Stocks/TLYS

TLYS

Tilly's, Inc.
Consumer Cyclical·Apparel - Retail
$4.46
$134M market cap
Claude Rating
5/10HOLD
Revenue
$553.6M
Free Cash Flow
$3.3M
Rev Growth
+5.3%
FCF Margin
0.6%
P/FCF
40.9x
EV/FCF
78.8x
Fwd EV/EBITDA
71.0x
Fair Value
$2.00
Upside
-55.2%

Tilly's, Inc. operates as a specialty retailer of casual apparel, footwear, accessories, and hardgoods for young men and women, and boys and girls in the United States. Its apparel merchandise includes tops, outerwear, bottoms, and dresses; and accessories merchandise comprises backpacks, hydration bottles, hats, sunglasses, small electronics and accessories, handbags, watches, jewelry, and others, as well as hardgoods consists of skateboards, longboards, bikes, roller-skates, and equipment for

2-Year Price History

$4.34-24.8%
$1.0$2.0$3.0$4.0$5.0$6.0volMay 24Sep 24Jan 25May 25Sep 25Jan 26May 26

Quarterly Financials & Projections

Quarterly Waterfall ($ M)
PeriodRevEBITDAOpInNIOCFFCFCapExCashDebtSharesROICIntCovEV/EBITDA
Est2027-Q4167.0-2.5---6.7--0.8-2.520.3----------
Est2027-Q3157.07.1--2.4---4.7-2.419.4----------
Est2027-Q2175.016.6--7.9--12.3-3.524.1----------
Est2027-Q1135.0-8.1---13.5---16.2-2.711.9----------
Est2026-Q4160.0-4.8---8.8---1.6-2.428.1----------
Est2026-Q3150.04.5--0.8---7.5-2.329.7----------
Est2026-Q2168.014.3--5.9--10.1-3.437.2----------
Est2026-Q1128.0-10.2---15.4---19.2-2.627.1----------
Act2025-Q4155.15.02.62.98.67.3-1.346.3170.530.35.8%----
Act2025-Q3139.60.6-1.8-1.4-10.4-11.7-1.339.0165.930.1-4.2%----
Act2025-Q2151.38.72.73.217.817.3-0.550.7357.330.33.0%----
Act2025-Q1107.6-19.9-22.7-22.2-8.1-9.6-1.537.2189.830.1-47.5%----
Act2024-Q4147.3-11.0-14.2-13.7-3.8-5.4-1.646.7193.930.1-29.2%----
Act2024-Q3143.4-13.9-14.1-12.9-23.0-25.1-2.151.7205.830.1-27.3%----
Act2024-Q2162.92.4-0.7-0.110.58.0-2.576.7213.830.0-1.3%----
Act2024-Q1115.9-16.5-19.1-19.6-25.7-27.8-2.168.0452.330.0-16.7%----
Act2023-Q4173.0-5.2-7.7-20.63.90.5-3.495.1463.229.9-6.3%-4.9x--
Act2023-Q3166.50.6-2.5-0.9-6.6-10.8-4.294.0489.229.9-1.6%----
Act2023-Q2160.00.6-2.7-1.112.310.2-2.1104.3502.829.8-1.7%----
Act2023-Q1123.6-14.1-17.3-12.0-16.2-20.5-4.393.4243.929.8-17.8%--55.2x
Act2022-Q4180.42.2-1.4-0.19.76.4-3.2113.3242.030.0-1.6%--15.7x
Act2022-Q3177.99.86.35.2-4.0-9.0-5.0105.8305.430.14.9%----
Act2022-Q2168.38.85.23.810.46.1-4.3116.4502.930.22.6%----
Act2022-Q1145.84.61.10.8-17.6-20.2-2.6111.0496.831.10.6%----

AI Analysis

LLM Evaluations

Claude5/10HOLDFV: $2.00

Tilly's is in the early stages of a meaningful turnaround under new CEO Nate Smith, with comp momentum accelerating from -7% to +20% over six months. Gross margins have expanded dramatically as the company cleans up aged inventory and shifts toward proprietary brands (37% of sales). However, this is a structurally challenged mall-based teen retailer competing against better-capitalized peers and fast-fashion disruptors, with a shrinking store base, declining e-commerce, and governance concerns around founder-controlled related-party leases. At $49M market cap (0.09x sales), the stock is priced for failure, which creates asymmetric upside if the turnaround sustains. But the path to durable profitability remains narrow—management itself acknowledges needing 8-9% annual comps just to breakeven. The massive insider buying (3.4M shares) is encouraging but largely driven by founder accumulation which may reflect different motivations than pure investment thesis. I rate this neutral with a slight positive tilt given the turnaround momentum, but the business quality is too low and execution risks too high for a higher-conviction call.

