VLGEA's Q1 earnings decline year over year due to margin compression and competitive store openings, but see 4.5% sales growth, powered by digital and fresh sales.
VLGEA's fiscal Q4 earnings saw a slight uptick year over year, driven by strong digital sales and new store openings, though margin pressures and weaker adjusted income weighed on results.
As seen with Village Super Market's latest fiscal results, the ShopRite operator's store replacement strategy continues to pay off. While not seriously undervalued compared to peers, there may still be room for further multiple expansion. This, coupled with earnings growth driven by additional store replacements, could send this stock to prices north of $50 per share.
Village reports 25% year-over-year earnings growth in fiscal Q3, driven by digital sales and new stores, while managing cost pressures in key categories.
Village Super Market, Inc. has outperformed the S&P 500, with shares rising 11.6% since October last year and 82.5% since December 2021. Despite significant gains, Village Super Market remains attractively priced, both absolutely and relative to peers, with strong revenue and profitability growth. The company has a solid balance sheet, with cash exceeding debt by $50.2 million, and continues to grow despite a stable physical footprint.
So far in 2025, my past “on the fence” thesis on Village Super Market, Inc. stock has been proven wrong by Mr. Market. Shares in the Wakefern retail cooperative member and ShopRite store operator have once again climbed by double-digits, thanks to the impact of replacement stores on earnings growth. Still cheap at present levels, if earnings growth persists, VLGEA may have a path towards $50 per share (and beyond).
Village Super Market Q2 earnings rise 17% y/y, driven by digital and pharmacy sales. It faces margin pressure from higher promotions and product mix shifts.
Village Super Market posts fiscal Q1 EPS growth driven by digital sales, pharmacy sales and remodeled store success.
Village Super Market is an interesting firm that isn't growing much, but that is attractively priced. Despite modest net income growth and mixed profitability metrics, the company maintains a robust balance sheet, with cash exceeding debt by $23 million. The firm trades at a discount to peers in most cases, indicating potential for significant upside.
VLGEA posts a year-over-year increase in fiscal Q4 earnings as sales rose 4.4%, driven by strong digital growth, remodeled stores and lower LIFO charges.
Discover why Zacks rates Village as "Outperform," being the first on Wall Street to initiate coverage on the stock. Explore its solid financial performance, strategic real estate investments, strong liquidity and expansion initiatives driving future growth.
Village's (VLGEA) third-quarter fiscal 2024 earnings decline year over year due to higher operating costs. Nevertheless, it has reported a 3.2% sales increase on the back of improved digital sales.