The Buckle, Inc. (NYSE:BKE) Q3 2026 Earnings Call Transcript November 21, 2025
The Buckle, Inc. misses on earnings expectations. Reported EPS is $0.96 EPS, expectations were $1.58.
Operator: Good morning. Thank you for standing by, and welcome to Buckle’s Third Quarter Earnings Release Webcast. [Operator Instructions]. Members of Buckle’s management on the call today are Dennis Nelson, President and CEO; Tom Heacock, Senior Vice President of Finance, Treasurer and CFO; Adam Akerson, Vice President of Finance and Corporate Controller; and Brady Fritz, Senior Vice President, General Counsel and Corporate Secretary. Before beginning, the company would like to reiterate its policy of not providing future sales or earnings guidance. All forward-looking statements made on the call are pursuant to the safe harbor provisions of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. Actual results may differ materially due to risks and uncertainties described in the company’s SEC filings.
The company undertakes no obligation to publicly update or revise these statements, except as required by law. Additionally, the company does not authorize the reproduction or dissemination of transcripts or audio recordings of the company’s quarterly conference calls without its expressed written consent. Any unauthorized reproductions or recordings of the calls should not be relied upon as the information may be inaccurate. As a reminder, today’s webcast is being recorded. And I’d now like to turn the conference over to your host, Tom Heacock.
Thomas Heacock: Good morning, and thanks for being with us this morning. Our November 21, 2025, press release reported that net income for the 13-week third quarter ended November 1, 2025, was $48.7 million or $0.96 per share on a diluted basis compared to net income of $44.2 million or $0.88 per share on a diluted basis for the prior year 13-week third quarter, which ended November 2, 2024. Year-to-date net income for the 39-week period ended November 1, 2025, was $128.9 million or $2.55 per share on a diluted basis, compared to net income of $118.3 million or $2.35 per share on a diluted basis for the prior year 39-week period ended November 2, 2024. Net sales for the 13-week third quarter increased 9.3% to $320.8 million compared to net sales of $293.6 million for the prior year 13-week third quarter.
Comparable store sales for the quarter increased 8.3% in comparison to the same 13-week period in the prior year, and our online sales increased 13.6% to $53 million. Year-to-date net sales increased 7.2% to $898.7 million compared to net sales of $838.5 million for the prior year 39-week fiscal period. Comparable store sales for the year-to-date period increased 6.3% in comparison to the same 39-week period in the prior year, and our online sales increased 11.6% to $142.9 million. For the quarter, UPTs decreased approximately 1.5%, the average unit retail increased approximately 4% and the average transaction value increased about 2.5%. Year-to-date, UPTs decreased approximately 1%, the average unit retail increased approximately 3% and the average transaction value increased approximately 2%.
Our gross margin for the quarter was 48%, a 30 basis point increase from 47.7% in the third quarter of 2024. The current quarter margin expansion was a result of 40 basis points of leverage buying, distribution and occupancy expenses, partially offset by a 10 basis point reduction in merchandise margins. Our year-to-date gross margin was 47.4%, up 50 basis points from 46.9% for the same period last year. The year-to-date increase was the result of a 20 basis point increase in merchandise margin, along with 30 basis points of leverage buying, distribution and occupancy expenses. Selling, general and administrative expenses for the quarter were 29% of net sales compared to 29.1% for the third quarter last year. And year-to-date, SG&A was 29.5% of net sales compared to 29.6% for the same period in the prior year.
The third quarter decrease was due to a 35 basis point reduction related to nonrecurring digital commerce investments made a year ago, a 35 basis point decrease in store labor-related expenses and a 5 basis point decrease in certain other SG&A expense categories. These decreases were partially offset by a 50 basis point increase in incentive compensation accruals and a 15 basis point increase in G&A compensation-related expenses. Our operating margin for the quarter was 19% compared to 18.6% for the third quarter of fiscal 2024. And for the year-to-date period, our operating margin was 17.9% compared to 17.3% for the same period last year. Income tax expense as a percentage of pretax net income for both the current and prior year fiscal quarter was 24.5%, bringing third quarter net income to $48.7 million for fiscal 2025 compared to 44.2% — $44.2 million for fiscal 2024.

Income tax expense as a percentage of pretax net income for both the current and prior year, year-to-date periods was also 24.5% bringing year-to-date net income to $128.9 million for fiscal 2025 compared to $118.3 million in fiscal 2024. Our press release also included a balance sheet as of November 1, 2025, which included the following: Inventory of $165.8 million, which was up 11% from the same time a year ago and $371.3 million of total cash and investments. We ended the quarter with $162.3 million in fixed assets net of accumulated depreciation. Our capital expenditures for the quarter were $11.1 million and depreciation expense was $6.2 million. For the year-to-date period, capital expenditures were $34.5 million and depreciation expense was $18.2 million.
Year-to-date capital spending is broken down as follows: $30.4 million for new store construction, store remodels and technology upgrades and $4.1 million for capital spending at the corporate headquarters and distribution center. During the quarter, we opened 2 new stores and completed 6 full store remodels, 3 of which were relocations in new outdoor shopping centers. Additionally, post quarter end and during November, we have opened 2 new stores and completed 2 store relocation projects in advance of the holiday selling season, which brings our year-to-date count through today to 6 new stores, 17 full remodels and 3 store closures. For the remainder of the year, we anticipate completing 4 additional full remodeling projects. Buckle ended the quarter with 442 retail stores in 42 states compared to 445 stores in 42 states as of the end of the third quarter last year.
