DKS — Deck
DICK'S Sporting Goods sells sporting goods, athletic apparel and sneakers through DICK'S, Golf Galaxy, House of Sport and Foot Locker banners, plus GameChanger subscriptions and retail media.
The stock is a Foot Locker proof trade now.
- The core is not the problem. DICK'S Business FY2025 sales rose 5.0% to $14.1B, comps rose 4.5%, and segment margin held at 11.1%. That is the premium retailer investors owned before the deal.
- The acquisition changed the denominator. Foot Locker added $3.1B of partial-year sales, but produced a $52.2M segment loss, pro forma comps down 3.3%, and a $217.9M inventory write-down and liquidation hit.
- The multiple already wants proof. At $219.02, DKS trades at 16.3x lease-adjusted EV/EBITDA versus a 9.2x five-year average; the forward P/E only looks normal if FY2026 adjusted EPS and cash flow normalize.
DICK'S still earns like the category winner.
The core earns through vendor access, store service, local fulfillment and first-party data, not just square footage. DICK'S stores enabled over 90% of DICK'S Business sales and fulfilled over 80% of online sales, while ScoreCard members accounted for over 75% of sales. For the premium to hold, FY2026 comps need to stay inside the 2% to 4% guide without relying on markdowns.
Adjusted EPS flatters the deal before owner cash proves it.
FY2026 adjusted EPS guidance of $13.50 to $14.50 can make the stock look ordinary, but the cash bridge is not ordinary yet. Capex, $413.9M of dividends, $415.9M of buybacks and Foot Locker cleanup absorbed the owner-cash story in FY2025. The valuation works if acquisition charges fade and FCF/net income moves toward 0.8x after the capex peak.
The reset has hard numbers and near-term dates.
- Charges are bounded until they are not. DICK'S recorded $390.0M of FY2025 acquisition-related charges, including the $217.9M inventory hit, and expects $500M to $750M in total. A new inventory or impairment charge would turn the reset into a recurring drag.
- Back-to-school is the operating test. Fast Break moved from 11 pilot stores to 21, with a goal of roughly 250 locations before back-to-school 2026. Foot Locker's FY2026 guide calls for 1% to 3% pro forma comps and $100M to $150M of segment profit, weighted to the second half.
- May 27 is the first checkpoint. Q1 FY2026 results need to show DICK'S comps tracking the 2% to 4% guide, Foot Locker losses narrowing, remaining charges contained, and full-year EPS guidance intact.
Lean long, wait for proof: the core wins, but cash has to catch up.
- For. The legacy DICK'S Business is already doing the hard part: 4.5% comps, 11.1% segment margin and $1.568B of segment profit in FY2025.
- For. Management has recent execution credit: FY2024 finished at $14.05 EPS and 5.2% comps, and FY2025 DICK'S Business EPS reached $14.58 after the team raised the guide.
- Against. Foot Locker starts from a weak base: negative FY2025 pro forma comps, a $52.2M segment loss and a second-half-weighted FY2026 profit guide that has not yet been earned.
- Against. Common holders own companywide cash flow, not the carved-out segment. FY2025 FCF was only $143M after acquired cash while the company still paid $413.9M in dividends and bought back $415.9M of stock.
Watchlist to re-rate: Q1 FY2026 results on May 27; back-to-school Fast Break sell-through and Foot Locker comps; FCF/net income versus the $1.5B capex plan, with $234.20 and $198.00 as tape confirmation levels.