Dick's Sporting Goods raises guidance after second-quarter earnings beat
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Dick's Sporting Goods raises guidance after second-quarter earnings beat

Why This Matters

Dick's Sporting Goods beat Wall Street's expectations on the top and bottom lines, leading it to raise its full year profit and sales guidance.

August 28, 2025
11:36 AM
5 min read
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In this articleDKS your favorite stocksCREATE FREE ACCOUNTA Dick's Sporting Goods store is shown in Oceanside, California, U.S., May 15, 2025.

Mike Blake | ReutersDick's Sporting Goods raised its full-year sales and earnings guidance after dering fiscal second-quarter results that beat expectations.The company is now expecting comparable sales to grow between 2% and 3.5%, up from a previous range of 1% and 3% and ahead of analyst estimates of 2.9%, according to StreetAccount.

Dick's said its earnings per are now expected to be between $13.90 and $14.50, up from a previous range of $13.80 to $14.40.

Analysts were expecting $14.39 per , according to LSEG.Here's how the company performed compared with what Wall Street was anticipating, based on a survey of analysts by LSEG:Earnings per : $4.38 adjusted vs.

$4.32 expectedRevenue: $3.65 billion vs. $3.63 billion expectedThe company's reported net income for the three-month period that Aug.

2 was $381 million, or $4.71 per , compared with $362 million, or $4.37 per , a year earlier.

Excluding one-time items related to its acquisition of Foot Locker and other costs, Dick's posted earnings per of $4.38.Sales rose to $3.65 billion, up 5% from $3.47 billion a year earlier.

During the quarter, comparable sales also grew 5%, well ahead of expectations of 3.2%, according to StreetAccount.

"Our performance shows how well our long-term strategies are working, the strength and resilience of our operating model and the impact of our team's consistent execution," CEO Lauren Hobart said in a news release.

"Our Q2 comps increased 5.0%, with growth in average ticket and transactions, and we drove second quarter gross margin expansion."While Dick's comparable sales guidance came in ahead of expectations, its full-year revenue outlook was slightly below estimates.

The company said it's expecting revenue to be between $13.75 billion and $13.95 billion, below estimates of $14 billion, according to LSEG.Dick's said its raised fit guidance includes the impact of tariffs that are currently in effect.

In an interview with CNBC's Courtney Reagan, Dick's executive chairman Ed Stack said the company has implemented some price increases to offset the impact of higher duties but has been "surgical" in its apach."We've been able to do what we need to from a pricing standpoint, whether that's from the national brands or from our own brands, and then other places where we've held price, we've been able to do that, and we've offset it someplace else, which is what you have to do in these in these situations, and the team's done a great job doing that," Stack said.Dick's said its guidance doesn't include any potential impact from its acquisition of Foot Locker, such as costs or results from the planned takeover, which is expected to close next month.

In May, Dick's announced it would be acquiring its longtime rival for $2.4 billion, giving it a competitive edge in the wholesale sneaker market, most importantly for Nike ducts, along with a bigger global presence.Nike is a critical brand partner for both Dick's and Foot Locker and, at times, their performance is reliant on how well the sneaker brand is doing.

During the quarter, Stack said new drops from Nike's revamped running portfolio, including the Pegasus Premium and the Vomero Plus, are performing so well, it can't keep the shoes in stock."Anything that's new, innovative and kind of the cool factor, is blowing out," Stack said.However, the acquisition also comes with risks.

Foot Locker's has been in the midst of an ambitious turnaround under CEO Mary Dillon but the company is still struggling.In the quarter Aug.

2, Foot Locker's sales fell 2.4% and it posted a loss of $38 million.

The company faces a range of existential challenges, including its heavy mall foot, its small online and a core consumer that often has less discretionary income than the core Dick's consumer.

Once the es are combined, Foot Locker's struggles could ultimately weigh on Dick's overall results. On the other hand, the combined company will become the No.

1 seller of athletic footwear in the U.S., which will allow it to better compete against its next biggest rival, JD Sports.

Stack acknowledged to CNBC that Foot Locker's earnings "were not great" but said the company has a strategy."We have a game plan of how to turn this around," Stack told Reagan.

"We think that we can return Foot Locker to its its rightful place in the top of this industry and we're excited to roll up our sleeves and get started with that."Dick's plans to operate Foot Locker as a separate entity.

Moving forward, Stack said the company plans to break out details on how each brand is performing when releasing quarterly results.

It'll vide separate details on how Dick's performed and how Foot Locker performed so investors can get a sense of what's going on in each part of the .Earlier this week, Dick's said it had received all regulatory apvals associated with the transaction.

It's un if it had to divest any stores to satisfy the FTC's requirements.During a conference call with analysts at 10 a.m.

ET, investors will be looking for more information on how the combined entities will operate and how Foot Locker will fit into the overall strategy.

FinancialBooklet Analysis

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Key Insights

  • Earnings performance can signal broader sector health and future investment opportunities
  • Merger activity often signals industry consolidation and potential valuation re-rating for similar companies
  • Consumer sector trends provide insights into economic health and discretionary spending patterns

Questions to Consider

  • Could this earnings performance indicate broader sector trends or company-specific factors?
  • Does this M&A activity signal industry consolidation or strategic repositioning?
  • What does this consumer sector news reveal about economic health and spending patterns?

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