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Recent Citations of Quo Vadis Research in the Financial News

Jet.com founder Marc Lore is leaving Walmart

“Under Mr. Lore’s leadership, Walmart pursued an aggressive and ultimately successful e-commerce strategy,” wrote retail analyst John Zolidis of Quo Vadis Capital. “We view Mr. Lore’s departure as an incremental negative in that it removes a visionary and entrepreneurial executive from the company.”

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Academy Sports CEO says hobbies acquired during COVID will continue to drive sales in 2021

John Zolidis, president of Quo Vadis Capital, is bullish about Academy as well, basing what the company can accomplish on Hicks’ history with Foot Locker Inc.

“We followed Foot Locker through this period and feel confident that Mr. Hicks and his team will find operational and merchandising improvements to maintain positive sales and margin momentum for Academy,” wrote Quo Vadis, which is long on the stock.

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Walmart’s Sales Gains Slow as Pandemic Drags On

“Within Walmart’s results are some mixed trends,” said John Zolidis, president and retail analyst at Quo Vadis Capital. “Clearly ecommerce has accelerated, but we can also see traffic was down 14% for the second consecutive quarter and that’s a big number.” Mr. Zolidis gave Walmart a “sell” rating last month, saying that it will be hard for the retailer to upstage its current results next year.

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Sprouts Farmers Market Stock Up Late After Earnings Crush Views

John Zolidis, analyst at Quo Vadis capital, said other analysts were overlooking the positives of the management change and saw other benefits for Sprouts Farmers Market stock.
“Analysts appear (in our opinion) to be ignoring a complete turnover in the executive suite and accelerated investments in digital engagement and the rollout of delivery and pickup,” he said in a research note on Tuesday. “We believe the near-term benefit of these efforts is not reflected in forecasts, setting up very substantial upward revisions to earnings.”

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Tractor Supply benefiting from consumer trends like gardening and the move to rural communities, analysts say

“Tractor Supply was already a strong company with excellent fundamentals prior to the corona-crisis,” wrote Quo Vadis president John Zolidis. Quo Vadis rates Tractor Supply long.

“We believe it is reasonable to believe that secular shifts (less competition, more people moving to rural locations, superior economies in rural locations) together with new strategic initiatives (accelerated investment in digital) potentially reset Tractor Supply’s earnings power in a way not yet appreciated in consensus forecasts or the equity’s valuation.”

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