Burlington Shares Slide After Store Traffic "Fell Off Significantly"
Off-price department store retailer Burlington, formerly known as Burlington Coat Factory, fell in premarket trading after reporting weak third-quarter comparable sales and issuing soft fourth-quarter and full-year comp guidance that missed Bloomberg Consensus expectations.
Snapshot: Q3 Results (Slight Miss on Revenue/Comps)
Adjusted EPS: $1.68 (beat) vs. $1.55 y/y
Revenue: $2.71B (+7.1% y/y), just below Bloomberg Consensus ($2.72B)
Comp sales: +1% (Estimate: +2.5%)
Gross margin: 44.2% (up from 43.9%)
SG&A: 35% of revenue (improvement vs. 35.4%)
Merchandise inventories: $1.66B, up 15% y/y (well above BBG estimate of $1.51B)
Burlington's fourth-quarter and full-year forecasts were also underwhelming compared with Bloomberg Consensus expectations. Shares are down 5% in premarket trading.
Snapshot: Q4 Outlook (Soft vs. Street)
Comp sales: 0% to +2% (Estimate: +2.1%) Adjusted
EPS: $4.50–$4.70 (Estimate: $4.62) Sales growth: +7% to +9%
Adjusted EPS: $9.69–$9.89, raised (Estimate: $9.56) Sales: +8% (prior +7–8%)
Comps: +1% to +2% (Estimate +2.46%) Net capex: ≈$950M
It's important to note that consumers more broadly, especially in the low- to mid-income tiers, are under financial pressure and increasingly value-oriented. This has been confirmed in recent earnings from Target, Home Depot, Walmart, and TJ Maxx.
The question becomes whether Burlington's customers are dialing back on spending on apparel, footwear, and coats, not because of seasonal trends, but because their pocketbooks are being squeezed.
Tyler Durden
Tue, 11/25/2025 - 08:45
The post <a href=https://www.zerohedge.com/markets/burlington-shares-slide-after-store-traffic-fell-significantly target=_blank >Burlington Shares Slide After Store Traffic "Fell Off Significantly" </a> appeared first on Conservative Angle | Conservative Angle - Conservative News Clearing House
Continue reading...