Catalyst Continued comp acceleration through Q1-Q2 FY2026 proving the turnaround is durable, achievement of full-year profitability, and successful new store openings demonstrating positive unit economics could re-rate the stock materially from distressed levels.
Risk The turnaround stalls as easy comparisons lap and tariff impacts hit margins in H2 FY2026, returning the company to losses and accelerating the cash burn that has already depleted the investment portfolio from $113M to $46M in two years.
Trend
IMPROVING
Mgmt
5/10
Quarter
9/10
Exp. Move
+15.0%

Latest Earnings Call

Transcript Summary

Tilly’s, Inc. delivered a strong fiscal 2025 fourth quarter, returning to profitability for the first time in three years. Total net sales rose 5.3% to $155.1 million, driven by a 10.1% increase in comparable net sales. This momentum has accelerated significantly into fiscal 2026, with February comps up 20.1%. Key drivers of the turnaround include a refreshed merchandise assortment, improved inventory management (down 10.8% YoY), and the implementation of price optimization and warehouse management tools. Product margins expanded by 470 basis points as the company moved away from heavy markdowns and aged inventory. Management is pivoting from store closures to selective growth, planning 4-6 new openings in fiscal 2026. The company also plans to roll out AI-driven allocation and RFID technology to further drive backend efficiencies. For Q1 2026, Tilly's expects comp sales growth of 16-22%. While still recovering from several difficult years, management sees a clear path to annual profitability if they maintain an 8-9% comp growth rate. The company maintains a strong liquidity position with $46.3 million in cash and no debt.

Valuation & Metrics

Market Stats

Price$4.46
Market Cap$134M
Enterprise Value$258M
P/S Ratio0.2x
P/FCF40.9x
EV/FCF78.8x
FCF Margin (TTM)0.6%
FCF Yield2.4%
Dividend Yield (TTM)--
Annual Dilution0.7%
CurrencyUSD

TTM Financial Snapshot

Revenue$553.6M
Net Income$-17.4M
Free Cash Flow$3.3M

Revenue Growth (YoY)+5.3%
EBITDA Margin-1.0%
Net Margin-3.2%
FCF Margin0.6%
CapEx % of Revenue0.8%
SBC % of Revenue0.1%
ROIC-10.7%
WC Change % Rev2.9%
Interest Coverage--

DCF Fair Value Estimate

$-0.22
-104.8% upside
Fair Enterprise Value$-65M
− Net Debt$124M
= Fair Equity$-7M
Revenue Growth4.6% → 1.0%
FCF Margin0.6% → 3.0%
Discount Rate16.0%
Terminal EV/FCF7.0x

Forward Outlook & Risk

Short Interest

Short % of Float1.9%
Short Shares0.6M
Days to Cover1.5
Change (vs Prior)-21.1%
Short % Float History
1.90%-2.60pp
2.0%3.0%4.0%5.0%04-3007-1509-1511-1401-1504-30

Options

Call IV (ATM)117%
Put IV (ATM)127%
ATM Spread16.2%
Call $OI (near money)$55K
Put $OI (near money)$7K
ATM ExpiryJuly 17, 2026 (56D)
ATM Strike$5.0
Major Expirations1
Near-money chain · July 17, 2026
StrikeCall Bid/AskCall OIPut Bid/AskPut OI
$2.50$1.45/$2.10304--/$0.20112
$5.00$0.20/$0.9035$0.90/$1.6522
$7.50--/$0.7016$2.90/$4.101
$10.00--/$0.250$5.20/$6.602
Snapshot: 2026-05-22

Forward Projections & Estimates

NTM Revenue Growth+9.5%
Forward FCF Margin-3.0%
Forward EBITDA Margin0.6%
Forward P/FCF--
Forward EV/FCF--
Forward Int. Coverage--
Model Risk Score8/10
Bankruptcy Odds12%
Est. Borrow Rate12.0%
Terminal EV/FCF7.0x
LT Growth1.0%
LT FCF Margin3.0%

Employees

Headcount1,410
Revenue / Employee$392,613
Gross Profit / Employee$116,643
2023: 1,525 → 2024: 1,536 → 2025: 1,410 → 2026: 3,809 (36% CAGR)

Institutional Ownership

Headline & net flow

NET BUYING

In Q1 2026 so far (quarter still filing), institutions are net buyers — bought 12.1% of float, sold 7.6%. 3 filers moved >1% of shares (2 buying, 1 selling).

