Skip to main content

Market Overview

Full Transcript: Dick's Sporting Goods Q1 2026 Earnings Call

Share:
Full Transcript: Dick's Sporting Goods Q1 2026 Earnings Call

Dick's Sporting Goods (NYSE:DKS) released first-quarter financial results and hosted an earnings call on Wednesday. Read the complete transcript below.

This content is powered by Benzinga APIs. For comprehensive financial data and transcripts, visit https://www.benzinga.com/apis/.

Access the full call at https://events.q4inc.com/attendee/382142176

Summary

Dick's Sporting Goods reported a strong Q1 2026 with consolidated net sales increasing by 62.7%, driven by the inclusion of Foot Locker and a 6% comp sales growth in the Dick's business.

Strategic initiatives include the expansion of Fast Break stores within Foot Locker, the enhancement of the House of Sport and Field House concepts, and the launch of Coach idexx, an AI-powered digital agent.

The company raised the low end of its full-year comp sales expectations for both the Dick's and Foot Locker businesses, anticipating comp sales growth of 2.5% to 4% for Dick's and 1.5% to 3% for Foot Locker.

Operational highlights include the opening of a new distribution center in Fort Worth and strong performance in key categories like footwear and apparel.

Management remains optimistic about the future, citing strong brand relationships, strategic investments, and an exciting sports environment due to upcoming global events like the World Cup and the Olympics.

Full Transcript

OPERATOR

Hello everyone. Thank you for joining us and welcome to the Dick's Sporting Goods Q1 2026 earnings conference call. After today's prepared remarks, we will host a question and answer session. If you would like to ask a question, please press Star one to raise your hand. To withdraw your question, press Star one again. I will now hand the conference over to Nate Gilch, VP of Investor Relations. Nate, please go ahead.

Nate Gilch (VP of Investor Relations)

Good morning everyone and thank you for joining us to discuss our first quarter 2026 results. On today's call will be Ed Stack, our Executive Chairman, Lauren Hobart, our President and Chief Executive Officer and Navdeep Gupta, our Chief Financial Officer. A playback of today's call will be archived in our investor relations website locatedat investors.dickssportinggoods.com for approximately 12 months. As a reminder, we will be making forward looking statements which are subject to various risks and uncertainties that could cause our actual results to differ materially from these statements. Any such statements should be considered in conjunction with cautionary statements in our earnings release and risk factor discussions in our filings with the SEC, including our last annual report on Form 10K, as well as cautionary statements made during this call. We assume no obligation to update any of these forward looking statements or information. Please refer to our investor relations website to find the reconciliation of our non GAAP financial measures referenced in today's call. And finally, a couple of admin items. First, a quick reminder on our comparable sales reporting Foot Locker will be included in our quarterly comp calculations beginning in Q4 of 2026, which will mark the start of their 14th full month of operations post acquisition. And finally, for future scheduling purposes, we are tentatively planning to publish our second quarter 2026 earnings results on August 25, 2026. And with that I will now turn the call over to Ed.

Ed Stack (Executive Chairman)

Thanks Nate Good morning everyone. We delivered a very strong first quarter and want to thank our more than 100,000 teammates around the globe for their commitment and execution. Sport is one of the hottest categories in the country today. We're in the middle of a real sports moment and the intersection of sport and culture has never been stronger. You see it everywhere from rising valuation professional sports teams to the level of investment from streaming platforms and networks and the strong demand from advertisers to be a part of live sports. Looking ahead with major global events like the 2026 World cup and the 2028 Summer Olympics in LA, we're entering one of the most exciting multi year periods for sport in this country's history, making it an incredibly powerful and compelling platform for consumer engagement. Today, this environment plays directly to our strengths and Dick's is leading from the front across our stores, our digital capabilities and our now expanded global reach. We are connecting with athletes in more ways and with more relevance than at any point in our history. What sets us apart is our ability to create and maintain that connection across performance, lifestyle and culture. Throughout the Dick's ecosystem, House of Sport and Fieldhouse are reshaping what retail can be and and redefining how brands come to life. GameChanger keeps us deeply embedded in youth sports, unlocking new levels of opportunity and partnership. Golf Galaxy reinforces our leadership in a category with strong participation and rising cultural relevance. And with Foot Locker we reach a different consumer connected deeply with sneaker culture, basketball and lifestyle and extend our influence even further. That's why the best and most exciting sports brands in the world want to partner with us. Not just to sell product, but to launch ideas, tell stories and scale concepts globally during the most important moments in sports. And that's why athlete engagement with us continues to grow. We're investing in our business from a position of strength. We're playing offense for the long term and it's widening the gap between us and the rest of the industry. Our vision is to build the best sports company in the world and we're just getting started. Our leadership showed up clearly with an exceptionally strong performance in our Dick's business this quarter. With comps of 6%. Our team executed at a very high level and we're all proud of their contributions. Now turning to Foot Locker. We remain highly focused on the transformational opportunity ahead and on delivering an inflection point in sales and profitability. Starting with Back to School. Our excitement and confidence continue to build as we execute our plan. And in Q1 we saw encouraging proof points for the global Foot Locker business. We delivered slightly positive comps and operating income with merge margin improvement. This marks the first quarter of positive comps for the Foot locker business since Q4 of 2024. North America performed even better with a 1.4% comp growth. And within this the US Foot Locker banner comped up 6.4%. The Foot Locker banners are largest and most critical part of the footlocker business. So it's where we focused first and the results we're seeing reinforce our turnaround approach. We have a clear plan and it's working. We're raising the low end of our full year comp sales expectations for the Foot Locker business. We now expect comp sales growth of 1.5 to 3%, up from 1% to 3% previously. A major driver of this strong execution is our store teammates. Our stripers and blue shirts are energized by the renewed momentum and investment in our stores. They are deeply embedded in their communities. They're the closest to the consumer because they are the consumer. Wearing the stripes in their own backyard is a badge of honor and that authenticity shows up every day in how they tell the sneaker story. Our Fast Break stores are performing exceptionally well, reinforcing our conviction in this capital light remodel initiative. During the first quarter, we expanded Fast Break by approximately 90 stores, bringing the total to approximately 100. Across that expanded footprint, our Fast Break stores delivered double digit comps in Q1 and meaningful merchandise margin improvement by Back to School. We plan to have approximately 250 fast break stores across Foot Locker, Kids, Foot Locker and Champs globally with further expansion ahead of the holiday season. Our Fast Break initiative is built on retail fundamentals. A more focused shoe wall, improved storytelling and the reintroduction of apparel with curated and complementary offerings. These updates are fast to implement, typically completed in a few days and require limited capital. At its core, it's retail 101 and when you execute it with discipline, it works. Looking across the entire Foot Locker business, we are very excited about our assortment heading into Back to School. This marks the first season where our team had full control over the buys and we feel great about the product that will be in the stores. This will be supported by a bold brand relaunch designed to bring consumers back to the Foot Locker brand in a meaningful way. Behind the scenes, we are strengthening the fundamentals of the footlocker business with improvements in our supply chain. We're moving product faster and getting into the right stores. We're playing greater discipline around pricing and using real time data to drive better decisions and and sharper execution. Finally, our brand partners remain fully engaged. They want a strong growing footlocker and they are leaning in with us as their largest global partner. In closing, the early results we're seeing reinforce our conviction in both the opportunity and our approach. We have the right plan, the right team and the right partnerships in place to unlock the full potential of the footlocker business. With that, Lauren will walk you through the continued momentum across the Dick's business. Lauren, I'll turn it over to you.

