The Wayfair app on a smartphone arranged in Hastings-on-Hudson, New York.
Tiffany Hagler-Geard | Bloomberg | Getty Images
Wayfair’s sales slid during its first fiscal quarter, but the online furniture retailer reduced its losses after cutting 13% of its workforce at the start of the year, the company announced Thursday.
Wayfair beat Wall Street’s expectations on the top and bottom lines and saw active customers grow nearly 3% compared to the year-ago period.
Here’s how Wayfair did compared with what Wall Street was anticipating, based on a survey of analysts by LSEG:
- Loss per share: 32 cents adjusted vs. a loss of 44 cents expected
- Revenue: $2.73 billion vs. $2.64 billion expected
The company’s reported net loss for the three-month period that ended March 31 was $248 million, or $2.06 per share, compared with a loss of $355 million, or $3.22 per share, a year earlier. Excluding one-time items, the company lost 32 cents per share.
Sales dropped to $2.73 billion, down more than 1% from $2.77 billion a year earlier. The steepest drop off came from Wayfair’s international segment, where sales fell nearly 6% to $338 million compared to the year-ago period.
Despite the sales drop, CEO and co-founder Niraj Shah struck a positive note in a news release, saying the quarter “ended on an upswing.”
“Shoppers are increasingly choosing Wayfair, with year-over-year active customer growth once again positive and accelerating compared to last quarter,” Shah said.
“For the first time since pre-pandemic, we’re seeing suppliers introducing large groups of new products into their catalogs as they look to build momentum for the next stage of growth,” he added.
Like some of its other digitally native peers, Wayfair implemented a series of layoffs after it saw sales boom during the pandemic and then shrink when consumers started trading new couches and shelves for dinners out and travel after the Covid-19 pandemic ended.
In January, it announced plans to cut 13% of its global workforce, or around 1,650 employees, so it could trim its structure and reduce costs after it went “overboard” with corporate hiring during the pandemic, the company said previously. The restructuring – the third Wayfair implemented since summer 2022 – was expected to save the company about $280 million, it said previously.
The company is still charting its path to profitability, but it cut its losses by $107 million during the fiscal first quarter after implementing the latest round of job cuts. It also grew its active customer count at a time when the home goods sector faces pressure as high interest rates and a sluggish housing market weigh on sales.
During the quarter, Wayfair’s active customers grew 2.8% to 22.3 million, slightly ahead of the 22.1 million that analysts had expected, according to StreetAccount.
On average, orders were valued at $285 during the quarter, compared to the $275.07 that analysts had expected, according to StreetAccount. While average orders were higher than Wall Street’s expectations, they fell slightly from the year-ago period, when the average order value was $287. That’s because of changes in Wayfair’s unit prices, which were inflated in 2021 and 2022 and started to come down last year, the company said.
Read the full earnings release here.