Net flow · Q1 2026still filing
+4.5% of float (net)
Bought 12.1% · Sold 7.6%
42 filers reported (last quarter: 56)

Ownership composition

Active
58.4%(+27.8% YoY)
50 filers
hedge / family / endowment
Retail funds
Fidelity, Schwab, 401(k)
Passive
4.1%(-3.7% YoY)
5 filers
Vanguard, iShares, SPDR
Market makers
1.3%(+0.8% YoY)
7 filers
Citadel, Susquehanna
Insiders
7.5%
Form 4 — latest per insider
0%25%50%75%100%2022-062023-032023-122024-092025-062026-03
ActiveRetail fundsPassiveMarket makersRetail direct

Top holders

Fund$ valueCost basisΔ QoQΔ YoYα lifeFund AUM
Fund 1 Investments, LLC$32.6M$8.08+$0−$472K-3.2%$767M
BML Capital Management, LLC$8.7M$5.90+$7.9M+$8.7M-1.5%$155M
Shay Capital LLC$7.2M$5.61−$6.4M−$2.0M+0.5%$704M
HEALTHCARE OF ONTARIO PENSION PLAN TRUST FUND$3.6M$1.38+$0+$3.6M-0.2%$60.08B
RENAISSANCE TECHNOLOGIES LLC$3.4M$4.05+$385K+$46K+1.2%$63.91B
TWO SIGMA INVESTMENTS, LP$3.3M$3.40+$2.6M+$3.3M-0.7%$117.03B
Pacific Ridge Capital Partners, LLC$2.8M$6.08+$3K+$759K-0.7%$462M
Simcoe Capital LLC$2.5M$4.05+$2.5M+$2.5M+6.4%$109M
NOMURA HOLDINGS INC$2.2M$2.76+$0−$5.4M+0.1%$9.84B
MUFG Securities EMEA plc$2.0M$1.72+$0+$2.0M+1.3%$6.70B
DIMENSIONAL FUND ADVISORS LPPassive$1.9M$7.96−$780K−$2.3M-0.4%$480.92B
BlackRock, Inc.Passive$1.6M$5.09+$20K−$3.8M-0.2%$5.69T
GEODE CAPITAL MANAGEMENT, LLCPassive$1.0M$6.85+$57K−$639K+2.3%$1.61T
SG Americas Securities, LLCMM$891K$2.17+$0+$43K-0.1%$90.20B
Aristides Capital LLC$818K$3.04+$168K+$574K-0.2%$295M
GSA CAPITAL PARTNERS LLP$502K$4.99−$255K+$502K-5.9%$1.61B
STATE STREET CORPPassive$434K$8.92+$0−$1.1M-0.2%$2.89T
MILLENNIUM MANAGEMENT LLC$397K$1.95−$614K+$397K-0.5%$127.40B
CIBC Bancorp USA Inc.$385K$3.21+$223K+$385K+2.4%$74.02B
CIBC WORLD MARKET INC.$385K$2.98+$231K+$385K+0.1%$56.92B
Cost basis is a volume-weighted estimate from accumulation periods within our 13F history; holders who built their position before our window started will show a stale basis. % above the cost basis is the unrealized gain at the current price.

Trading behavior

Smart-money alpha (lifetime, %/qtr)NEUTRAL
Holders
-1.64%
avg per quarter
Holders (ex-self)
-1.33%
excl. this stock
Buyers (this Q)
+0.29%
26 buyers · $0.02B in
Sellers (this Q)
+0.71%
18 sellers · $0.01B out
alpha coverage: 100% of $ has a lifetime-alpha record
Holder behavior on this stocksource: stock
On big dips (−10%+)
-16.3%
how holders react when this stock falls
On quiet Qs
+23.8%
−10% to +10% baseline
On rallies (+10%+)
+5.9%
how they react when this stock rises
Holders' portfolio flow this Q
+15.0%
inflows — adds are organic
Sellers' portfolio flow this Q
-4.7%
Sellers shed AUM broadly — partly forced.
▸ Compare to holder-profile behavior (across all their stocks)
Holder dip (any stock)
-1.9%
Holder mid (any stock)
-5.6%
Holder rally (any stock)
-11.7%

Top Holders Over Time

5-year share-count history (top 10 holders by peak, incl. exited) + price

03.7M7.4M11.1M14.8M$1.38$3.38$5.37$7.36$9.362021-062022-062023-062024-062025-062026-03
hover the chart for per-quarter detailprice (right axis)
Fund 1 Investments, LLC8.1MRENAISSANCE TECHNOLOGIES LLC849KPARADIGM CAPITAL MANAGEMENT INC/NYDivisar Capital Management LLCShay Capital LLC1.8MLong Focus Capital Management, LLCROYAL BANK OF CANADA145Acuitas Investments, LLCGOLDMAN SACHS GROUP INCEMERALD MUTUAL FUND ADVISERS TRUST

Corporate

Executive Compensation (2023-2025)

Direct Pay$10.8M
Incentive & Other$7.0M
Total Compensation$17.8M
% of Revenue1.0%