Lauren Hobart (President and Chief Executive Officer)

Thank you Ed and good morning everyone. Building on Ed's comments, it's exciting to see sport driving sustained energy and engagement across the consumer landscape. I am so proud of how our team has turned that athlete demand into a very strong quarter of execution for the company. At Dick's, the team continues to excel at bringing our four strategic pillars to life, a compelling omnichannel athlete experience, a differentiated on trend product assortment, a deep engagement with the Dick's brand and the strength of our teammates and culture. In Q1 we delivered comp sales growth of 6% in the Dick's business with growth in average ticket and transactions. These strong comps were on top of a 4.5% increase last year and a 5.3% increase in 2024. And as we continued to gain market share, one thing that remains notable is the consistency in athlete behavior. We saw more athletes purchase from us with more frequent purchases and they spent more each trip compared to the prior year. We continue to see a healthy consumer across income demographics with no signs of trading down alongside particularly strong engagement from our younger athletes. Our consumer is really responding to newness and innovation which is showing up throughout the Dick's business with broad based growth across footwear, apparel and hardlines. Given our continued confidence in the Dick's business, we are raising the low end of our expectations for comparable sales and now expect growth of 2.5% to 4%, up from 2% to 4% previously. At the high end of our expectations for the Dick's business, we now expect to drive approximately 30 basis points of operating margin expansion on a non GAAP basis. At the consolidated company level, we continue to expect full year non GAAP earnings per diluted share in the range of $13.50 to $14.50. This continued strength reflects the progress we're making across our strategic priorities. First, we continue to drive growth in our key categories supported by national brand partners, new and emerging brands and our own vertical brands. One of our biggest advantages is the depth of our brand relationships. We are a critical partner to the most important brands in our industry and that shows up in the access, allocation and marketing support we receive. Our partnerships span leading global brands like Nike, Adidas and Fanatics as well as fast growing emerging brands such as Biore and Gymshark. These relationships are deeply collaborative and they continue to bring the best product and innovation to our athletes. Second, we're continuing to reposition and elevate our real estate and store portfolio through House of Sport and Field House. These concepts are redefining the athlete experience in physical retail and strengthening how our brand partners show up in our stores. In Q1 we opened one House of Sport location and two Field House locations and our plans are on track to open approximately 13 and 20 more respectively for this year. We also continue to see extremely strong interest from landlords, giving us access to some truly iconic retail locations including Palm Beach Gardens, Cerritos and Tyson's Corner. Given these new opportunities, we can be selective in the locations we choose, which will drive greater long term shareholder value. Third, we are continuing to enhance how we serve athletes seamlessly across channels in our stores. We're evolving the experience with a greater focus on elevated service and selling rooted in deep sport and product expertise. At the same time, we are investing in our digital experience, enhancing our site and our app. We recently announced the upcoming summer launch of Coach IDX, our AI powered digital agent, representing a significant step forward in how we innovate for the athlete. Coach extends the expertise of our teammates into a personalized conversational experience, helping athletes make more confident decisions across product, training and services. We also remain very excited about our Dick's Media Network, a high growth asset that allows our partners to reach athletes in very relevant ways across our House of Sport locations and digital channels. And we're thrilled to have recently opened our Fort Worth Distribution center, enhancing our ability to serve athletes in the fast growing Texas market and surrounding areas. Finally, we continue to scale Game Changer as a key driver of engagement and innovation within the Dick's ecosystem. Earlier this year, Game Changer launched the most comprehensive product update in ITS history, introducing 1080p live streaming, automated game highlight reels and a new suite of AI powered coaching tools designed to help coaches coach smarter. The impact has been immediate and measurable. In Q1, approximately 50% of all games covered on the platform were streamed live, a record for the business. At scale, the reach is significant. In the last month alone, more games were streamed on Game Changer than have been played in the entire history of Major League Baseball. In closing, the consistency that we're seeing across the Dick's business validates our strategies and the discipline of our execution. We are operating from a position of strength and we remain confident in our ability to drive sustained growth while investing for the future. With that, I'll turn it over to NAVDEEP to share more detail on our financial results and our 2026 outlook. Navdeep, over to you.

