Dollar Tree surges on Q1 earnings beat, boost to full-year profit outlook
Dollar Tree is surging in premarket trading after the discount retailer reported Q1 earnings that exceeded Wall Street’s expectations, prompting management to boost its full-year earnings outlook.
The key Q1 figures:
Adjusted earnings per share of $1.74 (compared to analyst estimates of $1.55).
Comparable-store net sales growth of 3.5% (estimate: 3.27%).
Net sales of $4.97 billion (estimate: $4.96 billion).
The big strength, obviously, was in the bottom line. The company’s gross profit margin expanded by 120 basis points, largely thanks to lower freight costs, higher mark-ons, and reduced product shrink.
Dollar Tree raised its fiscal 2026 adjusted EPS guidance to a range of $6.70 to $7.10 (up from its prior forecast of $6.50 to $6.90). The $6.90 midpoint sits ahead of the $6.69 consensus estimate, per Bloomberg.
Guggenheim analyst John Heinbockel noted that sentiment on Dollar Tree was sour heading into this report, with estimates weakening “on a combination of low-income household health, elevated freight expense, and even the helium shortage,” which helps explain why there’s such an “outsized reaction” to these results.
While traffic was down, the consumers that did frequent Dollar Tree were spending more: average ticket sizes were up 4.5%.
“We continued advancing our strategic plan — a more relevant assortment, agile cost management, a stronger customer connection, and new store growth coupled with improved store conditions — all driving operating margin expansion and delivering a strong bottom-line performance,” CEO Mike Creedon said in a press release.
The retailer expects to open approximately 400 new store locations while converting roughly 630 existing venues into its more profitable multi-price format.
To further lower frictions for convenience-seeking shoppers, Dollar Tree officially launched a partnership with DoorDash alongside its earnings release. The distribution agreement brings more than 9,000 stores across 48 states onto the app, allowing users to order over 10,000 products on-demand. The partnership will add to existing delivery agreements with Instacart and Uber Eats as Dollar Tree increasingly competes on convenience as well as price.