Insider Trading (last 12mo)

Open-market only (Form 4 P-Purchase + S-Sale). Excludes grants, option exercises, tax withholding, gifts.
Major holders (≥10% beneficial owners)
Buys ($, 12mo)
$990K
14 txns · 1 insider · 728,163 sh
Sells ($, 12mo)
$2.69M
2 txns · 1 insider · 1,045,000 sh
Recent transactions
DateSideInsiderTitleSharesPriceDollarsOwned $
2026-03-20SELLShay Capital LLC10 percent owner20,000$3.70$74K$8.57M
2026-03-12SELLShay Capital LLC10 percent owner1,025,000$2.55$2.62M$5.96M
2025-08-11BUYShay Capital LLC10 percent owner25,000$1.29$32K$4.34M
2025-08-08BUYShay Capital LLC10 percent owner35,000$1.42$50K$4.74M
2025-07-30BUYShay Capital LLC10 percent owner25,000$1.90$48K$6.27M
2025-07-29BUYShay Capital LLC10 percent owner25,000$1.85$46K$6.06M
2025-07-28BUYShay Capital LLC10 percent owner50,000$2.03$102K$6.61M
2025-07-07BUYShay Capital LLC10 percent owner300$2.50$750$750
2025-06-30BUYShay Capital LLC10 percent owner59,935$1.45$87K$4.64M
2025-06-27BUYShay Capital LLC10 percent owner72,643$1.40$102K$4.39M
2025-06-26BUYShay Capital LLC10 percent owner100,000$1.30$130K$3.98M
2025-06-05BUYShay Capital LLC10 percent owner100,000$1.54$154K$4.57M
2025-05-30BUYShay Capital LLC10 percent owner90,678$1.23$111K$3.52M
2025-05-28BUYShay Capital LLC10 percent owner50,000$0.94$47K$2.60M
2025-05-27BUYShay Capital LLC10 percent owner50,000$0.86$43K$2.35M
2025-05-23BUYShay Capital LLC10 percent owner44,607$0.85$38K$2.28M

Order Flow (FINRA, ~3w lag)

23.9%retail-12.1pp
16.6%dark-2.9pp
week of 2026-04-13
0%20%40%60%24-1125-0225-0525-0825-1126-0226-04retail (non-ATS)dark (ATS)
Off-exchange volume from FINRA. Retail = non-ATS (wholesaler PFOF + broker internalization). Dark = ATS (dark-pool crossing networks, institutional). Lit-exchange = remainder.

Revenue Breakdown

Revenue Segments

By Product (2025-Q4)
Breakage$7.7M+48%
Customer Loyalty Program$2.9MNEW

Filing Risk Analysis

Filing Risk Scores

Tilly’s, Inc.: Founder-Controlled Liquidation of Assets Amid Perpetual Operational Decline

Overall Risk
7/10
Fraud
3/10
Dilution
8/10
Insolvency
5/10
Earnings Overstated
4/10
Hidden Liabilities
6/10
Legal
3/10
Audit Warnings
4/10
Hidden Upside
2/10
Contextually Acceptable
4/10

Counter-Thesis

Counter-Thesis & Recent News

📰 Recent News

Tilly’s reported a net loss of $1.4 million ($0.05/share) for Q3 fiscal 2025 (ended Nov 2025), a period where e-commerce sales plummeted by 9.0% year-over-year. While store-based comparable sales saw a 5.3% bump, the company continued its aggressive store closure program, ending the quarter with 232 locations (down from 247 a year ago). As of March 10, 2026, analysts remain cautious ahead of the Q4 report, noting the company's long-term history of missing revenue estimates and the continued technical 'Sell' signal triggered in late 2025 due to weak transaction volume (Source: TradingView, Nasdaq, Stock Titan).

🐻 Bear Case

The core bear case rests on a structural failure to adapt to digital-first youth retail. Despite years of 'stabilization' efforts, e-commerce continues to be a drag, shrinking 9% in the most recent quarter. The company is effectively shrinking its way toward profitability by closing underperforming stores, but this 'footprint rationalization' has yet to stop the decline in total revenue. Furthermore, management has warned of indeterminate tariff risks for fiscal 2026, which could crush margins already pressured by a highly promotional environment (Source: Webull, Seeking Alpha).

🚩 Red Flags

Leadership stability is a concern following the departure of the Chief Digital Officer (Jonathon Kosoff) in early 2025, with digital sales continuing to slide thereafter. Financial health metrics remain 'weak' according to InvestingPro, characterized by rapid cash burn in previous cycles and a full valuation allowance on deferred tax assets, indicating management’s own lack of confidence in near-term profitability to offset tax liabilities. The stock also exhibits extreme volatility, with over 82 moves greater than 5% in the past year, reflecting high speculative risk and low institutional confidence (Source: Investing.com, Simply Wall St).

