Dollar Tree, Inc. (DLTR) shares climbed in Wednesday trading after the discount retailer proved that plenty of shoppers still love a good deal. The company delivered quarterly results that handily beat Wall Street's expectations, powered by what management calls a record-breaking Halloween season and continued momentum from its multi-price strategy.
Third-quarter adjusted earnings came in at $1.21 per share, comfortably ahead of the $1.08 analyst consensus. Revenue hit $4.746 billion, representing 9.4% year-over-year growth and topping the Street's $4.699 billion estimate. Not bad for a retailer navigating a consumer environment where everyone claims to be stretched thin.
The interesting part is how Dollar Tree is threading the needle on pricing. Same-store sales rose 4.2%, driven by a 4.5% increase in average ticket size. Traffic dipped 0.3%, but apparently people who did show up bought more stuff. That's the multi-price strategy at work: while 85% of the assortment still sits at $2 or less, the company is testing higher price points that let them offer better products without abandoning their value proposition entirely.
"Our multi-price strategy drove strong momentum across our business in the third quarter and helped deliver an all-time record Halloween season," said CEO Mike Creedon. "With 85% of our assortment priced at two dollar or less, we continue to deliver exceptional value, while our multi-price assortment allows us to offer even more high-quality products and great gift options for the holidays."
The company has also been busy returning cash to shareholders, completing $1.5 billion in share repurchases year-to-date. That's real money, especially for a discount retailer.
The Margin Story Gets Better
Gross profit jumped 10.8% to $1.7 billion, with gross margin expanding 40 basis points to 35.8%. The improvement came from better pricing execution, lower freight costs (both domestic and import), and a favorable sales mix. When you're selling stuff for $2, every basis point matters.
Adjusted operating income increased 4.1% to $345.3 million, though operating margin compressed 30 basis points to 7.3%. Still, the company opened 106 new Dollar Tree stores during the quarter and converted roughly 646 locations to the Dollar Tree 3.0 multi-price format, suggesting management sees runway for expansion.
Balance Sheet Looks Solid
As of November 1, 2025, Dollar Tree had $594.8 million in cash and equivalents on hand. The company maintains $2 billion remaining under its $2.5 billion share repurchase authorization, with $620 million in commercial paper outstanding and no borrowings under its credit facilities. Year-to-date, the business generated $958.5 million in operating cash flow and $88.2 million in free cash flow from continuing operations.
Management Raises the Bar
Dollar Tree lifted its fiscal 2025 adjusted earnings guidance to a range of $5.60 to $5.80 per share, up from the prior $5.32 to $5.72 range. That compares favorably to the $5.51 consensus estimate. The company also tightened its full-year sales outlook to $19.35 billion to $19.45 billion from $19.30 billion to $19.50 billion, versus the $19.433 billion analyst estimate.
For the fourth quarter, management expects adjusted earnings of $2.40 to $2.60 per share compared with the $2.41 consensus, with sales forecast at $5.4 billion to $5.5 billion versus Wall Street's $5.416 billion estimate.
DLTR Price Action: Dollar Tree shares traded up 1.84% at $111.00 during premarket trading on Wednesday.