The
company's shares, which have gained nearly 22% over the last
year, fell 4.5% before the bell.
The promise of a return to relative normalcy later this year as
more Americans get inoculated against COVID-19 has made the boom
in pantry stocking, which made Dollar General one of the bigger
retail beneficiaries of the health crisis, unlikely to be
repeated.
Analysts expect sales at discount stores to drop in the later
half of the year after new stimulus money, on the way to mostly
lower- and middle-income households, has dried up.
Dollar General said it expects full-year same-store sales to
fall 4% to 6%, compared with analysts' estimate of a 1.2%
decline, according to IBES data from Refinitiv. Overall net
sales are expected to be flat to 2% lower, compared with
estimates of a 1.4% increase.
"Significant uncertainty continues to exist regarding the
severity and duration of the COVID-19 pandemic, including its
impact on the U.S. economy, consumer behavior and the company's
business," Dollar General said in a statement.
The company forecast annual earnings per share of $8.80 to
$9.50, below estimates of $10.08.
Same-store sales in the fourth quarter ended Jan. 29 rose 12.7%,
beating analysts' estimate of a 10.7% increase, helped by the
$600 stimulus checks that boosted spending in January.
Net income rose about 20% to $642.7 million, or $2.62 per share,
but missed estimates of $2.72 per share.
(Reporting by Uday Sampath in Bengaluru; Editing by Krishna
Chandra Eluri)
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