Navdeep Gupta (Chief Financial Officer)

Thank you Loren and good morning everyone. Let's begin with a brief review of our first quarter results. Consolidated net sales increased 62.7% to $5.16 billion, driven by a $1.79 billion contribution from Foot Locker business and a 6% comp increase for the Dick's business. As we continue to gain market share. Dick's business Comp reflects a 5.5% increase in average ticket and a 0.5% increase in transactions with a broad based strength across footwear, apparel and hardlines. On a two year and a three year basis, Dick's business comped increased 10.5% and 15.8% respectively. Pro forma comps for the foot locker business accelerated increasing 0.6% for the quarter driven by a 1.4% increase in North America. Notably as Ed highlighted, the US Foot Locker banner delivered a 6.4% comp growth reflecting strong underlying performance as we focus on driving improvements in this important part of the foot Locker business. From a margin perspective, consolidated non GAAP gross profit was $1.73 billion or 33.42% of net sales, down 328 basis points from last year. The year over year decline was primarily driven by mix impact from the foot locker business. Turning to our expenses on a non GAAP basis, consolidated SGA expenses increased 68.4% or $541 million to $1.33 billion and deleveraged 88 basis points compared to last year's non GAAP results, $480 million of this consolidated increase was driven by foot locker business. As expected for the Dick's business, SGNA deleveraged 31 basis points driven by investments digitally and in store. Consolidated non GAAP operating income was $378.4 million or 7.33% of net sales, compared to $360.4 million or 11.35% of net sales last year. For the Dick's business, operating income was $361 million or 10.69% of net sales. And for the Foot Locker business we delivered operating income of $17.5 million or 0.98% of net sales. Moving down, the P and L, consolidated non GAAP income tax expense was $106.2 million or a rate of 28.8%. Our effective tax rate for the quarter was shaped by mix of our earnings in foreign jurisdictions, including the effect of purchase accounting adjustments, particularly in Europe where losses do not currently generate a tax benefit due to valuation allowances. In total, we delivered consolidated non GAAP earnings per diluted share of $2.90 for the quarter, which includes the dilutive impact of the 9.6 million shares issued in connection with the Foot Locker acquisition. This compares to our non GAAP earnings per diluted share of $3.37 last year. On a GAAP basis, our earnings per diluted shares were $3.54. This includes $174 million of pre tax litigation and other settlements, partially offset by $97 million of pre tax Foot Locker acquisition related costs. For additional details you can refer to the non GAAP reconciliation tables of our press release that we issued this morning. Now, looking to our balance sheet, we ended the quarter with approximately $1 billion of cash and cash equivalents and no borrowings on our $2 billion unsecured credit facility. Inventory was $5.42 billion reflecting the addition of the Foot Locker business while the Dick's Business inventory was up just 3%. Importantly, we believe our inventory remains well positioned to support our growth plans across both Decks and Foot Locker businesses. Turning to capital allocation, net Capital expenditures were $289 million and we paid 114 million in quarterly dividends. We also repurchased 719,000 shares of our stock for $141 million at an average price of $196.38. Before I move to our outlook, I would like to provide a brief update on the expectations surrounding the Foot Locker acquisition. First, as part of our clean out of the garage actions and broader merger and integration work, we previously estimated and continue to expect total pre tax charges of between 500 million and 750 million dollars. During 2025 we recognized 390 million dollars of these charges. The remaining pre tax charges will be incurred over 2026 and the medium term as we complete this work. We now expect approximately $200 million of these remaining charges in 2026 compared to our original expectation of $150 million. These charges have been excluded from today's non GAAP EPS outlook. Second, we remain confident in achieving previously announced 100 to $125 million of cost synergies over the medium term, primarily from procurement and direct sourcing efficiencies. A portion of these synergy benefits are expected in 2026 which have been reflected in our outlook. Now moving to our outlook for full year 2026, our guidance continues to reflect the strength of the Dick's business and the turnaround efforts underway at Foot Locker, all within the contech of the dynamic geopolitical and macroeconomic environment. Based on our confidence in Dick's and Foot Locker, we are raising the low end of our comp sales guidance for both businesses. Beginning with the Dick's business, we now expect full year comp sales growth in the range of 2.5% to 4% compared to our prior growth expectation of 2% to 4%. From a pacing standpoint, we continue to expect higher comps in the first half driven in large part by the timing of the World Cup. We continue to expect pre opening expenses to be approximately $90 million for the full year for the Dick's business. From an operating margin, we now expect the high end of our expectation for the Dick's business to be approximately 11.4% which is above our prior expectation of approximately 11.2%. From a pacing standpoint, we continue to expect operating margins for the Dick's business to decline in the first half and expand in the second half due to the timing of the planned investments and synergy savings. The most significant pressure is expected in Q2 driven primarily by the timing of planned SGNA investments including marketing tied to the World cup and the timing of pre opening expenses to support a higher number of houses board openings in this year's second quarter compared to the last year. Now turning to Foot Locker business, we now expect full year pro forma comp sales growth in the range of 1.5% to 3% compared to a prior growth expectation of 1% to 3%. We now expect operating income for the Footlocker business to be in the range of $110 million to $150 million compared to our prior expectation of 100 million to $150 million. From a pacing standpoint, we continue to expect comp sales and operating income performance to be back half weighted at the consolidated company level. We continue to expect full year non GAAP earnings per diluted share in the range of $13.50 to $14.50. Our earnings guidance is now based on approximately 90.5 million average diluted shares outstanding, which includes the dilutive impact of 9.6 million shares issued in connection with the Footlocker acquisition. We now anticipate a consolidated company effective tax rate of approximately 27% for the full year. This is approximately 150 basis points higher than our original expectation as the dynamics we saw in Q1 are expected to persist, albeit to a lesser degree. This increase in tax rate unfavorably impacts our non GAAP EPS guidance by approximately $0.25 for the full year and is included in our updated outlook. Finally, from a capital allocation standpoint, investing in our business to grow our leadership position and drive profitable organic growth across both Dick's and Foot Locker business remains our top priority. We now expect net capital expenditures of approximately $1.4 billion for the full year, split roughly 70:30 across Dick's and Foot Locker businesses. For the Dick's business, our investment will be focused on store growth relocations and improvement in our existing stores as well as ongoing investments in technology and supply chain for the Foot Locker business. Our investments will be focused on re energizing our store fleet, including our Fast Break initiative. In closing, we are pleased with the strength in the Dex business and confident in the path to to improved performance at the Foot Locker business. This concludes our prepared remark. Thank you for your interest in Dick's Sporting Goods Operator. You may now open the line for questions.

