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Floor & Decor Hldgs — Financial Results

AI Overview

Sales Growth Driven Entirely by New Stores, Not Existing Ones

MetricFiscal 2025Fiscal 2024
Net sales$4.68B$4.46B
Comparable store sales growth-1.8%-7.1%
Comparable transactions-3.5%-4.7%
New stores opened20

Total sales grew 5.1%, but every dollar of that growth came from the 20 new stores opened during the year. Comparable store sales (performance of stores open for more than a year) actually fell 1.8%, meaning existing locations served fewer customers. The good news is this decline is much smaller than the 7.1% drop in 2024, suggesting the worst may be easing.

A Tough Housing Market Is the Core Problem

Floor & Decor links its struggles directly to the housing market. High interest rates and elevated home prices have kept existing home sales low, and people tend to buy flooring when they move. The company also notes that newer stores opened since 2022 are hitting lower first-year sales targets than older stores did — a sign that the environment for growth has gotten harder, not just that existing stores are struggling.

Profitability Held Steady Despite the Headwinds

MetricFiscal 2025Fiscal 2024
Gross margin43.6%43.3%
Net income$208.6M$205.9M
Adjusted EBITDA margin11.5%11.5%

Despite falling foot traffic in existing stores, the company managed to nudge its gross margin (the percentage of each sales dollar kept after product costs) up 0.3 percentage points, helped by lower supply chain costs. Net income grew only modestly — $2.8 million — but the fact that profitability margins held flat shows disciplined cost control.

Tariffs Are a Real and Growing Risk

The company explicitly flags U.S. tariffs on imported goods as an ongoing threat. Floor & Decor sources flooring products internationally, meaning tariff-driven cost increases flow directly into its inventory costs. Management says it is responding by renegotiating with suppliers, shifting to alternative source countries, and selectively raising retail prices — but acknowledges these steps only partially offset the impact and that higher prices could dampen customer demand further.

Cash Generation Slowed Significantly

MetricFiscal 2025Fiscal 2024
Operating cash flow$381.8M$603.2M
Capital expenditures (planned FY2026)$250M–$300M

Operating cash flow — cash actually generated from running the business — dropped by $221 million year over year, primarily due to changes in how quickly the company paid its suppliers (accounts payable timing). The company plans to spend $250–$300 million on capital expenditures in fiscal 2026, including opening another 20 stores, funded mainly from operations. With $909.8 million in available liquidity, the balance sheet looks healthy enough to support this.