And now I’ll turn it over to Adam Akerson, Vice President of Finance.
Adam Akerson: Thanks, Tom, and good morning. Our women’s business continued its acceleration in year-over-year growth rate during the quarter, with merchandise sales increasing about 19%, which was on top of 3% same week growth a year ago. For the quarter, our women’s business represented approximately 51% of sales, which compares to 47% last year. This growth continued to be led by the performance of our denim category with women’s denim increasing approximately 17.5% and average denim price points increasing from $81.15 in the third quarter of fiscal 2024 to $86.95 in the third quarter of fiscal ’25. This AUR increase continues to be primarily the result of strong growth in our Buckle Black Label, which has outperformed the total denim business, along with strong growth of other higher price point national brands.
Complementing our strong women’s denim selection, our team continued delivering compelling trends and fashions for our guests, for the quarter, we achieved growth across all women’s merchandise categories with the most notable growth in knits and sweaters, casual and fashion bottoms and accessories. In total, average women’s price points increased about 6% from $49.95 to $53.05. On the men’s side, we were pleased to see growth for the second consecutive quarter with men’s merchandise sales up about 1% against the prior year, representing approximately 49% of total sales compared to 53% in the prior year. This growth was also led by our men’s denim category, which was up about 1% for the quarter. Average denim price points increased from $88.10 in the third quarter of fiscal ’24 to $88.15 in the third quarter of fiscal ’25.
In other categories, we saw nice performance in both our short and long sleeve tees business in a variety of lifestyles as well as strong selling of our vests, jackets and accessories. For the quarter, overall average men’s price points increased approximately 2.5% from $54.30 to $55.70. On a combined basis, accessory sales for the quarter increased approximately 7.5% against the prior year, while footwear sales were essentially flat. These 2 categories accounted for approximately 10% and 4.5%, respectively, of third quarter net sales, which compares to 10% and 5% for each in the third quarter of fiscal ’24. For the quarter, average accessory price points were up approximately 3.5% and average footwear price points were up 4.5%. Also on a combined basis, our kids business continued its strong growth trend, increasing approximately 22% year-over-year.
This continues to be a category where our teams are excited to keep building the business and selection for our guests. For the quarter, denim accounted for approximately 46% of sales and tops accounted for approximately 29%, which compares to 46% and 29.5% for each in the third quarter of fiscal ’24. As previously mentioned, with strong selling and trends in many of our brand styles, our private label business decreased as a percentage of our total mix for the quarter. For the quarter, private label represented 47.5% of sales versus 48.5% for the third quarter of fiscal 2024. And with that, we welcome your questions.
Q&A Session
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Operator: [Operator Instructions]. Our first question comes from Mauricio.
Mauricio Serna Vega: This is Mauricio Serna from UBS Research. First, maybe could you speak on a high level what you’re seeing on the health of the U.S. consumer coming into the holiday season. There’s been some talks about maybe some pressure on the lower income consumer. So I was interested in hearing from your side, what have you been seeing? And then also, could you speak about the denim business? I think you talked about the momentum in women’s being up 17%. What do you — how do you — how are you thinking about the sustainability of this growth? And maybe could you talk about what you saw in men’s denim demand over the quarter?
Dennis Nelson: Thank you for the question. On the consumer, we haven’t seen a big change in our stores. I mean the team and guests seem excited about our product response. There’s probably a slight caution in some as our units per sale are off very slightly. But overall, we feel good about it. And if the guest is excited about the product and the quality we have, it’s been going pretty well. The ladies denim business continues to be excellent. There’s still a lot of variety of styles and fits. We’ve added some of our branded sources to the mix, which has added some higher price points, have been good for the business. And our fashion brands and our private brands continue to sell well. So we’re optimistic about the gal’s denim business throughout the rest of the year.
On the men’s denim, our private label brands are consistent and doing well, having good sell-throughs. We haven’t seen as much from other brands adding to the private brands mix, but feel our denim business is solid in men’s as well.
Operator: There are no further questions in queue. [Operator Instructions]. Okay. It looks like we have another question from Mauricio.
Mauricio Serna Vega: Great. Just on the other thing that I wanted to ask was the merchandise margin. It was down 10 basis points. Maybe could you elaborate on what were the puts and takes behind the merchandise margin trend in this quarter?
Thomas Heacock: Thank you, Mauricio. This is Tom. Yes, merchandise margins were down 10 basis points for Q3 and up 10 basis points for Q2. So I think if you look year-to-date with everything going on with tariffs, we feel really strong about where we’re at from a merchandise margin perspective. And we’ve been operating at a high level of merchandise margins for a long time and have continued to improve that. So both Q1 and Q2 were all-time highs merchandise margins and we were off just a little bit in Q3. So I feel really good about where we’re at. The biggest drivers are really — Adam called out the decrease slightly in private label business with some of the brands performing really well, especially in women’s denim. That’s the biggest driver probably of the shift this year and especially Q2 compared to Q3 and then a slight increase in costs with tariffs and other flow-throughs.
Operator: There are no further questions in queue. [Operator Instructions]. Okay. It looks like there are no further questions. I will now turn the call back over to Buckle for any closing remarks.
Thomas Heacock: Thank you for your participation today. It will be a quick call, but I wish everyone a wonderful weekend and a wonderful holiday season. So thank you for joining us today.
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