OPERATOR

We will now begin the question and answer session. Please limit yourself to one question and one follow up. If you would like to ask a question, please press Star one to raise your hand. To withdraw your question, press Star one again. We ask that you pick up your handset when asking a question to allow for optimum sound quality if you are muted locally. Please remember to unmute your device. Please stand by while we compile the Q and A roster. Our first question comes from the line of Simeon Gutman with Morgan Stanley. Your line is open. Please go ahead.

Simeon Gutman (Equity Analyst)

Hi, good morning everyone. Good quarter. So I know we're going to spend some time on Footlocker this morning, but I want to start with the Dick's business. A 6% comp is a very strong start to the year. Can you talk about the key drivers of the performance, how much reflects underlying momentum versus any one time benefits in the quarter and then how you're thinking about comps from here.

Lauren Hobart (President and Chief Executive Officer)

Thanks Simeon. Yes, we are really proud of the quarter and the results we just put out. The Dick's comp increased 6%. This was definitely not a result of a one time factor. We saw broad based strength across the entire portfolio. We saw, we saw strength in footwear and apparel and hard lines within hard lines. Feeling really terrific about team sports and licensed and trading cards and golf. There was tremendous growth across the whole portfolio and really this is due to the fact that our long term strategies are working. We've been leaning into differentiated product, elevated product. We're finding that consumers are really resonating with newness, with technical innovation and at the same time we repositioned our portfolio with House of Sport and Field House and the best expression of retail is cascading through our entire business. Our entire team is completely focused on elevating the athlete experience in our stores and throughout our digital ecosystem. And that is a big factor of our results. The other thing I would point to is, as Ed mentioned in his performance remarks, sport is one of the hottest categories in the country today and we sit right at the intersection of sport and culture. We're feeling that excitement in North America going into the World cup, it's going to continue for many years going into LA28 and we happen to just be in a fantastic lane. But for many quarters now, we have seen our consumer hold up really, really well. We haven't seen trade down again this quarter. We didn't see trade down from best to better or better to good. We saw growth again this quarter, all income demographics and we added 1.5 million new athletes to our database. So really, really pleased with the quarter that we just had and the momentum that it signals in our business.

Simeon Gutman (Equity Analyst)

And my follow up is on profit and flow through. So the 6% comps we would have expected a little stronger flow through. For us, strong comps typically means more full price selling. So good for gross and then nice SGA leverage. So can you talk about what's unique either to Q1? It may be unique to 2026 given World cup and the timing of House of Sport. And is it more of or less a whole year where we don't get what the business operating leverage the business throws off and we'll see more strength as we go into next year. Thank you.

Lauren Hobart (President and Chief Executive Officer)

Okay, Simeon, it's a really, really good question. I'm glad you asked it. Our business is performing exactly as we had expected it to and as we guided. So in the first half we said we were going to have higher comps than the second half and we also were going and making significant investments in our business, which we did. We invested in World cup and we'll continue to do that in Q2. So for the first half we did expect stronger comps, lower flow through. But when you look at the full year guidance, we just took our high end of our guidance up 20 basis points. So we guided to 10. We're now guiding to 30 basis points of improvement at the high end of the range, 11.4%. We're absolutely expecting leverage for the full year. It just as we've been planning, it's going to come in the second half and that's just due to the timing of investment. So again we feel terrific about the business and really good about the leverage for this year and the operating profit flow through. Okay, thanks. Good luck. Thanks.

OPERATOR

Our next question comes from the line of Brian Nagel with Oppenheimer. Your line is open. Please go ahead.

Brian Nagel (Equity Analyst)

Very good morning. Sorry to want to add my congratulations. Nice quarter. So my first question, I do want to focus on Foot Locker. So you know in your commentary and lately you've expressed a lot of confidence in the turnaround we saw some encouraging signs here in the first quarter, particularly United States. So can you just kind of maybe talk more about where the turnaround is today? You know, focus again on the with the progress you're seeing with the Fast Break refresh and just your overall positioning and health of that inventory within the Foot Locker channel?

Ed Stack (Executive Chairman)

Sure. Thanks, Brian. We're right on schedule with what we plan to do with Foot Locker. We've, you know, through last year and we've cleaned out the garage from an inventory standpoint. So our inventory is in terrific shape. We've repaired vendor relationships with key brands that were somewhat disenchanted with Foot Locker. We've repaired those vendor relationships and they're now fully supportive of Foot Locker and really want Foot Locker want in need Foot Locker to be a stable, growing retailer as part of their portfolio. So we've replaced those relationships, we've rebuilt the management teams and we've re merchandised the stores of what we're doing with Fast Break. From a Fast Break initiative, which are those early stories that we reconceptualized what the wall would look like. As you've heard me say before, the footlocker footwear wall was really a run on sentence. It was just filled with a bunch of shoes and there was nothing important. What we did is we took all those shoes off the wall. We reduced roughly 30% of the SKU choices and focused on key styles, key colors and key stories that when the consumer came in, they knew what was important in those Fast Break stores, as we've talked about, have done extremely well. They comped double digits in the first quarter. So we're really excited about that. As I said, the inventory is in good shape. We've augmented some of the assortment in the first quarter that helped the business. And remember, we've always said that the inflection point here was going to begin in Back to School, which is the first time that the team bought the entire assortment. So we feel that inflection point in Back to School is going to happen and we will have bought the product and that's the first time we'll be back marketing and doing a relaunch of the Footlocker brand and a big marketing effort, which we are really pretty excited about. And as you said, we did focus our attention on the biggest part of the business, which is the US Foot Locker locations. And those stores comped at over a 6% comp in the first quarter. So you know, our plan. We're right on schedule with our plan. Our plan is Working and we continue to be really excited about the Full Locker business going forward.

