Dollar Tree Surpasses Q3 Expectations as Analysts Raise Price Targets

MarketDash Editorial Team
4 days ago
Dollar Tree beat earnings estimates with a strong third quarter, prompting the company to raise its full-year guidance and analysts to increase their price targets. The retailer's multi-price strategy delivered record Halloween sales while maintaining value pricing.

Dollar Tree, Inc. (DLTR) is having a moment. The discount retailer dropped better-than-expected quarterly results on Wednesday, and Wall Street took notice with a flurry of price target adjustments.

The numbers tell a straightforward story: third-quarter adjusted earnings hit $1.21 per share, sailing past the $1.08 analyst consensus. Revenue of $4.746 billion marked a solid 9.4% jump from last year and topped the Street's $4.699 billion expectation.

So what's working? According to CEO Mike Creedon, it's the company's multi-price strategy. "Our multi-price strategy drove strong momentum across our business in the third quarter and helped deliver an all-time record Halloween season," Creedon said. "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."

Translation: Dollar Tree is threading a tricky needle. Keep most stuff dirt cheap (85% at two bucks or less), but charge more for select items that let them compete on quality and seasonal merchandise. That Halloween record? Proof it's working.

Management felt confident enough to bump up their full-year outlook. The fiscal 2025 adjusted earnings guidance now sits at $5.60 to $5.80 per share, up from the previous $5.32 to $5.72 range and above the $5.51 consensus. They also tightened the sales forecast to $19.35 billion to $19.45 billion, compared to the $19.433 billion analyst estimate.

Dollar Tree shares responded with a 3% gain to $116.32 on Thursday.

The earnings beat sparked some movement among Wall Street analysts, who revised their price targets:

  • B of A Securities analyst Robert Ohmes maintained an Underperform rating but raised his price target from $75 to $85.
  • Telsey Advisory Group analyst Joseph Feldman kept his Outperform rating and increased the price target from $130 to $135.
  • Guggenheim analyst John Heinbockel maintained a Buy rating and lifted the price target from $125 to $130.

Interesting spread there. Even the bearish Ohmes acknowledged the quarter was strong enough to warrant a higher target, though he's still far below the bulls who see the stock climbing into the $130-$135 range.

Dollar Tree Surpasses Q3 Expectations as Analysts Raise Price Targets

MarketDash Editorial Team
4 days ago
Dollar Tree beat earnings estimates with a strong third quarter, prompting the company to raise its full-year guidance and analysts to increase their price targets. The retailer's multi-price strategy delivered record Halloween sales while maintaining value pricing.

Dollar Tree, Inc. (DLTR) is having a moment. The discount retailer dropped better-than-expected quarterly results on Wednesday, and Wall Street took notice with a flurry of price target adjustments.

The numbers tell a straightforward story: third-quarter adjusted earnings hit $1.21 per share, sailing past the $1.08 analyst consensus. Revenue of $4.746 billion marked a solid 9.4% jump from last year and topped the Street's $4.699 billion expectation.

So what's working? According to CEO Mike Creedon, it's the company's multi-price strategy. "Our multi-price strategy drove strong momentum across our business in the third quarter and helped deliver an all-time record Halloween season," Creedon said. "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."

Translation: Dollar Tree is threading a tricky needle. Keep most stuff dirt cheap (85% at two bucks or less), but charge more for select items that let them compete on quality and seasonal merchandise. That Halloween record? Proof it's working.

Management felt confident enough to bump up their full-year outlook. The fiscal 2025 adjusted earnings guidance now sits at $5.60 to $5.80 per share, up from the previous $5.32 to $5.72 range and above the $5.51 consensus. They also tightened the sales forecast to $19.35 billion to $19.45 billion, compared to the $19.433 billion analyst estimate.

Dollar Tree shares responded with a 3% gain to $116.32 on Thursday.

The earnings beat sparked some movement among Wall Street analysts, who revised their price targets:

  • B of A Securities analyst Robert Ohmes maintained an Underperform rating but raised his price target from $75 to $85.
  • Telsey Advisory Group analyst Joseph Feldman kept his Outperform rating and increased the price target from $130 to $135.
  • Guggenheim analyst John Heinbockel maintained a Buy rating and lifted the price target from $125 to $130.

Interesting spread there. Even the bearish Ohmes acknowledged the quarter was strong enough to warrant a higher target, though he's still far below the bulls who see the stock climbing into the $130-$135 range.