⚔️ Competitive Threats

Tilly’s is being squeezed between larger, better-capitalized peers like Urban Outfitters and American Eagle, which have seen revenue growth (10.1% and 7.8% respectively) while Tilly’s top line remains flat or declining. Additionally, the shift toward fast-fashion giants and online-only retailers like Shein and Zara has eroded Tilly’s action-sports niche, making its mall-based model increasingly obsolete (Source: TradingView peer analysis, Investing.com).

💬 Customer Sentiment

Sentiment is dampened by declining physical traffic and a 'drop in the number of transactions,' as reported in Nov 2025. Consumers are increasingly price-sensitive and less brand-loyal to traditional 'skate/surf' aesthetics, leading to lower conversion rates unless the company engages in margin-killing markdowns (Source: TradingView, Seeking Alpha).

Full Earnings Call Transcript

Full Earnings Call Transcript — Q4 • 2026-03-11

Operator: Good afternoon, everyone, and welcome to the Tilly's, Inc. Fourth Quarter and Full Year 2025 Earnings Conference Call. All participants will be in a listen-only mode. After today's presentation, there will be an opportunity to ask questions. Please note that today's event is being recorded. At this time, I would like to turn the floor over to Gar Jackson with Investor Relations. Please go ahead.
Gar Jackson: Good afternoon, and welcome to the Tilly's, Inc. fiscal 2025 fourth quarter earnings call. Nate Smith, President and Chief Executive Officer, and Michael Henry, Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer, will discuss the company's business and operating results and then host a Q&A session. A copy of Tilly's, Inc. earnings press release, please visit the Investor Relations section of the company's website at tillys.com. From the same section, shortly after the conclusion of the call, you will also be able to find a recorded replay of the call for the next 30 days. Certain forward-looking statements will be made during this call that reflect 2026; actual results may differ materially from current expectations based on various factors affecting Tilly's, Inc. business. Accordingly, you should not place undue reliance on these forward-looking statements. A more thorough discussion of the risks and uncertainties associated with any forward-looking statements, please see the disclaimer regarding forward-looking statements that is included in our fiscal 2025 fourth quarter earnings release, which is furnished to the SEC today on Form 8-K, as well as our other filings with the SEC referenced in that disclaimer. Today's call will be limited to one hour. We will include a Q&A session after our prepared remarks. I will now turn the call over to Nate Smith.
Nate Smith: Thank you, Gar, and good afternoon to everyone joining us today. We finished fiscal 2025 surpassing our expectations on both the top line and bottom line for the fourth quarter relative to our outlook provided in early December. We ended the fiscal year with six consecutive months of accelerating positive comp momentum and 18 consecutive positive comp weeks. That momentum drove our first profitable fourth quarter and first positive comp sales fiscal year since fiscal 2021. Our momentum has continued to start fiscal 2026 with a 20% comparable net sales result in February. We have meaningfully improved our merchandise assortments and evolved our brand and digital marketing efforts to improve our customer engagement. Additionally, we have closed underperforming stores and sustained solid operational execution, delivering significantly improved results compared to last year. From a merchandising perspective, we began fiscal 2025 looking to reinvigorate our brand mix and to clean up excess aged inventory. With each passing quarter, our comparable net sales results and product margins improved as these changes were being made, ultimately leading to comp sales growth throughout 2025, which is momentum we are carrying into early fiscal 2026. Our merchandising teams put in a lot of effort to make the necessary changes to drive these improved results, and I am confident in their abilities to drive further improvements in fiscal 2026. I would especially like to acknowledge Michael Singulani, who we just promoted to Chief Merchandising Officer, for his leadership and tireless efforts in turning our sales trajectory around over the past year and setting us up for such a strong start to fiscal 2026. Good product offerings need to be supported by effective marketing strategies and tactics to help new customers realize who we are and what we have to offer, to update existing customers on changes we have made, and to reintroduce Tilly's, Inc. to former customers who may have disengaged from our brand. We believe our marketing team's efforts to drive greater consumer awareness and consideration for Tilly's, Inc. have made a significant impact through engaging campaigns, refreshed content, and exciting events, as evidenced by our growing TikTok following and reversing declines in our active customer loyalty program membership. These efforts will continue in various ways throughout fiscal 2026 to build upon the successes achieved in fiscal 2025. In terms of store real estate, with the improved store comp trends we have seen over the last seven months and counting, and because our unit economics support it, we are now pivoting from a store closure posture to a disciplined approach to new store openings in fiscal 2026, with a plan to open four to six new stores. We will remain selective and reasonably conservative in our future expectations for new stores, but it is encouraging to reach an inflection point of feeling the confidence to begin strategically considering store growth again. Fiscal 2025 was a year of significant store optimization, resulting in 21 