Brian Nagel (Equity Analyst)

No thanks, Ed. I appreciate all that. So this is my follow up. I just want to follow up on the Fast breaks. I've spent my, my associates and I've spent a lot of time looking at the, you know, the Foot Locker stores that you've refreshed, the Fast Break stores and wait, you understand this. So. And they do look much cleaner, much better organized. But that's there's no new product. The product we're seeing those stores is still legacy products. So to say you haven't introduced new product. So what's driving those sales? Just having a much cleaner, better organized existing product for right now.

Ed Stack (Executive Chairman)

Yes. You know, and when you've been into the Fast Break stores, you've seen, although it's not perfect yet, you've seen an increase in the apparel business. In the apparel presentation that we've got there. You know, Foot Locker previously won't say they exited the apparel business, but they significantly scaled back the apparel business. But we brought apparel back in and we've done the best we could assembling together because we didn't buy this assortment. We did talk to brands and they got us some additional allocation of product that so that we'd be in better stock. But as I've said, the first time that we were able to buy the product and build that assortment is for the back to school season. And that's where you'll see that inflection point. Got it. I appreciate it. Congrats again. Thanks.

OPERATOR

As a reminder, if you would like to ask a question, please press star one to raise your hand. Our next question comes from the line of Kate McShane with Goldman Sachs. Your line is open. Please go ahead.

Kate McShane (Equity Analyst)

Hi, good morning. Thanks for taking our question. It looks like your capital expenditure outlook came down a little bit for fiscal year 26 and we wondered if you could explain what the change was there. Is there any breakdown you can give between Foot Locker and Dick's? And is there a way to think about capex from the Fast Break investment but also by banner for Foot Locker?

Navdeep Gupta (Chief Financial Officer)

Good morning Ray, this is Navdeep. So two part question there. Let me start with the outlook that we are provid provided for the capex. We actually gave a little bit of a detailed outlook on the capex between the banners and right now we expect net capex for the Dick's banner to be about a billion dollars for 2026 and for Foot Locker to be about 400 million. As you can imagine, vast majority of that $400 million of the capital investment in Foot Locker will be associated with the investments that we are making in our stores, including the Fast Break stores. But as Ed called out, the Fast Break stores are capital light. But at the same time, when you think about the magnitude of investments in terms of the number of stores we'll be investing in, that is a significant portion of the capex investment for Footblocker for 26. In terms of where the efficiencies came, the efficiency or the decrease in our CapEx outlook by about $100 million came predominantly in the text business. It's part of what Lauren talked about, like the confidence that we have on our operating margin expansion on a full year basis. The team has been working on productivity initiatives for last several years and what you're seeing is the manifestation of that work showing up both in the operating margin leverage expectation on a full year as well as the Capital efficiency of $100 million of reduction in CAPEX Outlook for Dick's Alpha full year.

Kate McShane (Equity Analyst)

Okay, thank you. And just as a follow up question, which is strength in the footlocker US Business, can you maybe talk through what you're seeing with the Foot Locker Europe stores currently?

Ed Stack (Executive Chairman)

Yeah, Europe, the European business is, as we expected, is a little bit behind where the US business is. We are just in the process of implementing the Fast Break strategy into Europe. We've gotten a couple stores done there and results are pretty promising. We're making some other changes there from a management standpoint. But all in all, the European business is about where we anticipated it to be, but it's definitely a bit behind the US business and we expect that to be that way through the end of the year. But we do expect that we'll catch up.

OPERATOR

Our next question comes from the line of Adrian Yee with Barclays. Your line is open. Please go ahead.

Adrian Yee (Equity Analyst)

Great. Thank you for taking my question and good morning and well done, Ed and Lauren. I guess my question starts with kind of what macro backdrop do you envision for the rest of the year and the guidance. And then secondarily, Lauren, I really like the comment on, you know, intersection of sport and culture, sport and lifestyle, and you have the two brands to go after both of those. So can you talk about kind of level of innovation, competition and maybe kind of focus on some of the fat footwear fashion trends, so performance versus lifestyle versus maybe non athletic, just the ebbs and flows of kind of those subsector trends. Thank you so much.

Lauren Hobart (President and Chief Executive Officer)

Great. Thanks, Adrian. As we've looked at the guidance, the macro we balanced all of the confidence that, that we have in our business and the momentum that I talked about in my first answer with some caution, appropriate level of caution about the macroeconomic environment, geopolitical environment. And that is why we've left the top end of our comp range. Same both Dicks and Foot Locker. But overall, our strategies are working. The things that we can control are working and we're feeling really good about them. In terms of the intersection of sports and culture, we see a lot of innovation. And within footwear in particular, we're really pleased with things like performance, running, which is doing really, really well. Even basketball, women's basketball is doing really well. Some of the lifestyle footwear is doing very well. We point to retro running in particular, and some of the other brands are doing really terrific and training and recovery. So we're seeing footwear is a very strong business for us. We drove growth in the past, the past quarter, will continue to drive growth into the future. And we're feeling very bullish.

Adrian Yee (Equity Analyst)

Great. And my follow up, as you mentioned, the brand relationships, you know, kind of porting over that strength to Footlocker. Can you kind of give us specific examples of what that means? Faster turns, obviously, access to exclusives, you know, really kind of what are the muscle that you're putting over from, from Dick to Footlocker. Thank you so much.

