Boot Barn (BOOT) came out with quarterly earnings of $1.37 per share, beating the Zacks Consensus Estimate of $1.26 per share. This compares to earnings of $0.95 per share a year ago.
Does Boot Barn (BOOT) have what it takes to be a top stock pick for momentum investors? Let's find out.
Stride, Ralph Lauren, Encompass Health and Boot Barn stand out with robust interest coverage ratios and strong growth outlooks.
Boot Barn Holdings has delivered exceptional growth, with shares rising 106.1% since the last upgrade, far outpacing the S&P 500. BOOT's strong performance is driven by new store openings, robust same-store sales, e-commerce innovation, and a healthy net cash position of $95.3 million. Despite continued operational strength and optimistic management/analyst forecasts, BOOT's valuation is now fair to expensive compared to peers.
DECK, BOOT, ZUMZ & GCO are focusing on a superior product strategy, the advancement of omnichannel capabilities and prudent capital investments.
Here is how Boot Barn (BOOT) and O'Reilly Automotive (ORLY) have performed compared to their sector so far this year.
Boot Barn delivered another stellar quarter with strong revenue, margin growth, and impressive same-store sales, benefiting from the Western wear trend. Operational excellence is evident, with SG&A leverage, effective marketing spend, and robust denim sales, but tariff headwinds loom for the rest of FY26. Despite strong fundamentals, valuation is stretched at 28x earnings, making the stock too expensive given macro and trend risks.
Boot Barn Holdings, Inc. reported very strong fiscal Q1 results with rapid same-store sales momentum. The raised FY 2026 guidance still reflects growth deceleration. Same-store sales are guided to flatline in H2 due to tariff concerns, being a significant hit to Boot Barn's growth story. Even though I believe Boot Barn's guidance to be conservative, the valuation is too expensive. I estimate BOOT stock to have a 28% downside to $125.
Boot Barn shares are expensive after a strong rally, with high short interest and seasonally weak market conditions, so I rate the stock neutral. Recent earnings showed increasing sales and same-store sales, strong margins, and earnings expansion. Guidance calls for just 7% EPS growth this fiscal year.
Boot Barn Holdings, Inc. (NYSE:BOOT ) Q1 2026 Earnings Conference Call July 31, 2025 4:30 PM ET Company Participants James M. Watkins - CFO & Secretary John Hazen - CEO & Director Mark Dedovesh - Senior VP of Investor Relations & Finance Conference Call Participants Ashley Anne Owens - KeyBanc Capital Markets Inc., Research Division Christopher Michael Nardone - BofA Securities, Research Division Corey Tarlowe - Jefferies LLC, Research Division Janine Marie Hoffman Stichter - BTIG, LLC, Research Division Jay Daniel Sole - UBS Investment Bank, Research Division Jeffrey Francis Lick - Stephens Inc., Research Division Jeremy Scott Hamblin - Craig-Hallum Capital Group LLC, Research Division Jonathan Robert Komp - Robert W.
Although the revenue and EPS for Boot Barn (BOOT) give a sense of how its business performed in the quarter ended June 2025, it might be worth considering how some key metrics compare with Wall Street estimates and the year-ago numbers.
Boot Barn (BOOT) came out with quarterly earnings of $1.74 per share, beating the Zacks Consensus Estimate of $1.55 per share. This compares to earnings of $1.2 per share a year ago.