Source: Lowe’s
Lowe’s is rolling out a rural store concept featuring a broader offering of farm, ranch, and outdoor products in up to 300 additional stores by year-end.
The selected stores, primarily in the South, Midwest and Northeast, play up categories such as pet, livestock, trailers, fencing, utility vehicles and specialized hardware. The stores also stock Carhartt and Wrangler apparel.
Bill Boltz, EVP of merchandising, speaking on Lowe’s first-quarter analyst call, described the rural-focused stores as a “one-stop shop to make it convenient for rural customers to get what they need in one shopping trip.”
The expansion follows a successful pilot and takes advantage of Lowe’s strong existing positioning in rural markets. Lowe’s operates three times as many stores as Home Depot in North Carolina, West Virginia, and Kentucky; twice as many in South Carolina, and 1.5 times as many in Virginia, Alabama, Tennessee, and Mississippi, according to an analyst note from Jeffries.
Lowe’s expects the rural locations will help elevate margins since the stores can be operated at a lower cost.
“As an example, what we spend to operate our store in Philadelphia, Mississippi is significantly less than the cost to operate one of our stores in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania,” said CEO Marvin Ellison on the call. “While in years past, our penetration of rural and remote stores was viewed as a competitive disadvantage, we now expect that these stores will be a key component of our operating profit growth over the next three to five years.”
Jeffries analysts said Lowe’s will face challenges competing against Tractor Supply’s “loyal following” in rural markets.
“Given the retailer’s micro-merchandising, exclusive product, and loyalty program, we believe [Tractor Supply has] built an impressive moat in small town America,” according to Jeffries’ note. “That said, we do see the opportunity for market share shift as Lowe’s takes a page out of Tractor Supply’s playbook.”
Lowe’s reduced its full-year outlook last week as lumber prices fell, unfavorable weather hurt demand for seasonal merchandise and do-it-yourself customers bought fewer big-ticket items.
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