total store closures. We are proud of the fact that we were able to deliver sales growth in the fourth quarter with 17 fewer net stores. At the present time, we have four known store closures that will take place late in the first quarter, and while that number may change as the year progresses, we do not currently expect to close a significant number of additional stores this year. Our infrastructure investments in a price optimization tool during 2025 and in warehouse management software in mid-fiscal 2024 have now been producing the anticipated benefits we expected. Our price optimization tool has contributed meaningfully to our improved fourth quarter product margins. The new warehouse system is now helping drive significant labor efficiencies within our store and e-commerce distribution centers. Further investments in our business are expected to continue during fiscal 2026, including an AI-driven merchandise allocation tool that we believe will lead to greater operating efficiencies over time. In closing, we are very excited about our prospects for fiscal 2026. We believe our turnaround is real, the fundamentals are fixed, our top line is growing, we are looking to reinitiate store growth, and we must continue to build upon the progress made thus far. The team has done the hard work. Now we are optimizing. We are not yet profitable on an annualized basis, but we see a clear path to get there after generating profit in two of the last three quarters. We built forward momentum in our business throughout fiscal 2025, and that momentum has carried into an unprecedented start to fiscal 2026. Given current trends, we expect to deliver further improvement in both top line and bottom line performance in each quarter of the year. We look forward to discussing our progress with you as the year progresses. I will now turn the call over to Mike to share the details about our fiscal 2025 fourth quarter operating results and to introduce our fiscal 2026 first quarter outlook.
Michael Henry: Thanks, Nate. We finished fiscal 2025 with stronger sales and product margins than we anticipated, along with lower expenses, to achieve our first profitable fourth quarter since fiscal 2021. Details of our fourth quarter operating results compared to last year's fourth quarter were as follows: Total net sales of $155,100,000 increased by 5.3% despite finishing fiscal 2025 with 17 fewer stores than a year ago. Comparable net sales for the 13-week period ended January 31, 2026, including both physical stores and e-commerce, increased by 10.1% with increases from both physical stores and e-commerce of 10.3% and 9.8%, respectively. That strong fourth quarter comp performance was enough to pull full-year comp sales slightly positive for the first time since fiscal 2021 at plus 0.3%. Total net sales from physical stores increased by 3.6% despite our 7.1% reduction in year-over-year store count. Net sales from physical stores represented 72.3% of total net sales compared to 73.5% last year. E-commerce net sales represented 27.7% of total net sales compared to 26.5% last year. Gross margin, including buying, distribution, and occupancy expenses, increased to 33.2% of net sales, an improvement of 720 basis points compared to 26% of net sales last year. Product margins improved by 470 basis points as a result of higher initial markups and lower total markdowns associated with operating with reduced and more current inventories than a year ago. Buying, distribution, and occupancy costs improved by 250 basis points, or $1,900,000 in the aggregate, primarily due to lower occupancy costs associated with our reduced store count and partially offset by increased shipping costs associated with our online net sales growth. Total SG&A expenses were $48,900,000, or 31.5% of net sales, a reduction of $3,500,000 or 410 basis points as a percentage of net sales, compared to $52,400,000 or 35.6% of net sales last year. Significant SG&A reductions compared to last year's fourth quarter were attributable to store payroll and related benefits of $1,600,000, primarily related to our reduced store count; lower noncash impairment charges of $700,000; reduced e-commerce fulfillment labor of $700,000; and a variety of smaller reductions across several line items. Operating income improved to $2,600,000, or 1.7% of net sales, from an operating loss of $14,100,000, or 9.6% of net sales last year. Income tax expense was $18,000, or 0.6% of pretax income, compared to $200,000, or 1.8% of pretax loss last year. Both years include the continuing impact of a full noncash valuation allowance on our deferred tax assets. Net income improved to $2,900,000, or $0.10 per diluted share, compared to a net loss of $13,700,000, or $0.45 per share last year, representing an improvement of $16,600,000, or $0.55 per share, versus last year's fourth quarter. Turning to our balance sheet. We ended fiscal 2025 with total liquidity of $87,800,000, comprised of cash of $46,300,000, no debt, and available borrowing capacity of $41,500,000 under our asset-backed credit facility. Net inventories were 10.8% lower, with an improved inventory aging compared to a year ago. Total capital expenditures for fiscal 2025 were $4,700,000 compared to $8,200,000 in fiscal 2024. Turning to 2026. Comparable net sales for the first month of the year ended 02/28/2026 increased by 20.1% relative to the comparable period of 2025. Based on current and historical trends, we currently expect the following for our fiscal 2026 first quarter operating results. Total net sales to be in the range of approximately $119,000,000 to $125,000,000, translating to a comparable net sales increase of 16% to 22%, respectively. We currently expect to generate product margin improvements of 310 to 330 basis points compared to last year's first quarter; SG&A