Petco's Q2 2025: Contradictions Emerge on Gross Margin Strategy, Phase 3 Timing, and Inventory Management
Generado por agente de IAAinvest Earnings Call Digest
jueves, 28 de agosto de 2025, 9:53 pm ET3 min de lectura
WOOF-- 
The above is the analysis of the conflicting points in this earnings call
Date of Call: August 28, 2025
Financials Results
- Revenue: Net sales down 2.3% YOY; comparable sales down 1.4%
- Gross Margin: 39.3%, up more than 120 bps YOY
Guidance:
- FY25 adjusted EBITDA $385–$395M (~+16% YOY at midpoint).
- FY25 net sales down low single digits; tariffs increasingly impactful in H2.
- Q3 adjusted EBITDA $92–$94M (~+15% YOY at midpoint); net sales down low single digits; Q3 EBITDA seasonally below Q2.
- FY25 depreciation ~ $200M; net interest expense ~ $130M.
- FY25 capex $125–$130M; ~25 net store closures; focus on ROIC.
- Selective H2 reinvestment (e.g., Leadership Summit); maintaining dry powder for opportunities.
Business Commentary:
- Profitability Improvements:
- Petco Health and Wellness Company, Inc. improved
operating incomeby over$40 millionand generated more than$50 millionin free cash flow in Q2 2025. - The company delivered
$114 millionin adjusted EBITDA, reflecting meaningful improvements in profitability. These improvements were driven by a reduction in unprofitable sales, a disciplined promotional strategy, and enhanced customer experience.
Gross Margin Expansion:
- Petco expanded its gross margin by over
120 basis pointsversus last year to39.3%, with both products and services gross margins expanding. - This growth was achieved through a more disciplined approach to average unit cost and average unit retail, as well as effective management of pricing strategies.
The expansion was supported by minimal tariff impact in the second quarter.
Digital Channel Focus:
- Petco's e-commerce channel became more profitable by intentionally reducing unproductive sales and promotional activities.
- While the online segment showed a decline in sales, the focus was on improving profitability and setting the stage for future growth.
The company hired a new leader for its e-commerce channel and plans to address barriers and improve the digital experience.
Store Performance and Marketing:
- Petco's store performance improved, with positive customer sentiment and engagement around in-store events and experiences.
- The company relaunched its "Where the Pets Go" tagline and introduced new marketing strategies aimed at increasing relevance and customer engagement.
- These efforts were supported by a comprehensive North Star project to reimagine key elements of Petco's business and differentiate its positioning in the market.

Sentiment Analysis:
- Raised FY25 adjusted EBITDA outlook to $385–$395M. Q2 adjusted EBITDA $114M with margin up ~220 bps to 7.6%; operating income increased ~$41M to $43M. Gross margin expanded >120 bps to 39.3% on pricing/promo discipline. Inventory down 9.5% with higher in-stocks; free cash flow >$50M. Acknowledged headwinds: net sales down low single digits and tariffs becoming more meaningful in H2, Q3 toughest comp.
Q&A:
- Question from Michael Lasser (UBS): When should investors expect a return to positive comps—Q4 this year or 2026?
Response: Positive comps are expected in 2026; Q3 is the toughest compare and the company remains in Phase 2 while seeding Phase 3.
- Question from Michael Lasser (UBS): Were gross margin gains mainly from reducing online promos, and would stores have comped positive excluding e-commerce?
Response: Focus was on stores while cleaning up heavier promo stacking in e-comm; not disclosing store-only comp, but e-comm cleanup prioritized profitability.
- Question from Steven Zaccone (Citi): How did gross margin perform versus expectations, and how should we think about tariffs and back-half margin?
Response: Gross margin expanded strongly on AUR/AUC and promo/pricing rigor; tariffs were minimal in Q2, meaningful in Q3, and most impactful in Q4.
- Question from Steven Zaccone (Citi): What are tariff mitigation efforts and how is pricing trending into H2?
Response: Pricing levers have been used all year and will continue with a consumer-first lens; no major change in approach for H2.
- Question from Jacob Nivasch (Guggenheim): Update on planogram resets and store execution impact?
Response: Dog/cat resets are complete, improving on-shelf availability, labor productivity, and store profitability; benefits reflected in SG&A leverage.
- Question from Jacob Nivasch (Guggenheim): Any details on the North Star initiative?
Response: Phase 3 will center on four pillars: superior store experience, services at scale, merchandising differentiation/newness, and winning in omnichannel.
- Question from Kaumil Gajrawala (Jefferies): Status of e-commerce pullback/retool and inventory right-sizing?
Response: E-comm is more profitable with a new leader driving basics (speed, scheduling, repeat delivery, media/personalization); inventory down 9.5% with better in-stocks and tight governance.
- Question from Kaumil Gajrawala (Jefferies): What’s driving NPS improvement at this stage?
Response: Broad store-execution and people investments, leadership engagement, and focus on in-store experience are lifting customer metrics.
- Question from Kendall Toscano (BofA): How did transactions vs. AUR/UPT trend in the quarter?
Response: UPT and basket were solid; transactions lagged and are a key focus to improve via events and marketing to drive traffic.
- Question from Kendall Toscano (BofA): Biggest remaining execution gaps before fully shifting to Phase 3?
Response: Progress enables reinvestment; margin runway remains with opportunities in sourcing, pharmacy, and supplies; focus turning to growth pillars.
- Question from Simeon Gutman (Morgan Stanley): Trends in pet families and customer behavior; any surprises?
Response: Industry is roughly flat; Petco prioritized profit while holding share; many one-time and services-only customers—plan to improve omni LTV and cross-sell.
- Question from Simeon Gutman (Morgan Stanley): Any markdown risk from inventory changes and newness?
Response: No significant risk anticipated; tight processes and fast-turn, seasonal buys to control exposure.
- Question from Justin Kleber (Baird): Can you quantify the comp drag from promo cleanup; is underlying business comping positive?
Response: Not quantifying; cleanup began in Q4’24; stores are improving while e-comm is about six months behind but progressing.
- Question from Justin Kleber (Baird): What drives the implied Q4 adjusted EBITDA softness—tariffs or reinvestment?
Response: Q4 tariffs are most impactful; maintaining dry powder for selective investments and prudently managing macro volatility within guidance ranges.
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