AutoZone's Q4 2025 Earnings Call: Contradictions Emerge on Inflation, Mexico Expansion, Commercial Growth, Tariffs, and Discretionary Sales
Generado por agente de IAAinvest Earnings Call Digest
martes, 23 de septiembre de 2025, 4:18 pm ET3 min de lectura
AZO--
NOT--
The above is the analysis of the conflicting points in this earnings call
Date of Call: September 23, 2025
Financials Results
- Revenue: $6.2B, up 0.6% vs 17-week prior year; up 6.9% on a comparable 16-week basis
- EPS: $48.71 per diluted share, down 5.6% vs reported 17-week prior; up 1.3% on a comparable 16-week basis; +8.7% YOY ex-$80M LIFO
- Gross Margin: 51.5%, down 103 bps YOY on a 16-week basis; ex-LIFO comparison, up ~25 bps
- Operating Margin: Approximately 19.4% (EBIT $1.2B on $6.2B sales); EBIT down 1.1% YOY on a 16-week basis; ex-LIFO/FX, EBIT up 6.6%
Guidance:
- Q1 LIFO charge ~$120M; Q2–Q4 ~$80–85M per quarter.
- Q1 interest expense ~$112M (vs $108M last year).
- Model Q1 tax rate ~23.2% before stock option benefits.
- If current FX holds for Q1: +$32M revenue, +$9M EBIT, +$0.38 EPS.
- Merchandise margin gains expected to offset commercial mix pressure on gross margin.
- FY26: open 325–350 stores in the Americas; 25–30 Mega-Hubs; CapEx ~$1.5B; openings skewed to back half.
- SG&A growth planned in mid-single digits, weighted to back half.
- Expect ≥3% inflation, potentially higher; pricing and vendor negotiations to protect margins.
Business Commentary:
* Sales and Market Share Growth: - AutoZoneAZO-- reported totalsales grew 0.6% for Q4, with international same-store sales up 7.2% on a constant currency basis. - The growth was driven by increased domestic commercial sales, which rose 12.5% year-over-year, and improved execution and inventory availability in the commercial segment.- Gross Margin and LIFO Impact:
- The gross margin for the quarter was
51.5%, down103 basis pointsfrom the previous year primarily due to an$80 millionLIFO charge. The LIFO charge was attributed to higher costs due to tariffs, impacting LIFO layers and margins.
Segment Performance and Market Dynamics:
- The domestic DIY segment witnessed a positive
2.2%comp for the quarter, with discretionary categories growing at their highest pace since FY 2023. Growth was driven by improved product mix, higher average DIY ticket growth, and favorable weather conditions in key regions.
International Expansion and Market Opportunities:
- AutoZone opened
51 new storesinternationally, with same-store sales in Mexico and Brazil up7.2%on a constant currency basis. - The expansion was driven by the growing car park and market opportunities in Mexico, with a focus on leveraging the existing store base and improving service levels.
Sentiment Analysis:
- Management highlighted accelerating domestic commercial comps (+12.5%), domestic comps +4.8%, and international comps +7.2% (constant currency). Excluding an $80M LIFO charge, EPS would have risen 8.7% YOY (16-week). They plan to open 325–350 stores in FY26 and 25–30 Mega-Hubs, citing strong execution, record in-stocks, and share gains. While LIFO and FX were headwinds, they expressed confidence in FY26 growth and margin management.
Q&A:
- Question from Bret Jordan (Jefferies): With at least 3% inflation expected in Q1, are you using lower costs to price for share, or should we expect more than 3% same-SKU inflation tied to tariffs?
Response: Inflation likely exceeds 3%; pricing remains rational and will be used to cover costs while staying competitive.
- Question from Bret Jordan (Jefferies): Discretionary category improved—are you doing something internally, or are there consumer green shoots?
Response: Discretionary appears to have bottomed and is recovering modestly; lower-income DIY consumer still pressured.
- Question from Michael Lasser (UBS): How should we model LIFO from here and do margins recover as the cycle fades?
Response: Q1 LIFO ≈$120M; Q2–Q4 ~$80–85M each; over time LIFO could reverse if costs deflate; aim to maintain gross margins via vendor negotiations and pricing.
- Question from Michael Lasser (UBS): SG&A is elevated—is this an industry arms race or structural cost increase?
Response: NotNOT-- an arms race; investing in accelerated new store growth; SG&A mid-single digits with early-year drag that leverages as stores mature.
- Question from Gregory Melich (Evercore ISI): What comp is needed to leverage SG&A given growth plans?
Response: SG&A will be managed in line with sales; expect faster comps to support investment; confidence from share gains in DIY/commercial and Mexico.
- Question from Gregory Melich (Evercore ISI): Any price elasticity as inflation rises?
Response: Minimal elasticity; break-fix/maintenance dominate, with rational industry pricing and only modest deferral.
- Question from Christopher Horvers (JPMorgan): What’s the growth runway in Mexico and can the store base double?
Response: Long runway; fragmented competition; underpenetrated dense cities; older car park; strong share position supports expansion.
- Question from Christopher Horvers (JPMorgan): Are LIFO estimates tied to inflation assumptions, and how is SG&A per store paced?
Response: Yes—higher inflation implies similar LIFO run-rate; SG&A per store mid-single-digit growth, accelerating in back half with store openings.
- Question from Steven Zaccone (Citi): Could rising same-SKU inflation trigger elasticity and affect comps?
Response: Demand should hold given necessity purchases and small ticket sizes; will avoid pricing that destroys demand.
- Question from Steven Zaccone (Citi): What’s driving merchandise margin strength and can it persist?
Response: Cost actions, mix optimization, and Duralast penetration; expected to offset commercial mix pressure and support margins.
- Question from Brian Nagel (Oppenheimer): How did tariffs impact Q4 sales and margins?
Response: Tariffs lifted product costs and tickets, driving higher same-SKU inflation; industry raised retails accordingly.
- Question from Brian Nagel (Oppenheimer): What drove the sales acceleration through the quarter—tariffs, weather, or demand?
Response: All three: better weather, some inflation uplift, and stronger execution with improved assortments, hubs/Mega-Hubs, and record in-stocks.
- Question from David Bellinger (Mizuho): Risk of another deferral cycle in 2026 given inflation?
Response: Not expecting a major deferral unless inflation spikes; maintenance can’t be deferred indefinitely; discretionary appears to be normalizing.
- Question from David Bellinger (Mizuho): Will Mexico adopt Hub/Mega-Hub model to support commercial?
Response: Yes; currently lighter on hubs; building assortments and will add hubs/Mega-Hubs to better serve commercial demand.
- Question from Steven Forbes (Guggenheim): Path to 500 stores by 2028—international split and expense dynamics?
Response: Most international growth will be in Mexico; new-store cost drag similar to U.S., with 4–5 year maturity to profitability.
- Question from Steven Forbes (Guggenheim): Does matching expense growth to sales apply in 2026 despite a store ramp?
Response: Yes; SG&A mid-single digits driven by new stores; top-line growth must support it; will pull costs if sales underperform.
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