did not provide a specific forecast.

The retailer also named a new chief merchandising officer. Mara Sirhal, who most recently served as general merchandise manager of health, beauty and consumables, will replace Joe Hartsig, who is leaving the company.

Here’s how the retailer did in the three-month period ended May 28 compared with what analysts were anticipating, based on Refinitiv data:

  • Loss per share: $2.83 vs. $1.39 expected
  • Revenue: $1.46 billion vs. $1.51 billion expected

The company’s net loss widened to $358 million, or $4.49 per share, from $51 million, or 48 cents per share, a year earlier. On an adjusted basis, the company’s net loss was $2.83 per share. That was more than the $1.39 that analysts expected, according to Refinitiv.

Sales fell to $1.46 billion from $1.95 billion a year earlier. Wall Street expected sales of $1.51 billion.

Same-store sales, a key retail metric, declined 24% in the quarter compared with a year ago, worse than the 20.1% drop that analysts expected, according to StreetAccount. Online sales fell by 21% year over year. The figures include a 27% drop for its Bed Bath & Beyond banner and a mid single-digits decline for the Buybuy Baby banner.

A leadership shakeup

Activist pressure

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