Ed Stack (Executive Chairman)

Sure. I think there's a number of things. The, the fact that Foot Locker will now have a different allocation of product that they didn't have before, access to certain products that they didn't have before in the confidence of these brands, that Foot Locker is a viable go forward business that can help them grow, which a number of them had lost. And they, we've talked about this, and they've talked to me about this, that they had really lost confidence in Foot Locker, that they didn't think Foot Locker was really going to be able to kind of present their product in the way that they wanted it presented, protect their brands. And with the relationship that they have, we have between Dick's's and Foot Locker, these brands, all these relationships have been, have been repaired. And what we've got from an allocation standpoint, what we've got from an exclusive standpoint on either styles and, or colors going forward, stories that we'll be able to tell around different athletes and around different aspects of what's going on in sport or sneaker culture is very different. And you'll see a lot of that start to come to life to even greater degree in Q1 of next year. Is we're, we're bidding to beginning to build those assortments now. But it's an entirely different relationship with the brands. And if you talk to the group in Foot Locker, the buyers, the stripers, etc. They'll see a very different brand relationships going forward in the past and then going forward.

Adrian Yee (Equity Analyst)

Fantastic. Thank you very much. Best of luck. Thank you.

OPERATOR

Our next question comes from the line of Bob Durbal with btig. Your line is open. Please go ahead.

Bob Durbal (Equity Analyst)

Hi, good morning. Thanks for taking the question. I was wondering if you could expand a bit more on the core Dick's sporting goods segment. The gross margin performance and the decline that we saw this quarter.

Navdeep Gupta (Chief Financial Officer)

About the Dick's gross margin climbed about 35 basis points on a year over year basis. Two big drivers on that and both in line with our expectation. The first is the headwind that we saw in supply chain expenses. Firstly, as you can anticipate with the higher fuel cost, that was a headwind on a year over year basis as well. As we opened our sixth distribution center in Q1 and it was in the tail end of Q1. Really excited to have had that new infrastructure available to be able to service the athletes and a market much more efficient way as well as serve our stores. However, that did end with a little bit of a headwind on a year over year basis when you open that fixed infrastructure. Outside of that, we saw a little bit of a mix headwind driven by the fact like Lauren talked about the exciting new business and a tremendous amount of growth opportunity we see in the trading card business. It's bringing in new customer, it's allowing us to go and kind of tap the market around the collectibles as well as trading cards. However, that does come with a slightly lower gross margin and that was a mixed impact that you saw in Q1. I'll finish by saying if you look at our outlook that we have shared for the full year, we expect our gross margin to expand now with the updated outlook that we have provided.

Bob Durbal (Equity Analyst)

Great, thank you. And then if I could just ask one more question on the basketball business. Can you talk about maybe what you're seeing at the Dick segment versus what you're seeing at the Footlocker stores In basketball?

Ed Stack (Executive Chairman)

Sure. Basketball business is coming back. You know, basketball had it slowed down a little bit. The basketball business is coming back in a really big fashion and really built around the women's basketball business. Whether that's Sabrina Ionescu and A'ja Wilson, that group of athletes have had a real impact and boys and girls, young men and women are buying that Product and we're pretty excited about it around the Dick's business. We're very excited about it around the Foot Locker business. So basketball is going to be quite good and we're pretty excited about it across both banners. Great. Thank you very much.

OPERATOR

Our next question comes from the line of Michael Lasser with ubs. Your line is open. Please go ahead.

Michael Lasser (Equity Analyst)

Good morning. Thank you so much for taking my question on the outlook for the core Dick's business. You mentioned that you expect the gross margin to improve over the course of the year. Presumably collectibles will remain a source of pressure. So what do you expect outside of the supply chain drag becoming less of an impact? What do you expect the offset will be from this collectibles pressure and any other driver that you're considering over the course of the next few quarters? Thank you.

Navdeep Gupta (Chief Financial Officer)

Good morning, Michael. I would say that there are puts and takes with the gross margin out and like you called out like fuel pressure. You know, we have contemplated at least that pressure persisting into the near future. We have Talked about the 6 DC opening for this year as well as the occupancy headwind as we look to continue to invest in repositioning our portfolio. And the mixed trade headwind that you called out from trading cuts is also contemplated. However, the offsetting factors continue to be pretty consistent with what has been driving our gross margin expansion mentioned the first and foremost, the access and allocation that Ed just talked about. That continues to be the key driver of us continuing to have confidence in the gross margin and the merge margin expansion, the work that our pricing team is doing, the work that our vertical brand teams are doing. And again, vertical brands carry 7 to 900 basis points of higher margin rate. So as we penetrate more there and those brands are doing fantastic for us, that's the driver. And then outside of that, like Lauren talked this morning about our excitement for the Dix Media Network which is continuing to have a strong growth as well as the growth that we are seeing in our game changer business will be the drivers that will be offsetting some of the headwinds that I just mentioned.

Lauren Hobart (President and Chief Executive Officer)

Michael, if I can just add to that, I want to just say the collectibles business, the trading card business are such exciting incremental opportunities. So while they do have a lower margin than our overall mix, I think thinking of them as a pressure or any sort of sort of, you know, negative thing is the wrong way to look at it. It's incremental gross margin dollars bringing people in more frequently, appealing to a younger audience. Totally incremental from the rest of our store and driving trips. So. So we're thrilled about that business and to Nadi's point, the math will work so that we can grow gross margin

Michael Lasser (Equity Analyst)

Lauren, I'd be asleep. I'd be remiss if I didn't ask you if you wanted to quantify the contribution from collectibles and trading cards in the first quarter. But I assume probably won't. Okay. Okay. Well, in that case, my follow up question is on the economics of the House of Fort location. This is now more in focus over time as you add more of these flagship stores. How have the economics changed? Are you continuing to see the same store sales growth in the second, third and fourth year of these locations consistent with the overall chain average? And do you think the return on investment both tangible and maybe intangible? Because you do get some intangible benefits from your key stakeholders like landlords and vendors. Will the tangible benefits or the tangible returns be sustained as you scale this concept to what could be 75 or more locations over time? Thank you.

