Dive Brief:
- Bob’s Discount Furniture posted a first quarter net revenue increase of 8.5% to $578 million. The retailer attributed results to its five new store openings and strong comps, which grew 1.2% for the period.
- Meanwhile, Q1 net income fell by nearly 81% to $2.5 million and SG&A increased 9%, largely due to new store expenses and increased marketing spend, per the company. In addition, Bob’s paid a one-time $2 million termination fee associated with the advisory agreement with its controlling stockholder.
- The company used proceeds from its recent initial public offering, plus cash on hand, to pay off its $350 million term loan during the quarter. On a call with analysts, CFO Carl Lukach said a 21% decline in adjusted net income for the period reflected higher interest expenses associated with the loan repayment.
Dive Insight:
The U.S. home sector is floundering right now as it grapples with a sluggish housing market and decreased discretionary spending. In addition, many retailers saw lower-than-usual in-store traffic in the first quarter due to multiple winter weather events.
Against this backdrop, “Bob’s managed to generate meaningful revenue growth,” Neil Saunders, managing director at GlobalData, said in a note. “This is a very solid rate of expansion that is significantly above the overall market, which underlines that Bob’s is making market share gains.”
Customers earning between $100,000 and $150,000 annually also represent an important segment, according to CEO Bill Barton. He told analysts that in the first quarter, consumers across all income cohorts traded up from good tier to better tier pieces, but that Bob’s continued “to see strong growth amongst higher-income households.”
Nonetheless, Bob’s will be lapping double-digit comps in the next two quarters, setting up for tough comparisons. UBS analysts led by Michael Lasser said in a Monday note that this, along with higher input and transportation costs, and “a still-recovering industry backdrop,” mean there’s some doubt as to the pace of Bob’s continued upward trajectory.
“That said, we don't think anything has structurally changed,” UBS said, adding that if the retailer can prove it’s able “to manage its P&L tightly in the current backdrop, and point to solid performance in its newly entered markets, we think there's significant room for sentiment to improve.”
Bob’s reaffirmed its full fiscal 2026 guidance of net revenue between $2.6 billion and $2.63 billion, and comparable sales growth of between 1.5% and 2.5%. The company will also continue to open new stores throughout the year.
“In all, we remain on track to open approximately 20 stores in 2026, representing 10% unit growth, and we continue to see a clear and actionable path to more than 500 stores by 2035,” Barton said.