SV
Savers Value Village, Inc. (SVV)·Q2 2025 Earnings Summary
Executive Summary
- Q2 2025 delivered solid top-line growth and raised FY2025 guidance: Net sales rose 7.9% to $417.2M; U.S. comps +6.2% and Canada comps +2.6% as assortment and value resonated; Adjusted EBITDA margin 16.5% .
- Results beat Wall Street on revenue and EPS: Revenue $417.2M vs ~$406.7M consensus; Adjusted EPS $0.14 vs ~$0.12 consensus; management cited transitory margin headwinds in Canada processing and accelerated Two Peaches conversions, with margins expected to normalize in H2 * * .
- Guidance raised across revenue, comps, net income, adjusted EPS, and Adjusted EBITDA; store openings refined to 25 and capex trimmed to $125–$140M; net interest expense guided at ~$67M and effective tax rate ~30% GAAP/~27% adjusted .
- Strategic catalysts: strong U.S. momentum, improving Canadian trends, pipeline of high‑quality real estate deals, and technology initiatives (Automated Book Processing now supplying ~50% of fleet), positioning long‑term margin recovery and share gains .
- Capital allocation: 2.7M shares repurchased in Q2, including 2.3M in conjunction with Ares’ secondary; $2.8M authorization remains, supporting per‑share metrics amidst improving fundamentals .
What Went Well and What Went Wrong
What Went Well
- U.S. strength and demographic broadening: U.S. net sales +10.5% to $228.8M; comps +6.2% driven by transactions and basket; customer base trending younger and higher income, consistent with secular thrift adoption .
- Canadian progress: comps +2.6% with favorable basket/transactions; third consecutive quarter of sequential improvement as assortment strengthened .
- Technology and operations: ABP rollout expanded to supply nearly 50% of fleet, supporting efficiency and selection; On‑site donations plus GreenDrop reached 79% of supply, bolstering sourcing .
- “After seeing strong financial returns from our rollout of Automated book processing (ABP), we've expanded ABP to supply nearly 50% of the fleet.” — CEO Mark Walsh .
- “OSDs plus GreenDrop… accounted for 79% of supply versus 78% last year.” — CFO Michael Maher .
What Went Wrong
- Gross margin pressure: Cost of merchandise sold rose 270 bps to 44.8% on higher Canadian processing levels and new stores; management expects H2 gross margins closer to last year as equilibrium is reached .
- Canada segment profit down: Canada segment profit fell $4.6M YoY in Q2 due to deleveraging and weaker CAD; FX translation lifts sales but is hedged with limited near‑term earnings impact .
- Near‑term investment drag: Accelerated conversion of the seven Two Peaches stores created modest, low‑single‑digit million‑dollar costs in Q2; largely behind the company now .
Financial Results
Consolidated P&L and KPIs (Q4 2024 → Q1 2025 → Q2 2025)
Estimate Comparison (Q2 2025)
Values marked with an asterisk were retrieved from S&P Global.
Segment Breakdown (Q2 2025)
Operating Drivers & KPIs
Guidance Changes
Earnings Call Themes & Trends
Management Commentary
- “Sales in our U.S. business grew 10.5%, with comparable store sales up 6.2%, driven by both transactions and average basket… our customer base has been getting younger and more affluent… not driven by economic circumstances.” — CEO Mark Walsh .
- “In Canada, higher production levels are improving assortment… This investment… has had a transitory impact on Canadian profit margin, which we expect to normalize over the next few quarters.” — CEO Mark Walsh .
- “Second quarter adjusted EBITDA was $69 million, and adjusted EBITDA margin was 16.5%… GAAP net income was $19 million, or $0.12 per diluted share. Adjusted net income was $23 million, or $0.14 per diluted share.” — CFO Michael Maher .
- “We are raising our previously stated outlook… Net sales of $1.67B to $1.69B… adjusted EBITDA of $252M to $267M… effective tax rate ~30% GAAP / ~27% adjusted.” — CFO Michael Maher .
- “Our price gaps to discount retail [are] between 40% and 70%… If that price gap were to widen, it gives us… optionality… opportunity to really gain share.” — CEO Mark Walsh .
Q&A Highlights
- Margin cadence and transient headwinds: Q2 marked peak impact from Canadian production ramp and Two Peaches conversions; expected H2 gross margins to be closer to last year as equilibrium is reached .
- Comps momentum: Acceleration noted in May/June, continuing into July for both U.S. and Canada, driven by transactions and basket .
- Pricing optionality and AUR: Sustained 40–70% price gaps vs discount retail provide optionality to maintain gaps while potentially lifting AUR if industry pricing rises .
- Operating expense and mix: OpEx expected slightly better as % of sales vs last year; reasonably consistent between Q3 and Q4; new store maturation tailwind into Q4 .
- FX and hedging: Stronger CAD boosts translated sales; profit impact limited in 2025 due to hedging; long‑term positive if CAD remains stronger .
Estimates Context
- Q2 beat on revenue and EPS vs S&P Global consensus: Revenue $417.2M vs ~$406.7M; EPS $0.14 vs ~$0.121 — both ahead, reflecting strong U.S. performance and improving Canadian trends * *.
- Consensus inputs were based on ~9 covering estimates for revenue and EPS; estimate dispersion modest, suggesting potential upward revisions post‑print [GetEstimates]*.
- Street may raise FY revenue, comps, EPS, and Adjusted EBITDA ranges given guidance raise and continued comps momentum, while modeling H2 gross margin normalization and the maturing 2024 store class .
Values marked with an asterisk were retrieved from S&P Global.
Key Takeaways for Investors
- U.S. momentum remains the anchor; demographic broadening and value positioning support share gains and secular thrift adoption .
- Canada is improving; margin normalization in H2 should support consolidated profitability as processing equilibrates .
- FY2025 guide raised across key metrics; near‑term trading catalyst is continued comps strength and confirmation of gross margin recovery trajectory in Q3 .
- Operational initiatives (ABP to ~50% of fleet; OSD+GreenDrop at ~79%) underpin sourcing efficiency and assortment quality, supporting sales yield and turn .
- Real estate pipeline quality suggests sustained unit growth into 2026+, aiding medium‑term revenue scale and margin leverage as cohorts mature .
- Capital allocation (2.7M shares repurchased) provides per‑share leverage; authorization balance remains, though near‑term focus is growth investments and new store maturation .
- Watch FX and tariffs: FX translation benefits sales but is hedged on profit; tariff‑driven new retail price inflation could widen SVV’s price gap and accelerate share gains .
Notes:
- Q2 2025 documents read in full: earnings call transcript and 8‑K press release – – –.
- Prior quarters used for trend: Q1 2025 8‑K –; Q4 2024 8‑K –.
- No additional standalone Q2 press releases beyond the 8‑K exhibit were identified within the Q2 window.