Lauren Hobart (President and Chief Executive Officer)

Yes, great question. House of Support is everything you just said. It has a tangible benefit, it has an intangible benefit. From a financial standpoint, we're thrilled with the results and we do see comp store growth in years three and years four. So we've been able to confirm that. So they open fully and then continue to grow and they're driving strong sales and profitability and an roi. So really terrific financial results. But some of the intangibles that you mentioned are really important and that's everything from the consumer, the athlete who is coming and spending more time in our stores, significantly spending significantly higher than an average typical VIX athlete. Our national brand partners. So this has been an incredible on ramp for new and emerging brands. You heard us say this quarter we just added Yori to our mix of brands last quarter, Gymshark. That's all been enabled because of the House of Sport where people can really bring a brand to life head-to-toe, tell their story and it's a fantastic way for us all to get to know each other. So that's going to have tangible returns in the future that'll impact the whole business. And then lastly, you mentioned the landlord community. Every time we open one of these houses for we're seeing incredible impact in the center or the mall, we're driving traffic, we're revitalizing different areas of real estate throughout the country. And so that's giving us access to bigger and better, really more Premium locations which we are working really closely to curate and move forward. So I think it's a win, win, win. The last thing I'll say is House of Sport is translating not just to the House of Sport, but our field house concept, which is our 50k prototype, is really a mini version of a house support. It's got many of the same elements, just a little smaller. And so that's a very tangible return as well. And as we look to the rest of the portfolio where the whole chain is benefiting from things like product access and experiential selling and elevated curated experience across the board. So really, really strong House of Sport overall.

Navdeep Gupta (Chief Financial Officer)

Yeah, Michael, I'll just build on what Ron said, which was a pretty comprehensive response. The another opportunity that we are now investing into in House of Sport is the Dix Media Network. The way we can bring a brand to life and through the Dix Media Network and have that curated experience and an engagement with the athlete is what the brands are really excited about. Our visual team, our marketing team, have done a fantastic job not just creating that moment to create that interaction, but be able to create that in a way that it's measurable and quantifiable, that we can report the metrics back to the brands and that's what the brands are really excited about as we think about the DixMedia Network.

Michael Lasser (Equity Analyst)

Understood. Thank you so much and good luck. Thank you. Thank you.

OPERATOR

Our next question comes from the line of Paul Lijue with Citi. Your line is open. Please go ahead.

Paul Lijue (Equity Analyst)

Hey, thanks guys. Lauren, I think you said you didn't see a trade down between good, better and best. Can you talk about the performance of those three good, better, best in terms of what is driving the cop from each of those different segments? Might be as to how each of your customer segments are holding up. And then second, curious to get your updated thoughts on putting some leverage on the balance sheet. Aggressive. More aggressive with share repo. Thanks. Great.

Lauren Hobart (President and Chief Executive Officer)

Well, I'll start with your first question. I did say we did not see a trade down between good, better and best. And I won't get into specifics about all the three, but I do think it's important to note that we are serving different occasions and different athletes and within our portfolio we have everything from opening price points, say our DSG brand, which is really tremendously attractive pricing, but high function, high fashion, all the way up to, if you look at technical apparel or on the equipment side, really performance, driving equipment, cleats, everything. So every single one of those categories is doing well. And they all play a role in a balanced portfolio and they're all being reacted to by different consumer groups and that's what's driving the comp in each of those segments. I'll turn it to NAVDEEP to talk about the balance sheet.

Navdeep Gupta (Chief Financial Officer)

Yeah, Paul, just to build on your question on the balance sheet itself, we continue to have a very strong balance sheet as you saw in Q1. We bought 140 million of shares already in Q1 and still finished the quarter one with a billion dollars of cash on the balance sheet. So we have plenty of flexibility. And from a share repurchase perspective, I would say we'll continue to be opportunistic and that's the approach that we have taken and we'll continue to take that approach into the balance of this year.

Paul Lijue (Equity Analyst)

Just one quick follow up. The private label business you mentioned, you talked about how private label generally performed versus the rest of the chain.

Lauren Hobart (President and Chief Executive Officer)

Yeah, we're thrilled with our vertical brand business. We're thrilled with the DSG brand, the Clia brand, the Verse brand. MaxFly is doing amazingly well. The brands are doing very well versus the rest of the chain and also continuing to expand gross margin. So a vertical brand on average is 7 to 900 basis points higher in margin gross margin than the average VIX margin. And that continues the team is doing a fantastic job continuing to leverage that. So overall our vertical brands are a key mix. They're also filling white space opportunities in the portfolio and we're thrilled with how they're doing. Good luck. Thanks.

OPERATOR

Our next question comes from the line of Christopher Hobers with JP Morgan. Your line is open. Please go ahead.

Christopher Hobers (Equity Analyst)

Thanks and good morning and thanks. Thanks for taking my question to my. My first question is you've been very optimistic about the Dick's business, but we're also coming off a period where there was plenty of tax stimulus that affected all levels of the consumer income spectrum. So my question is is I was curious if you thought the first quarter benefited from tax stimulus such that that two, three year trend that you referenced is not sustainable as we look forward outside of just being prudent.

Navdeep Gupta (Chief Financial Officer)

Yeah, Chris, I would say, you know, we were very happy with the overall performance that we saw across both the banners, not just DICs and the foot Locker business as well. You know, if you look at it, the outlook that we have provided continues to kind of indicate that level of confidence around the core strategies and we are balancing that against the macroeconomic and the geopolitical landscape. I don't know if I would call out that we saw any significant benefit from the stimulus checks as they were puts and takes. Even if you look at it within Q1 with the stimulus check and higher gas prices and even in those economic conditions we delivered what we consider really strong results across both the banners.

