B5
BIG 5 SPORTING GOODS Corp (BGFV)·Q3 2025 Earnings Summary
Executive Summary
- Big 5 Sporting Goods did not publish Q3 2025 earnings as the company completed its go‑private merger on October 2, 2025, became a wholly owned subsidiary of Worldwide Sports Group Holdings, and initiated delisting and deregistration from Nasdaq/SEC reporting, removing the obligation to report quarterly results .
- The fixed cash consideration to public shareholders was $1.45 per share; outstanding options/RSUs were cashed out per terms; the prior Bank of America credit facility was repaid and terminated at closing with liens released, eliminating early termination penalties .
- Ahead of the merger, operating trends deteriorated: Q2 2025 net sales declined 7.5% year over year to $184.9M, gross margin contracted to 28.2%, and net loss widened to $24.5M ($1.11 per share) with negative Adjusted EBITDA of $14.7M, including merger costs and non‑cash impairments .
- Q1 2025 similarly reflected macro/tariff/weather headwinds: net sales fell to $175.6M, comps −7.8%, gross margin 30.9%, and net loss of $17.3M ($0.78 per share); management guided Q2 to a larger loss and lower comps due to calendar shifts and consumer pressure .
What Went Well and What Went Wrong
What Went Well
- Management progressed and subsequently closed the go‑private transaction, positioning the business for strategic support and capital under private ownership: “we are progressing toward an expected closing in the second half of 2025” (prior to closing) ; closing occurred October 2, 2025 with delisting steps initiated .
- Inventory positioning was managed ahead of tariff risk and kept consistent year over year in Q2, mitigating near‑term cost impacts ; “we brought in extra product in advance of the tariffs, which should minimize any tariff impacts in the near term” .
- Store base optimization: continued rationalization of underperformers with eight closures in Q1 and ~four planned in Q3 (no openings), refocusing resources on productive locations .
What Went Wrong
- Demand softness and adverse calendar/weather drove broad sales and margin pressure: Q2 same‑store sales −6.1%, gross margin −120 bps YoY to 28.2% on lower merchandise margins and higher occupancy/distribution cost mix .
- Operating deleverage and merger costs: Q2 selling and admin expense rose $3.2M YoY; Q2 net loss widened to $24.5M including ~$2.8M merger expenses and $1.3M store impairments; Adjusted EBITDA was −$14.7M .
- Leverage and liquidity strain pre‑closing: Q2 ended with $71.4M drawn on the $150.0M credit facility and $4.9M cash, highlighting limited cushion during ongoing macro headwinds .
Financial Results
Segment breakdown: Not applicable; the company does not report segment revenue in its releases .
KPIs
Guidance Changes
Dividend guidance: Not discussed in Q1/Q2 releases; no Q3 public guidance due to merger .
Earnings Call Themes & Trends
Management Commentary
- “Our second quarter results continue to reflect the challenging macroeconomic and geopolitical environment affecting consumer discretionary spending.” — Steven G. Miller, Chairman, President and CEO .
- “We are progressing toward an expected closing in the second half of 2025, subject to customary closing conditions and stockholder approval.” — Steven G. Miller (pre‑closing) .
- “We brought in extra product in advance of the tariffs, which should minimize any tariff impacts in the near term.” — Steven G. Miller (Q1 call) .
Post‑merger status and governance were formalized with amended charter/bylaws and Board changes at the Effective Time .
Q&A Highlights
- Not available. The company did not hold or publish a public Q3 2025 earnings call; Q1 2025 transcript excerpts available in our records contained prepared remarks without accessible Q&A in retrieved sections .
Estimates Context
- S&P Global consensus estimates for Q3 2025 could not be retrieved and are unavailable; post‑merger private status likely curtailed active coverage and reporting. Values retrieved from S&P Global were unavailable due to access limitations at this time.
- For Q2 2025, management’s guidance implied a larger loss than the prior year; actual EPS of $(1.11) was below the guided range, suggesting estimates likely required downward revision after the print .
Key Takeaways for Investors
- With the October 2, 2025 close and delisting, BGFV ceased public quarterly reporting; any Q3 2025 financials are not publicly available, and future performance will be assessed privately by new owners .
- Operating momentum was negative into the merger: comps declines, margin compression, and rising operating losses/negative Adjusted EBITDA signaled ongoing consumer/tariff/occupancy headwinds .
- Liquidity tightened ahead of closing (revolver draws up, low cash), but the facility was fully repaid and terminated at closing, removing near‑term balance sheet overhang and liens .
- Store optimization and disciplined CapEx ($4–$7M) should support margin structure under private ownership, but demand recovery is the key variable; prior initiatives were targeted at core productivity and cost control .
- Short‑term trading implications largely ended with cash consideration at $1.45 per share and delisting; legacy holders received cash, and public market catalysts no longer apply .
- Medium‑term thesis under private ownership depends on execution across pricing/value, inventory turns, occupancy efficiency, and footprint optimization—formerly disclosed as priorities in public commentary .
Sources: SEC 8‑K (Merger closing and delisting) ; Q2 2025 press release (financials/merger status) ; Q1 2025 press release and call (financials/guidance/themes) .