RH Really Needed This Power Quarter

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The business of selling high-end furniture can be a bit hit or miss at times. A $7,000 couch is the sort of discretionary purchase that a person is much more likely to postpone if he or she isn't feeling flush with cash. So emotional headwinds really took a bite out of RH (NYSE: RH), the former Restoration Hardware, back in its fiscal 2018 fourth quarter, after the stock market's precipitous tumble left its target customers poorer. But the fiscal first-quarter 2019 report it dropped Wednesday showed what a difference a few months can make.

In this segment of the MarketFoolery podcast, host Chris Hill and MFAM Funds' Bill Barker dig into the factors that helped RH rebound -- its exposure to conditions in the stock market, low interest rates, and its relative immunity from the Trump administration's tariffs -- as well as its investment thesis from here.

To catch full episodes of all The Motley Fool's free podcasts, check out our podcast center. A full transcript follows the video.

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This video was recorded on June 13, 2019.

Chris Hill: You know what? When that day comes, I'm going to be shopping at Lululemon because I know they can actually provide good apparel. Let's move on to RH, which is better known as Restoration Hardware. First quarter, they needed this quarter. Restoration Hardware put up some strong profits. They raised guidance for the full fiscal year. The stock is up 21%. And as they said, they needed it, because even with this rise today, it's still down year to date, and really over the past 12 months.

Bill Barker: They are correlated -- I may come back and address whether they're better known as Restoration Hardware, and why they got away from that name to go to RH. I think that naming has a thread through today's episode of all these stories. In disclosing their last quarterly report and lowering guidance for the year, RH was affected, seemingly, because of the highly discretionary nature of purchasing anything at Restoration Hardware, which is not competing on price. To be affected by, if not the economy, the stock market going into the fourth quarter, when the stock market last year was very weak. That would have affected their biggest quarter. They were projecting ahead and seeing discretionary spending for their end, of the furniture, under attack. And it's been a better quarter since three months ago. They've had a better quarter in their results. Now they're able to project ahead. We'll see, if the market goes down 15%, whether they're making another adjustment. Not that that's the only element of what affects the upper middle class or upper class, the people who are most likely to be shopping at Restoration Hardware. But the market does affect, at least in the short-term, some discretionary spend.