to be approximately $44,000,000 to $45,000,000 before factoring in any potential noncash store asset impairment charges, which may arise; pretax loss and net loss to be in the range of approximately $10,100,000 to $8,000,000, respectively, with a near-zero effective income tax rate due to the continuing impact of a full noncash valuation allowance on our deferred tax assets; and loss per share to be in the range of $0.34 to $0.27, respectively, compared to a loss per share of $0.74 in last year's first quarter, with estimated weighted average shares of approximately 30,100,000. We currently expect to end the first quarter with 220 total stores, a net decrease of 18 stores, or 7.6%, from the end of 2025. We are not in a position to provide annual guidance given we cannot predict our comparable net sales performance for the balance of the fiscal year with any certainty. However, for illustrative purposes regarding our potential to return to profitability in 2026, and subject to various assumptions with respect to product margins, inventory levels, and expenses, we estimate that it would take an annualized comparable net sales increase of approximately 8% to 9% to begin generating profitability for fiscal 2026 as a whole. In closing, as Nate noted earlier, we are optimistic about our prospects in fiscal 2026 based on the sequential improvement in our comparable net sales trend we achieved from quarter to quarter throughout fiscal 2025 and into our strong start to fiscal 2026. Operator, we will now go to our Q&A session.
Operator: At this time, we will begin the question-and-answer session. To ask a question, you may press star and then one. To withdraw your questions, you may press star and two. If you are using a speakerphone, we do ask that you please pick up the handset prior to pressing the keys to ensure the best sound quality. Again, that is star and then one to ask a question. Our first question today comes from Matt Koranda from Roth Capital. Please go ahead with your question.
Matt Koranda: Hey, guys. Nice work in the quarter. I guess, first off, curious about the composition of the strong comp. The fourth quarter in particular? It looks like, based on the comments from the last time you guys gave public commentary, it probably accelerated in December and January, so I wanted to hear about the acceleration in comp, but also, if you can break down traffic versus ticket for that period, that would be helpful as well.
Michael Henry: Sure, Matt. So, going back to the beginning of the third quarter, we did a plus one in August, plus one in September, plus six in October, then a plus eight in November, plus 10.6 in December, plus 12.4 in January, and, as we just said, a plus 20.1 in February, and March is off to an even stronger start than that so far. So really significant acceleration in our comp sales trend from month to month, on top of the quarter-to-quarter performance we were achieving throughout fiscal 2025 from Q1 through Q4. So just really excited to see this kind of performance. Our conversion rate has been super strong. It has been a high-teens, double-digit percentage increase compared to last year. Traffic has been improving, both stores and e-commerce performing, all departments positive. So, pretty much everything is moving in a favorable direction.
Matt Koranda: Got it. Okay. Good to hear. And then I guess just wanted to hear a little bit about what you think is working in the assortment. Obviously, really strong acceleration all the way through the February commentary you gave, and it sounds like March sounds pretty good. What is working? What do you think is driving higher traffic? And is there something in the assortment in particular? Is it a better marketing posture? Maybe just help us identify the big levers you pulled.
Nate Smith: Thanks, Matt. This is Nate. Mike and I were talking last night about this, and, you know, we were constructing what we figured this question would come. It really is across every category. We are not seeing any spike in any particular category. We are seeing strength across the board, both genders, and kids. So, I think, obviously, our private label is working as well. So I think when we think about what was causing some of our struggles, it started with the assortment. We feel very strongly now our assortment across the board, across all categories, is where it needs to be, and we mentioned Michael Singulani coming in and taking charge of that and now being promoted to the CMO role. So I think that was a huge component of it. Let us also note the inventory situation was addressed too. So now we are selling far more full price than we were, say, a year ago, when we were selling a lot of off-price with aged and obsolete inventory. So our inventory levels are healthier. Our assortment is stronger. We have obviously rationalized some of our underperforming stores, and the consequence of all that is now really healthy margins.
Matt Koranda: Okay. Alright. That is helpful. Thanks, Nate. On the store openings, it sounds like you are telegraphing net opener of stores this year considering the four to six you mentioned in terms of opens and only a handful of closures near term. What determines the path forward on further expansion, I guess? Maybe just help us understand your head at on store expansion over maybe a medium to longer term? And then what are we factoring in, maybe for Mike, on CapEx for the store expansion this year?
Nate Smith: So, to your first question, Matt, I think we feel good about our unit economics. We feel good about our ability to execute. For me, it is more the consumer spending environment in the long term. If the macro does turn against discretionary retail spending, certainly double-digit comps will become harder to sustain, no matter how well we execute. But, largely speaking, I would say we are leaning into it this year and can only expect to be more aggressive in 2027, the way we are viewing our business.
