New York, June 3, 2026, 19:03 (EDT)
- Five Below shares dropped after hours, even as first-quarter sales, profit and the company’s full-year outlook all beat estimates.
- Comparable sales at the retailer rose 22.7%. But executives pointed to fuel costs, ongoing inflation and a tougher consumer backdrop.
- Discounters are sending mixed signals, with shoppers looking for value but staying selective.
Five Below shares dropped in late trading Wednesday, giving up gains from the regular session. Investors set aside the strong quarterly numbers and instead questioned how long the teen-focused discount chain can keep up its sales momentum.
The stock last changed hands at $194.87 in after-hours trading, down 12.6%. It finished the regular Nasdaq session 1.1% higher at $222.89. About 3.1 million shares traded during the regular session, close to three times the average volume.
Five Below had a lot riding on this quarter, with expectations for a smooth report built in. The retailer beat on profit and revenue, and even raised its full-year guidance, but shares dropped anyway. Some traders look ready to see if the company’s viral-product streak can keep up in what could be a tougher summer for retailers.
Five Below posted a 32.5% jump in net sales to $1.29 billion for the fiscal first quarter. Comparable store sales climbed 22.7%. Adjusted earnings came in at $2.22 per share, up from 86 cents the same period last year.
Wall Street was looking for adjusted EPS of $1.77 on $1.23 billion in revenue, MarketBeat said. The company ended the quarter with 1,970 stores in 46 states after adding 49 net new locations.
Five Below CEO Winnie Park said the company’s push for “compelling newness at amazing value” brought more shoppers in. Park said on the call that Five Below used merchandising and marketing to boost social-media trends. She called out toys, collectibles, games, beauty, fashion, food and candy as strong categories. markets.businessinsider.com
The retailer lifted its fiscal 2026 sales guidance to $5.40 billion to $5.48 billion, up from its earlier $5.20 billion to $5.30 billion range. Adjusted EPS is now expected at $8.65 to $9.05 a share, higher than the previous projection of $7.74 to $8.25.
Five Below put out guidance for second-quarter sales between $1.18 billion and $1.20 billion, with adjusted EPS in a range of $1.17 to $1.29. That’s ahead of what analysts told Benzinga they expected—$1.14 billion in sales and $1.12 in adjusted earnings per share.
But management told investors to be careful. Chief Financial Officer Dan Sullivan said on the earnings call that Five Below was monitoring “rising fuel costs,” “sticky inflation” and what he called a somewhat soft labor market. He said the company hadn’t seen data yet showing a change in how customers behave. Alphastreet
Five Below got a boost in the first quarter from social-media buzz on things like squishy dumplings and bigger tax refunds. But those factors may not show up as strongly moving forward. The company’s guidance counts on tariff rates staying as they are through July 24, and then going back to where they started this fiscal year. If fuel costs stay up, tariffs weigh more, or shoppers pull back, it could be tough for Five Below to stand by its raised outlook.
Value retailers are trading mixed. Dollar Tree bumped up its annual profit outlook after a good quarter, getting a lift from shoppers looking for cheaper goods and its push into more price points. But Dollar General shares dropped this week, despite beating earnings forecasts, as its main shoppers are still squeezed.
Retail analysts are looking at the same trouble spots. Michael Gunther, senior vice president for research and market intelligence at Consumer Edge, told Reuters consumers are “clearly shifting behavior.” He said gas prices will be the big tell if they hold up through summer and the back-to-school stretch. Reuters
Five Below held its traffic in the latest quarter as the chain relied on low-priced, quick-turn goods. Shares dropped in after-hours trading Wednesday, with investors looking for signs that trend-driven traffic will last once the top sellers fade.