5-204-270 Revised April 15‚ 2005 ARTUR RAVIV AND TIMOTHY THOMPSON Bed Bath & Beyond: The Capital Structure Decision “Bed Bath & Beyond’s earnings report could have been called Bed Bath & Brag‚” according to the New Jersey newspaper The Record in April 2004.1 However‚ Bed Bath & Beyond (BBBY) had the performance to back up its boastfulness. Since going public in 1992‚ the home goods retailer‚ based in Union‚ New Jersey‚ had never missed an earnings estimate. For fiscal year 2003 (ending
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Business Analysis Part I: Bed Bath and Beyond (BBBY) Management 521/MBAY10K3R1 November 18‚ 2011 Abstract Bed Bath and Beyond‚ Inc.‚ (BBBY) and its subsidiaries are a chain of retail stores operating under the names Bed Bath and Beyond‚ Christmas Tree Shops‚ Harmon‚ Harmon Face Values‚ and buybuy BABY. The company focuses on home furnishings and domestic merchandise. The company sells a wide assortment of domestic merchandise. The Fortune 500 currently lists the company at 304.
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expansion trough opening new stores and enhancing space in existing stores. Stores are not built but leased which gives company a saving of $1 million on each new store. However company emphasizes preserving value during expansion. Consistency Analysis among Business‚ Operating and Expansion Strategies Consistency All strategies are consistent in maintaining low cost of merchandise and low expense on operations (discounted purchase‚ lean organization and low capex through leasing‚
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Bed Bath and Beyond’s Business Risk Bed Bath & Beyond Inc. is a nationwide chain of 575 retail stores selling domestics merchandise (bed linens‚ bath items‚ and kitchen textiles) and home furnishings (kitchen and tabletop items‚ small appliances‚ and basic house wares). In 2003 Bed Bath and Beyond reported annual revenues (gross profit) of approximately $1.8 billion‚ net income of $339 million and net sales of $4.5 billion‚ representing 22% growth in revenue and 32% growth in income as compared
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Running head: BBBY Case Study Bed Bath & Beyond (BBBY) Case Study Rajib L. Mishra & Sukumar Haldar Corporate Finance (K4115) Abstract Description: The Bed‚ Bath‚ and Beyond case requires that students assess the future growth of a company by using financial statement analysis. This is a team project and should be completed in groups of four students. The case questions below are meant to guide you through the analysis. Questions: 1. Assess Bed‚ Bath & Beyond’s (BBBY) business‚ operating
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Q. 1: Explain how Bed Bath & Beyond practices the retailing concept. A. 1: Bed Bath and Beyond practices the retailing concept by being value-driven and goal oriented. By maintaining annual sales of 6 billion (not to mention the 15 years of consecutive profit)‚ BB&B has clearly met the customer’s standards by offering convenient and multiple store locations‚ excellent store atmosphere‚ and an assortment of indispensable merchandise. BB&B also practices the retailing concept by giving their
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Bed‚ Bath and Beyond Case Analysis 1. Study BBBY’s historical results in the “Historical Performance” worksheet contained in the “BBBY” EXCEL workbook. What overall conclusion about BBBY’s recent operating and financial condition do the numbers support? Back up your conclusion by listing the six most critical observations you discern from your analysis of the numbers. Conclusion: BBBY is a home goods industry leader in sales growth‚ margins and return on equity. The company continues to
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Ratio analysis is a common and useful way to compare accounting numbers to evaluate the performance. Fixed-asset turnover as the profitability analysis to interpret how well a company manages and utilizes its property‚ plant‚ and equipment asset (PP&E). The fixed-asset turnover of Bed Bath & Beyond Inc. is computed by dividing its net sales by its average total fixed assets during 2011 period. The fixed-asset turnover of 7.8355 indicates that Bed Bath& Beyond Inc. could invest in one dollar’s fixed-asset
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Bed Bath and Beyond Business Analysis Businesses have to adapt to the ever-changing economy. It is not much of a choice for business leaders to change elements of their organization to stay in competition with their peers. The hardest part‚ most of the time‚ is changing the people in the organization to develop the necessary outcome or goal. As a business leader getting rid of people or changing their job specifics is one of the many responsibilities they have to be comfortable performing. Organizations
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Statement of Problem Bed‚ Bath and Beyond (BBBY) currently has $400 million more in cash than they need for ongoing growth and operations requirements. While the company is financially sound analysts and investors worry about the company’s capital structure decisions. Investors do not want to see that much cash on the books and worry that the current capital structure is not the most effective for the future. They prefer that BBBY change their capital structure by paying out excess cash
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