Burlington Eyes Better Brands as Trade Down Customer Base Grows

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A concurrence of factors has helped Burlington Stores Inc. fire on all cylinders.

The off-price retailer is benefiting from lower-income shoppers who need a deal, as well as trade-down consumers who want a deal. A decision to flow goods later in the quarter allowed it to adjust the mix, and lower product sourcing costs contributed to better margins for the first quarter.

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Burlington’s CEO Michael O’Sullivan told investors Thursday in an earnings conference call that results were “driven by higher merchandise margins from strong regular price selling, leading to faster turns and low markdowns, and also driven by faster than expected progress on our supply chain initiatives.”

He said the company also made a “deliberate” decision to flow seasonal merchandise later in the quarter versus last year’s timetable.

“The benefit of that is that it gave us a chance to read and react more effectively to early season trends,” O’Sullivan said. “By flowing receipts later, we were able to adjust the mix of those receipts and we were able to adjust the allocation of those receipts by store based upon real selling data. And I would say that contributed to faster inventory turns, lower markdowns, and stronger sales.”

The CEO also said delayed tax refunds contributed to a slower start to the quarter’s sales. He all income groups are feeling economic pressure, and identified two main customer segments. The deal shoppers tend to be lower income and have larger families, while the want-a-deal shoppers have slightly higher incomes and more financial choices. The former “needs value, especially at opening price points” and tend to seek out moderate brands.

O’Sullivan also said that over the last five quarters, discretionary income for the lower income group “appears to have stabilized.” And while still fragile, the situation isn’t getting worse given that real incomes aren’t shrinking as they did in 2022 now that inflation has come down, he said.

And while that group remains a very important customer base for Burlington, O’Sullivan sees some opportunity ahead for its other customer base now that the trade-down consumer is walking through Burlington’s doors. “We believe that now that demographic is also feeling the pinch. We think that’s good for us. It means that those customers are shopping off price in search of value,” he said, explaining that this group likely had savings previously that helped insulate them from the impact of inflation.