DI
DILLARD'S, INC. (DDS)·Q4 2025 Earnings Summary
Executive Summary
- Q4 2025 was mixed: revenue declined year over year and margins compressed, while expenses were well controlled; EPS fell to $13.48 from $15.44 as retail gross margin contracted to 36.1% and consolidated gross margin to 34.9% .
- Sales softness (-1% retail comps) and a 7% inventory increase weighed on profitability; management highlighted expense discipline but acknowledged margin pressure as the key headwind .
- 2025 guidance items updated: capex raised to $120M (from $100M in Q3), interest and debt (income) expense outlook to $(8)M (from $(7)M); D&A $180M and rentals $20M maintained .
- Catalyst for stock reaction: margin compression vs the continued SG&A control, higher capex plan for 2025, and tax-related EPS tailwinds tied to the ESOP dividend deduction that are non-operational in nature .
What Went Well and What Went Wrong
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What Went Well
- Expense control: SG&A held at 22.4% of sales; operating expenses fell ~$24.7M YoY primarily due to last year’s 53rd week, with continued focus on expense management .
- Category strength: Home & furniture and cosmetics outperformed within Q4 retail sales mix .
- Capital return flexibility intact: Repurchased ~$14.0M (≈36K shares at $391.04) with $273.0M still authorized at quarter-end .
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What Went Wrong
- Top-line and comps: Total retail sales decreased 1% and comparable store sales decreased 1% for the quarter .
- Margin pressure: Retail gross margin fell to 36.1% from 37.7%; consolidated gross margin to 34.9% from 36.6% .
- Inventory build: Ending inventory rose 7% YoY, elevating risk to near-term margin if demand slows .
Financial Results
Notes:
- Q4 2025 EPS includes $30.8M ($1.94/sh) tax benefit from ESOP special dividend deduction; Q4 2024 included $26.1M ($1.61/sh) and a $7.3M ($0.45/sh) tax valuation allowance benefit .
- Stronger categories: home & furniture, cosmetics; weaker: men’s apparel & accessories, shoes .
Segment-level view (reported):
- Net Sales (includes CDI Contractors) vs Total Retail Sales (excludes CDI) are shown above; company does not separately disclose CDI contribution in the press release .
KPIs
Guidance Changes
Other capital return:
- Regular cash dividend declared $0.25/sh, payable May 5, 2025 (record date March 31, 2025) .
Earnings Call Themes & Trends
Note: A Q4 2025 earnings call transcript was not available in the document set; commentary below reflects reported press releases.
Management Commentary
- “With sales down 1%, we worked on controlling expenses but lost some steam in gross margin.” — William T. Dillard, II, CEO (Q4 release) .
- “We were happy to see sales strength continue through the third quarter, ending up 3%.” — William T. Dillard, II (Q3 release) .
- “We were happy to achieve a sales increase for the first time in a while and encouraged by strengthening sales trends in July. ... we focused on controlling inventory, ending up 2% compared to 6% at the end of first quarter.” — William T. Dillard, II (Q2 release) .
Q&A Highlights
- An earnings call transcript for Q4 2025 was not available in the document set; therefore, Q&A themes and any clarifications provided during live remarks could not be reviewed [Search conducted; no transcript found].
Estimates Context
- Wall Street consensus (S&P Global) for Q4 2025 EPS and revenue was unavailable due to a data access limit at query time, so we cannot explicitly score beats/misses versus consensus today. Values retrieved from S&P Global were unavailable at time of request (request limit exceeded).
- Given the YoY pressure on consolidated and retail gross margin and negative comps, estimate revisions may skew lower on margin expectations and potentially SG&A leverage, while higher FY25 capex may trim free cash flow estimates at the margin .
Additional Detail and Cross-References
- Tax items affecting comparability: Q4 2025 includes $30.8M ($1.94/sh) tax benefit from ESOP-related special dividend deduction; Q4 2024 included $26.1M ($1.61/sh) and $7.3M ($0.45/sh) tax benefits (valuation allowance release) .
- Balance sheet/capital allocation: Cash & equivalents $717.9M at FY-end; short-term investments $325.7M; LT debt $321.6M; sub debentures $200.0M; equity $1,796.2M . Repurchases of ~$14.0M in Q4; $273.0M authorization remaining .
- Store base: 272 stores including 28 clearance centers; 46.3M square feet .
Key Takeaways for Investors
- Margin deterioration was the focal negative: retail GM down 160 bps YoY and consolidated GM down 170 bps despite expense discipline; this is likely to dominate near-term narrative .
- Comps turned negative (-1%) into the holiday quarter and inventory rose 7% YoY; risk to markdowns and near-term GM if sell-through lags persists .
- 2025 capex plan was raised to $120M from $100M at Q3, implying stepped-up investment despite margin pressure; interest and debt (income) expense outlook moved to $(8)M, modestly supportive to net income .
- Ongoing buybacks and sizable remaining authorization provide downside support, but are unlikely to fully offset operating softness if margin pressure continues .
- Non-operational tax benefits aided EPS this quarter; investors should normalize for these items when assessing underlying run-rate earnings power .
- Near-term trading: watch inventory clearance cadence and full-price sell-through in early FY25; medium-term thesis hinges on stabilizing comps and re-expanding retail GM while maintaining SG&A discipline .