Walmart's $9 billion store makeover may already be paying off

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Spotlights, staged dinner tables, dressed mannequins — no, it's not your local theatre play — rather a revamped Walmart (WMT) store.

America's biggest retailer is seeing some early returns after it announced the grand re-opening of 117 remodeled locations last month. The total price tag for the remodels was over $500 million, with features like new light fixtures, product displays, interactive signs with QR codes, mannequins and more.

It's part of a $9 billion dollar plan to modernize more than 1,400 stores in the US over two years. In a call with investors following its Q3 results, which showed a slowdown in consumers spending, Walmart US CEO John Furner said the team was "pleased" with the performance of the remodels so far.

"The customer reaction of the new assortment particularly...apparel, pets, beauty, home, a number of categories is really great," Furner added.

Walmart Supercenter in Secaucus, NJ features store redesign elements like product featured on mannequins and new light fixtures (Photo taken by Yahoo Finance/Brooke DiPalma).

Telsey Advisory Group Senior Managing Director Joe Feldman, who has an outperform rating on shares, called the renovations "really well done" over the phone to Yahoo Finance.

Feldman said the showcases in home and apparel is able to "highlight products better," and reminds him of one of the retailer's rivals.

"They've got mannequins, dressed up...you can see the whole family kind of the way Target does."

Walmart Supercenter in Secaucus, NJ features store redesign elements like product displayed as a dining room setting and new light fixtures (Photo taken by Yahoo Finance/Brooke DiPalma).

Another new feature is an elevated display setup, like pictured above.

In Q3, sales of general merchandise had a low-single-digit drop due to fewer people buying discretionary items like apparel, home decor, and toys. Physical displays could help with that, Feldman said.

"It shows more of the style and highlights some of the quality of the discretionary goods, and gives people ideas of how the product they buy could work for them."

Consumer psychologist Dr. Cathrine Jansson-Boyd of Anglia Ruskin University said that this sort of display is a shoe in for converting window shoppers to paying customers.

"[If] physical retailers can get consumers through the doors, get them to interact with things, get them to touch stuff. The sale is almost done," she told Yahoo Finance over the phone, "We know that when you physically interact with something, consumers take psychological ownership of it, so they are more likely to purchase it. They're also more likely to want to pay more for it."

Walmart Supercenter in Secaucus, NJ features brand names in certain apparel sections. (Photo taken by Yahoo Finance/Brooke DiPalma).

It's about perception too, Feldman said.

"People historically have thought about Walmart is just a cheap place to shop" he said.

The company has invested in new signage, refreshed interiors, increased check out options, grab and go food sections, and more prominent pharmacies to update their image. The more premium design help showcase merchandise, including branded goods like Reebok, Justice, Sofia Vergara and US Polo Association as pictured above.