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Sprouts Farmers Market, Inc. (SFM) Q3 2025 Earnings Summary

Executive Summary

  • Q3 2025 delivered an EPS beat and slight top-line miss versus consensus: diluted EPS $1.22 vs $1.17*, revenue $2.20B vs $2.22B*, with EBITDA also ahead ($198.1M vs $193.0M*) .
  • Comparable store sales decelerated to 5.9% amid tough laps and a softening consumer, while gross margin expanded 60 bps YoY to 38.7% on improved shrink .
  • Guidance was tempered: FY 2025 comps lowered to ~7% (from 7.5–9.0%) and net sales growth to ~14% (from 14.5–16.0%); Q4 comps guided to 0–2% and EPS $0.86–$0.90 .
  • Strategic catalysts: full launch of Sprouts Rewards loyalty (early signs of higher frequency/sales per customer) and continued self-distribution transition in meat/seafood to improve in-stocks; board authorized a new $1.0B repurchase (Q3 buybacks $50M) .

What Went Well and What Went Wrong

  • What Went Well

    • Margin execution: gross margin rose to 38.7% (+60 bps YoY) primarily from improved shrink, supporting EBIT margin of 7.2% .
    • Private label and attributes: Sprouts Brand exceeded 25% of sales, and e-commerce grew 21% to ~15.5% of total sales (baskets strong across partners) .
    • Strategic progress: loyalty fully launched with early indicators of increased shopping frequency and sales per customer; self-distribution in meat/seafood completed at four DCs to improve fill rates .
    • Quote: “We delivered strong earnings growth, up 34% year-on-year, with a 5.9% comp…inventory management improvements contributed to expansion of our EBIT margin.” .
  • What Went Wrong

    • Top-line moderation: as the quarter progressed, comps moderated faster than expected due to challenging YoY comparisons and signs of consumer softness (traffic still positive but slowed; pressure at basket tail) .
    • Q3 revenue undershot consensus and prior cadence; Q4 guide embeds flat-to-low single-digit comps reflecting 10%+ laps in Nov/Dec and macro caution .
    • Competitive dynamics: Texas produce pricing more aggressive (HEB expansion) requiring vigilance; cannibalization running ~125–150 bps as density grows .
    • Analyst concern: risk that outsized tailwinds last year (strike, supply disruptions) are now tougher laps; management flagged pockets of prior gains (Oct 2024, Feb, May/June) .

Financial Results

MetricQ3 2024Q2 2025Q3 2025
Revenue ($USD Billions)$1.946 $2.221 $2.200
Diluted EPS ($USD)$0.91 $1.35 $1.22
Gross Margin %38.1% 38.8% 38.7%
EBIT ($USD Millions)$122.5 $179.4 $157.4
EBITDA ($USD Millions)$158.6 $217.8 $198.1
Comparable Store Sales %8.4% 10.2% 5.9%

Estimate comparison (Q3 2025):

  • Revenue: $2.200B actual vs $2.224B consensus* (miss)
  • EPS: $1.22 actual vs $1.17 consensus* (beat)
  • EBITDA: $198.1M actual vs $193.0M consensus* (beat)
    Values marked with * retrieved from S&P Global.

Product mix (category disaggregation):

CategoryQ3 2024Q3 2025
Perishables ($USD Millions; % of Sales)$1,128.3; 58.0% $1,266.0; 57.5%
Non-Perishables ($USD Millions; % of Sales)$817.5; 42.0% $934.5; 42.5%

Selected KPIs:

KPIQ2 2025Q3 2025
E-commerce share of sales~15% ~15.5%
E-commerce growth YoY+27% +21%
Sprouts Brand penetration24% >25%
Traffic contribution to compMajority ~40%
Stores opened in quarter12 9
Ending store count455 464
Cash & equivalents$261M $322M
YTD CFO$410M $577M
Q3 share repurchases$73M $50M

Guidance Changes

MetricPeriodPrevious Guidance (Q2 release)Current Guidance (Q3 release)Change
Net Sales GrowthFY 202514.5%–16.0% ~14% Lowered
Comparable Store SalesFY 20257.5%–9.0% ~7.0% Lowered
EBIT ($USD Millions)FY 2025$675–$690 $675–$680 Narrowed lower end
Diluted EPS ($USD)FY 2025$5.20–$5.32 $5.24–$5.28 Maintained/narrowed
Unit GrowthFY 2025≥35 new stores 37 new stores Raised
Capex (net) ($USD Millions)FY 2025$230–$250 $230–$250 Maintained
Comparable Store SalesQ4 20250.0%–2.0% Introduced
Diluted EPS ($USD)Q4 2025$0.86–$0.90 Introduced