Christopher Hobers (Equity Analyst)

Understood. And then on the footlocker side of the business a two part question. Can you talk about same store sales from an aur and transaction perspective? One would think that if it was basically a you are but you also have you know all the clearance that you took in the back half and you're going to be re merchandising and getting better just overall in stocks, in the stores such that you know transactions could, could also accelerate. And then on the gross margin side of that in the, in the footlocker gross margin was there any remnant clearance in there? And presumably we didn't have any of the buy in synergies in there yet. Thanks so much.

Ed Stack (Executive Chairman)

Yeah, I think on the gross margin piece there was certainly still some clearance. There's, there's always going to be clearance in a retail business. There's you know, products that you think you're going to sell, don't sell. It's all but all part of the normal aspect of the, of the business. So we were very pleased with what, with what we did with Foot Locker from a. We haven't guided right now we're not going to report this until it becomes copy in the fourth quarter the transactions and the traffic piece of this. But we, we are right on schedule. What we're doing with Footlocker. We're really excited about it and we're looking forward to that, that back to school time period when we have that inflection point where we've then had the ability to buy the product and also lay out the, the relaunch marketing campaign that we've got with Foot Locker that we're, we're pretty excited about. And then no, there's no buying synergies in that, in that gross margin yet. No, no.

Christopher Hobers (Equity Analyst)

Got it. Thanks so much. Have a great summer. Thanks.

OPERATOR

Our next question comes from the line of Christina Fernandez with Telse Advisory Group. Your line is open. Please go ahead.

Christina Fernandez (Equity Analyst)

Thank you. Good morning. I have two questions on full Locker and you mentioned earlier that you were planning on doing more than 250 stores on the fast break conversion sector back to school. You know how many can you think you can do for the year and with the double digit comps would you look to accelerate that? And the second question is on the, on the changes on the merchandising plan for Back to School and they have on the back half. Can you talk about what categories will be the changes will be more pronounced for the consumer, whether it's like basketball, casual, running or any more details you can share. Thanks.

Ed Stack (Executive Chairman)

Sure. So the Fast Break initiative will have 250 of them for Back to School. We will continue that program through holiday. We'll have some, we'll have more done for holiday. We're not going to guide to those right now. We're trying to decide how much we want to disrupt the holiday business with this. But there will be, there will be more of those that will be done at the end of the third quarter and the beginning of the fourth quarter. So we will continue with this. We're very pleased with how the Fast Break initiative are doing as it relates to the merchandising plans for the Back to School season. The categories that we're focusing on, you'll see a better assortment of women's product. You'll see a better assortment of what's going on from a basketball standpoint. And not only performance run, but also the retro running category will be you'll see better product and more storytelling around that. And then one of the things you'll see is you'll see better apparel product in there and a better apparel assortment around stories associated with tying back to the to the shoes. So it'll be around footwear, apparel and some around some key accessory items that Foot Locker had run out of in the past that we will, we will be in stock in and we think will certainly help this the business going forward. As we look at this inflection point and Back to School.

OPERATOR

Our final question comes from the line of Joseph Chevalo with Truist Securities. Your line is open. Please go ahead.

Joseph Chevalo (Equity Analyst)

Hey guys, thanks so much for taking my question. I was wondering is there anything you could suss out in your data that suggests that you might be, you know, getting incremental cop lift from the use of GLP1s. Anything in like the categories or the sizing or something like that?

Ed Stack (Executive Chairman)

Joe, we don't have specific data on that, but for the long time now we've been seeing people leaning in. I mean this goes back many years, even post Covid leaning into healthier active lifestyle, outdoor living, team sports, golf. So in general our consumer is doing really well and leading into these, but we don't have any specific correlation to GLP1s.

Joseph Chevalo (Equity Analyst)

Got it. And then maybe just one follow up. Can you give any color on the promotional environment and maybe like how it impacts both the dick's and the footlocker side of the business.

Lauren Hobart (President and Chief Executive Officer)

Yeah in Q1 we didn't that wasn't a major factor and we always on both the Dicks and the footlocker side will manage through any promotional environment we do what's best for the consumer and best for our business. We and we're very surgical about it we've got advanced pricing capabilities where we can really be curated in how we lean into a promotional environment but nothing on the horizon that we're particularly concerned about.

Joseph Chevalo (Equity Analyst)

Got it. Thanks so much. Thank you.

OPERATOR

We have reached the end of the Q and A session. I will now turn the call back to Lauren Hobart president and CEO for closing remarks.

Lauren Hobart (President and Chief Executive Officer)

Thank you everybody for your interest in Dicks and thank you to our 100,000 teammates and associates around the country and around the world. We have the best team in sports and we're very grateful for everything you do. Thank you all.

OPERATOR

This concludes today's call. Thank you for attending. You may now disconnect.

Disclaimer: This transcript is provided for informational purposes only. While we strive for accuracy, there may be errors or omissions in this automated transcription. For official company statements and financial information, please refer to the company's SEC filings and official press releases. Corporate participants' and analysts' statements reflect their views as of the date of this call and are subject to change without notice.

Importance Rank: 
1
 

Related Articles (DKS)

View Comments and Join the Discussion!

Posted-In: Earnings Conference Call TranscriptsNews Markets Trading Ideas

Don't Miss Any Updates!
News Directly in Your Inbox
Subscribe to:
Benzinga Premarket Activity
Get pre-market outlook, mid-day update and after-market roundup emails in your inbox.
Market in 5 Minutes
Everything you need to know about the market - quick & easy.
Fintech Focus
A daily collection of all things fintech, interesting developments and market updates.
SPAC
Everything you need to know about the latest SPAC news.
Thank You

Thank you for subscribing! If you have any questions feel free to call us at 1-877-440-ZING or email us at [email protected]