Medicine Hat News

Dollarama reports $133.5M Q4 profit

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MONTREAL Dollarama Inc. will focus more of its attention on its lowest priced products in a bid to keep its comparable store sales growth from slowing.

On a Thursday call with analysts, chief executive officer Neil Rossy said the Montreal-based dollar store chain saw its third-quarter comparable store sales grow 3.1 per cent compared with 4.6 per cent in the same quarter a year ago.

The comparable store sales growth for the period ended Oct. 28 was due to a 4.0 per cent increase in average transactio­n size, but was partially offset by a 0.9 per cent drop in the number of transactio­ns and was impacted by a decision to strategica­lly limit price increases in recent quarters.

To keep growth from stalling, Dollarama said it will call attention to products it sells for $1.25 and less.

Asked if Dollarama will drop prices on more expensive items, Rossy said, "We are going to start with the highlighti­ng and then depending on the results of the highlighti­ng, we might take further action."

Dollarama has been slowly introducin­g higher price points in stores for years as it has grappled with increased competitio­n from e-commerce giant Amazon and Asian retailers Miniso and Muji, which recently entered the Canadian market. It's also faced pricing challenges from periods when the loonie's value was depreciati­ng or the North American Free Trade Agreement was being renegotiat­ed.

Their highest priced items go for $4.

Despite the price points rising, Rossy described the company's recent performanc­e as stable and revealed it earned $133.5 million in its latest quarter, up from $130.1 million a year ago.

That profit amounted to 41 cents per diluted share, up from 38 cents per share in the same quarter last year.

Sales for the quarter ended Oct. 28 totalled $864.3 million.

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