Michael Henry: Yeah. In terms of total CapEx, we do not expect our CapEx to reach $10,000,000 in the aggregate. It has been less than that each of the last two years, as we noted in our prepared remarks. It should be in a similar neighborhood; I would say not more than $8,000,000 to $9,000,000 would be our expectation as we sit here today. And, you know, look, we are still on the path of recovery. We struggled for a lot of 2025. So we have lost productivity in terms of sales per square foot. Finishing fiscal 2025, we are—
Operator: Ladies and gentlemen, we seem to be having a technical difficulty with the main speaker line. Please stay on the line. We will be reconnecting here momentarily, and, again, we do apologize for the audio break. We are reconnecting Mr. Henry's line. One more moment. We should have him back on the line for you. Thank you. This is the conference operator once again. We have reconnected Michael's line into the conference. Michael, we still have Matt on the line for you if you would like to continue with the Q&A.
Michael Henry: Yes. Sorry about that, everybody. We had some sort of technical glitch happen here that booted us out of the line. So apologies for that little hiccup. We are back. Hey. Can you guys hear me, by the way?
Operator: Yes. We can hear you. Can you hear us? Yes, sir. We can hear you.
Matt Koranda: Alright. Got it. Just want to make sure. I think, Mike, you may have, you kind of dropped off when you were talking about CapEx for stores—probably no greater than $8,000,000 to $9,000,000—and then it started getting a little choppy. So maybe if you want to finish commentary around that, that would be helpful.
Michael Henry: Yeah. I started talking about our sales per square foot—that we are ending fiscal 2025 at roughly about $260 per square foot, which is still well below where we have been as a business in the past—and we would expect ourselves to continue to improve on that metric. And, as we do, it will continue to give us greater confidence in even expanding the rate of store expansion that we have noted for this year to even higher levels in future years, is what we would expect to be able to do. So lots of room yet to continue to improve this business. We struggled a lot through fiscal 2022, 2023, 2024, 2025, and we are just beginning to regain that lost ground that we struggled with for that three-to-four-year period. So we will walk before we run. We will continue to be reasonably conservative in our expectations for new stores. They have to be at the right economics, but it is nice to reach this inflection point where we are starting to look ahead and feel confident about our ability to reinitiate growth.
Matt Koranda: Okay. Great. Maybe just last one from me. It was helpful to hear commentary on the zone in which you would be profitable from a comp perspective. Just curious if there are any other assumptions that we should be embedding in that profitability outlook, or hypothetical, I guess, profitability outlook? Is there more gross margin leverage embedded in that assumption with an 8% to 9% comp? Is there more you can do on SG&A expense that gets you to the breakeven line, or is it just a simple, sort of comp assumption you are making?
Nate Smith: No. So, good question. So Mike talked about the sales per square foot. We have targets we want to hit. But on the other side of that, we are really on the efficiency journey now—what we are calling it. And we see a clear path with things like our price optimization tool, where we will continue to see margin upside. We have our AI solution to planning allocation rolling out here later part of the latter part of this year with Impact Analytics. We will be launching RFID latter part of this year, which will give us, obviously, better inventory accuracy resulting in a reduction of stockouts, and it will also cut our manual inventory counting time by probably 80% to 90%. And then we have a series of back-end efficiency projects as it relates to all of our product handling and fulfillment processes, to include store labor efficiency is another workstream we have underway. So we are approaching this from both sides—not only sales per square foot, but what we would consider to be efficiency on the back end.
Michael Henry: Yeah, and just to add on to that, an 8% to 9% comp increase does not correlate to a proportionate increase in SG&A. To the efficiency comments that Nate is making from a variety of angles, the aggregate increase in SG&A, despite continuing minimum wage increases and other cost pressures, would not cause SG&A in the aggregate to go up as much as you might expect with an 8% to 9% comp. We do also expect to continue to improve product margins this year—more in the front half of the year than in the back half of the year. If you follow the cadence of our product margin improvement that we achieved each quarter through fiscal 2025, we are still going to have a meaningful amount in Q1. It will start to moderate, but still be triple digits in Q2, if all goes as planned, and then it would more moderate in Q3 and Q4.
Matt Koranda: That makes sense. Thanks, Mike, and I appreciate it, Nate.
Operator: Ladies and gentlemen, at this time, I am showing no additional questions. I would like to turn the floor back over to management for any closing remarks.
Nate Smith: I would just like to say thank you for joining us today, and we look forward to sharing our fiscal 2026 first quarter results with you in early June. Have a good afternoon. Have a good evening.
Operator: With that, everyone, we will be concluding today's conference call and presentation. We do thank you for joining. You may now disconnect your lines.