Optimism Improves Ahead of Q3 Retail Earnings

Just about everything seems lined up for large U.S. retailers to report solid third-quarter earnings, including energetic consumer spending, a brief late summer drop in borrowing costs, and improved U.S. confidence and sentiment readings. Even so, certain retailers could benefit more than others, with home improvement stores likely to continue feeling pressure from the slow housing market.

Retailers with the biggest e-commerce platforms likely have an advantage.

"E-commerce continues to outpace brick-and-mortar companies in terms of U.S. growth, primarily driven by online marketplaces like Amazon, Walmart, and Target," said Alex Coffey, senior trading strategist at Schwab. "Amazon can essentially leverage 200 million or more Prime members, accounting for around 30% of U.S. e-commerce sales. If that's growing fastest, it's a pretty good barometer of the consumer and retail economy."

Walmart (WMT), he added, has an e-commerce platform around 20% the size of Amazon (AMZN), meaning it alone can account for 5% to 6% of U.S. e-commerce sales. And Target's (TGT) recent partnership with Shopify (SHOP) gives it new momentum in digital shopping.

The bulk of retail sector earnings hit the aisles later this month, but a sneak preview came October 31 when Amazon reported better-than-expected third-quarter earnings. While Amazon is better known on Wall Street for its profitable cloud computing business, millions of customers think of it mainly as an online shopping destination.