Dick’s Sporting Goods blames ‘increasingly serious’ theft problem for profit plunge


New York
CNN
 — 

Dick’s Sporting Goods warned Tuesday that retail theft is damaging its business and would lead to lower annual profits.

The sporting goods and athletic clothing seller reported second-quarter results Tuesday morning that included a 23% drop in profit, despite sales that rose 3.6% in the period. Shares of Dick’s (DKS) plunged nearly 24% Tuesday.

The company blamed shrink, the industry term for theft and damaged inventory, for its surprisingly poor earnings. Although other national retailers have also warned investors about growing theft, Dick’s is among the first to blame its lackluster quarterly financial report primarily on theft.

“Our [second-quarter] profitability was short of our expectations due in large part to the impact of elevated inventory shrink, an increasingly serious issue impacting many retailers,” CEO Lauren Hobart said in a statement. Retail “shrink” is a term that refers to merchandise that goes missing due to theft, fraud, damage, accounting errors or other reasons.

Looking ahead, the retailer said it now expects its earning per share for the year to come in 12% below its initial forecast. The Pittsburgh-based retailer stuck to its full-year forecast for sales at stores open at least a year: flat to up 2%.

Retailers large and small say they are struggling to contain an escalation in store crimes — from petty shoplifting to organized sprees of large-scale theft that clear entire shelves of products. Target warned earlier this year that it was bracing to lose half a billion dollars because of rising theft. The retailer reported a large number of incidents of shoplifting and organized retail crime in its stores nationwide.

It’s not clear that crime is growing significantly more serious. Within the industry, at least one major player has argued that the problem is being overhyped: Walgreens (WBA) earlier this year changed

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Theft targets in Western New York

Video of a Wednesday morning ripoff displays how brazen and structured intruders have develop into.

ELMA, N.Y. — In accordance to people who sell ATVs, bikes, and other electrical power athletics gear, they are getting to be increasing targets for theft, in spite of the measures they choose to safeguard their items.

Protection digital camera video clip from a electricity sporting activities and garden machines vendor in Elma, which bought hit early Wednesday early morning, displays how daring and organized burglars have develop into.

“They are receiving really bold,” mentioned Matt Kelchlin, a 3rd-generation owner of Kens Assistance and Profits on Clinton Road.

When the stock arrives, some of it is saved exterior in yard surrounded by a 6-foot tall chain-connected fence with concrete jersey boundaries all around it, to protect against it from becoming city down or operate above.

They’ve received stability cameras, and even park trucks in entrance of the gate soon after hours to hold that from becoming crashed.

It truly is like striving to keep squirrels out of a fowl feeder

All of individuals steps did not avert intruders from hanging early Wednesday early morning, in accordance to surveillance camera movie Kelchlin shared with 2 On Your Aspect.

It reveals several people who, following climbing the fence, sign up for together to raise two $6,000 ATVs, continue to in their packing crates, and toss them in excess of the fence to the relaxation of their crew waiting outside the house. 

It took then only about two minutes to raise them in this style.

“Two cars, 7 individuals, and a U-Haul box truck, so they have been structured,” Kelchlin claimed.

“We’ve experienced three incidents in the very last 2.5 decades,” reported Kyle Armstrong at Pioneer Motorsports in Chaffee, who said their newest happened was on Tremendous Bowl

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