Dollar General Corporation (DG) just gave investors and analysts a pleasant surprise. The discount retailer reported third-quarter fiscal 2025 results on Thursday that sailed past Wall Street's expectations, prompting the company to raise its outlook for the full year.
The numbers tell a compelling story. Dollar General posted net sales of $10.65 billion, essentially matching the consensus estimate of $10.64 billion. But the real standout was earnings per share, which came in at $1.28—a solid beat compared to the Street's estimate of just 95 cents.
Following the strong quarter, Dollar General announced it's raising its financial expectations for 2025. The move primarily reflects the third-quarter outperformance and an improved outlook for what remains of the year, though management acknowledged they're keeping an eye on potential uncertainty around consumer behavior.
Here's how the guidance changed: The company bumped up its fiscal 2025 earnings guidance from a range of $5.80-$6.30 to $6.30-$6.50 per share. That's comfortably above the consensus estimate of $6.17. On the sales side, guidance increased from $42.36 billion-$42.56 billion to $42.52 billion-$42.60 billion, right in line with analyst expectations of $42.52 billion.
The market responded enthusiastically. Dollar General shares climbed 6.5% on Friday to trade at $133.55.
Analyst Response
The earnings beat triggered a wave of price target increases from Wall Street analysts. Seven major firms adjusted their targets upward, though most maintained cautious ratings on the stock:
- Telsey Advisory Group analyst Joseph Feldman kept his Market Perform rating while lifting the price target from $123 to $130.
- BMO Capital analyst Kelly Bania maintained a Market Perform rating and raised the target from $115 to $130.
- Morgan Stanley analyst Simeon Gutman stuck with an Equal-Weight rating but increased the price target from $125 to $135.
- Truist Securities analyst Scot Ciccarelli held his Hold rating and boosted the target from $120 to $129.
- UBS analyst Michael Lasser, one of the more bullish voices, maintained a Buy rating and raised the price target from $135 to $143.
- Evercore ISI Group analyst Michael Montani kept an In-Line rating while increasing the target from $105 to $130.
- Piper Sandler analyst Peter Keith maintained a Neutral rating and raised the price target from $117 to $129.
The pattern is clear: analysts are more optimistic about where the stock is headed, even if most aren't ready to enthusiastically recommend buying it just yet. The consensus seems to be that Dollar General is executing well in a challenging retail environment, but questions about consumer spending patterns remain.