Ross Stores stock jumped 5.3% in premarket trading Friday to above $228, after the off-price retailer delivered first-quarter results that beat Wall Street across every major metric.
Ross Stores, Inc., ROST
Total sales for the quarter ending in early May rose 21% to $6.01 billion. Analysts had expected $5.64 billion.
Same-store sales grew 17% — more than double the 9.4% consensus estimate. CEO Jim Conroy said the growth was “broad-based” across merchandise categories, income levels, age groups, and regions.
Tax refunds also helped. Conroy said higher consumer spending tied to tax refunds gave sales a lift in the period.
EPS came in at $2.02, up 37% from $1.47 a year ago. That blew past both the company’s own guidance of $1.60–$1.67 and the analyst estimate of $1.73.
Operating margin hit 13.4%, well above Ross’ forecast of 11.8%–12.1%, driven largely by merchandise margin gains and occupancy leverage on strong sales.
Net income for the quarter rose to $650 million, up from $479 million in the prior-year period.
Every major merchandise category posted comparable sales growth in the teens or higher. Ladies and cosmetics were the standout performers, with Conroy citing new brands and Korean beauty trends as tailwinds in cosmetics.
The company’s dd’s DISCOUNTS chain also delivered solid top-line growth across categories and regions. Geographically, the Midwest led, but strength was seen across the country.
On the cost side, merchandise margin improved 85 basis points, and occupancy costs leveraged 60 basis points on the strong sales base. Higher fuel prices limited some freight cost benefits, and incentive pay rose in line with the earnings outperformance.
Ross ended the quarter with consolidated inventories up 12%. Packaway inventory was 36% of the total, down from 41% a year ago. Conroy described closeout availability as “outstanding.”
Ross ended Q1 with 2,282 stores, adding 17 new locations across 11 states. The company plans to open approximately 110 new stores in fiscal 2026, a roughly 5% expansion. That includes around 85 Ross locations and 25 dd’s DISCOUNTS stores, net of 10–15 closures or relocations.
For Q2, Ross projects same-store sales growth of 6%–7% and EPS of $1.85–$1.93, up 19%–24% from a year ago. Total Q2 sales are expected to rise 9%–11%.
For the full fiscal year 2026, Ross raised guidance to same-store sales growth of 6%–7% and EPS of $7.50–$7.74, up from $6.61 last year.
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