Earnings Call Themes & Trends

TopicQ1 2025 (Prior-2)Q2 2025 (Prior-1)Q3 2025 (Current)Trend
Loyalty programPilots in ~35 stores; planning broader launch; early engagement metrics positive AZ rollout; expect comp impact in 2026; omnichannel enhancements underway Full launch chainwide this week; early increases in frequency and sales per customer Scaling; early lift; 2026 driver
Supply chain/self-distributionBeginning to insource meat/seafood; bridge solutions; expect benefits in 2026 Insourcing starts in Orlando; Northern CA DC expansion planned early 2026 Transition completed at 4 DCs; target completion by Q2 2026; improving fill rates and delivery frequency Execution progressing
Consumer/macroNo notable trade-down; resilient target customer Strong produce season; external disruptions benefited in May/June; normalization expected Softer consumer; tough laps (Sept/Oct); Q4 comps 0–2% vs double-digit laps; two-year stacks stabilizing Softer near term; watch Q4
Competition/produce pricingOrganic pricing strategy and long-term grower contracts; watch industry Texas produce more aggressive (HEB); overall price gap intact; Amazon/Whole Foods monitored Competitive vigilance
Sprouts Brand & attributesPenetration 24%; strong innovation pipeline; events drive discovery 24% of sales; >350 new products planned; attributes lead growth >25% of sales; strong innovation (e.g., wellness bowls) Continuing strength
E-commerce~15% penetration; omnichannel customers high value 15% of sales; +27% yoy; shop.sprouts.com fastest-growing channel ~15.5% of sales; +21% yoy; balanced performance across partners Sustained growth
Cannibalization/density~125–150 bps; as density increases, remains manageable Stable

Management Commentary

  • “In the third quarter, we delivered strong earnings growth, up 34% year-on-year, with a 5.9% comp…inventory management improvements in supply chain contributed to the expansion of our EBIT margin.” — CEO Jack Sinclair .
  • “Traffic remained positive…e-commerce sales grew 21%…Sprouts Brand now represents more than 25% of our total sales.” — CFO Curtis Valentine .
  • “As the quarter progressed, our comp sales moderated faster than expected as we came up against challenging year-on-year comparisons, as well as signs of a softening consumer.” — CEO Jack Sinclair .
  • “Sprouts Rewards is fully launched this week…encouraging indications of increased shopping frequency and sales per customer.” — CEO Jack Sinclair .
  • “Through October, we have successfully completed [meat/seafood self-distribution] transition at four DCs…anticipate completing by Q2 2026.” — CEO Jack Sinclair .
  • “Quarter to date [Q4], we are just north of a 1, up against that 13% [October] last year…the two-year has started to stabilize.” — CFO Curtis Valentine .

Q&A Highlights

  • Top-line cadence and Q4 comps: two-year stacks stabilizing; Q4 comps guided 0–2% given 10%+ laps in Nov/Dec; margins expected stable YoY at the EBIT level .
  • Loyalty impact: initial data shows higher frequency and sales per customer; expect meaningful comp contribution in 2026 as data depth improves .
  • Competition: Texas produce pricing more aggressive with HEB expansion; Amazon/Whole Foods monitored (focus shifted to 365 entry price); price gap intact elsewhere .
  • Cannibalization: ~125–150 bps as density grows; viewed as within expectations and manageable .
  • Capital allocation: will be opportunistic on buybacks under new $1.0B authorization (remaining ~$966M) .
  • Prepared foods and protein: building salads/meals programs; protein assortment a key attribute-led growth area .

Estimates Context

  • Q3 2025 actuals vs consensus: EPS $1.22 vs $1.17* (beat); revenue $2.200B vs $2.224B* (miss); EBITDA $198.1M vs $193.0M* (beat) .
  • Q4 2025 guidance vs consensus: EPS $0.86–$0.90 vs ~$0.885*; revenue consensus ~$2.155B* — guidance implies subdued comps consistent with laps and macro caution .
  • FY 2025: comps and net sales growth tempered; EBIT range narrowed; EPS range tightened; consensus may drift lower on sales/comp while EPS largely maintained given margin execution .
    Values marked with * retrieved from S&P Global.

Key Takeaways for Investors

  • Earnings power intact despite softer top-line: EPS/EBITDA beat driven by shrink and margin discipline; revenue miss reflects tough laps/consumer softness — near-term narrative centers on comp stabilization through Q4 .
  • Guidance reset mainly on comps/sales; EPS range preserved: FY comps ~7% and sales ~14% lower than prior guide, while EPS range narrowed but maintained at mid-point — supports margin stability even at low-end comps .
  • Structural levers in place for 2026: loyalty scaling (early lift), self-distribution improvements, innovation pipeline and private label penetration underpin medium-term comp/margin trajectory .
  • Watch competitive intensity in Texas produce and ongoing cannibalization (~125–150 bps) as store density rises; pricing vigilance continues .
  • Capital returns remain robust: $1.0B buyback authorization (~$966M remaining) with strong YTD cash from operations ($577M), providing downside support .
  • Trading lens: near term, results/guidance likely pressure top-line expectations; medium term, loyalty/self-distribution and margin discipline support EPS durability; monitor Q4 two-year stacks, in-stock improvements, and early loyalty KPIs .

Additional Q3-period press releases:

  • NIL partnerships expand PowHERed by Sprouts platform, reinforcing brand positioning in wellness and community engagement .
  • Row 7 Seed partnership brings flavor-first produce varieties to CA stores, supporting differentiation in perishables .
  • Healthy Communities Foundation awarded $3.3M across 550+ local partners in a single day, strengthening community ties .

Structural update:

  • Executed a new 10-year primary distribution agreement with KeHE (effective Aug 2025), covering bakery, bulk, dairy, deli, grocery, frozen, HBC, vitamins/supplements with defined service levels, code-life standards, fuel surcharges, and credit policies .

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