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Dollar Tree Inc

Dollar Tree Inc (DLTR)

64.20
-1.47
(-2.24%)
Closed November 16 4:00PM
64.20
0.00
(0.00%)
After Hours: 7:46PM

Professional-Grade Tools, for Individual Investors.

Key stats and details

Current Price
64.20
Bid
64.20
Ask
64.40
Volume
19,739,978
64.095 Day's Range 66.18
60.49 52 Week Range 151.215
Market Cap
Previous Close
65.67
Open
66.00
Last Trade
26
@
64.2
Last Trade Time
Financial Volume
$ 1,283,377,674
VWAP
65.0141
Average Volume (3m)
4,889,743
Shares Outstanding
214,992,119
Dividend Yield
-
PE Ratio
-13.82
Earnings Per Share (EPS)
-4.64
Revenue
30.6B
Net Profit
-998.4M

About Dollar Tree Inc

Dollar Tree operates discount stores in the U.S. and Canada, including 8,647 shops under its namesake banner and 8,016 Family Dollar units (as of the end of fiscal 2021). The eponymous chain features branded and private-label goods, generally at a $1.25 price. Around 45% of Dollar Tree stores' fisca... Dollar Tree operates discount stores in the U.S. and Canada, including 8,647 shops under its namesake banner and 8,016 Family Dollar units (as of the end of fiscal 2021). The eponymous chain features branded and private-label goods, generally at a $1.25 price. Around 45% of Dollar Tree stores' fiscal 2021 sales came from consumables (including food, health and beauty, and household paper and cleaning products), nearly 50% from variety items (including toys and housewares), and just over 5% from seasonal goods. Family Dollar features branded and private-label goods at prices generally ranging from $1 to $10, with over 76% of fiscal 2021 sales from consumables, 9% from seasonal/electronic items (including prepaid phones and toys), 8% from home products, and 6% from apparel and accessories. Show more

Sector
Variety Stores
Industry
Variety Stores
Headquarters
Chesapeake, Virginia, USA
Founded
-
Dollar Tree Inc is listed in the Variety Stores sector of the NASDAQ with ticker DLTR. The last closing price for Dollar Tree was $65.67. Over the last year, Dollar Tree shares have traded in a share price range of $ 60.49 to $ 151.215.

Dollar Tree currently has 214,992,119 shares outstanding. The market capitalization of Dollar Tree is $14.12 billion. Dollar Tree has a price to earnings ratio (PE ratio) of -13.82.

Dollar Tree (DLTR) Options Flow Summary

Overall Flow

Bearish

Net Premium

-486M

Calls / Puts

20.00%

Buys / Sells

180.00%

OTM / ITM

12.50%

Sweeps Ratio

0.00%

DLTR Latest News

Dollar Tree Announces Leadership Changes

Steve Schumacher promoted to Executive Vice President and Chief People Officer Jocelyn “Jocy” Konrad named Chief of Dollar Tree Stores and Enterprise Store Operations Jason Nordin named...

AppLovin Corporation to Join the Nasdaq-100 Index® Beginning November 18, 2024

NEW YORK, Nov. 08, 2024 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Nasdaq (Nasdaq: NDAQ) today announced that AppLovin Corporation (Nasdaq: APP), will become a component of the Nasdaq-100 Index® (Nasdaq: NDX®) and the...

Boeing Ends Strike; Leadership Changes at Dollar Tree and Southwest; PLTR, HIMS, and ALAB Soar; MQ and LSCC Decline

Boeing (NYSE:BA) – Boeing workers on the U.S. West Coast ended a seven-week strike after approving a contract that includes a 38% wage increase over four years. The strike, which impacted...

Dollar Tree Announces Leadership Transition and Reaffirms Fiscal Third Quarter Outlook

Michael C. Creedon Jr. Appointed Interim Chief Executive Officer Edward J. Kelly, III Elected Chairman Company Reaffirms Fiscal Third Quarter 2024 Outlook Review of Strategic Alternatives for...

Family Dollar Teams up With Instacart to Accept SNAP/EBT Online

Collaboration helps families do more with greater access to Family Dollar essentials Family Dollar has teamed up with Instacart (NASDAQ: CART), the leading grocery technology company in North...

PeriodChangeChange %OpenHighLowAvg. Daily VolVWAP
10.841.3257575757663.3666.5960.49430067363.1001991CS
4-3.71-5.463112943667.9170.3760.49454810864.84400262CS
12-34.12-34.703010577798.3298.660.49488974369.2879412CS
26-55.32-46.2851405622119.52123.1760.49373092584.16494713CS
52-54.4-45.86846543118.6151.21560.493182442103.11485365CS
156-58.94-47.8642195875123.14177.1960.492697467127.11511569CS
260-45.17-41.3001737222109.37177.1960.22671299114.4847127CS

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DLTR Discussion

View Posts
TRUSTUNITS1000000 TRUSTUNITS1000000 2 months ago
Never been in dollar tree
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TRUSTUNITS1000000 TRUSTUNITS1000000 2 months ago
Never been in dollar tree
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TRUSTUNITS1000000 TRUSTUNITS1000000 2 months ago
Interesting how one competitor soared over 10 years
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TRUSTUNITS1000000 TRUSTUNITS1000000 2 months ago
Shareholders post
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TRUSTUNITS1000000 TRUSTUNITS1000000 2 months ago
Wonder if bottom, speculating
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nowwhat2 nowwhat2 2 months ago
Next day (naturally)....

INSTANTLY Plunged 25 % - Down to a TA Support ???




Next day.......Boing !.......Now what ?


Waffle around down here for a while ?........But ATTEMPT to use that as "the bottom" ?

Or, just start ripping back upwards again until it hits around a hundred bucks ?.....






Nah, make that ; Until it hits around an 87 Head Clonk !




Well, that'd be the OBVIOUS thing for it to do......The question tho now is ; WILL IT ?



Thing's going to be FUN (and "revealing") TO WATCH !......We might just SEE how "corrupt" these markets are.


Because if it did that ?.......One COULD call them corrupt.





.
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nowwhat2 nowwhat2 2 months ago
Wow.....This seems kinda weird




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Bountiful_Harvest Bountiful_Harvest 2 months ago
First Dollar General, Now Dollar Tree Shares Plunge As Both Discount Retailers Warn Of Core Customer Under Pressure

https://www.zerohedge.com/markets/first-dollar-general-now-dollar-tree-shares-plunge-both-discount-retailers-warn-core


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Southern Gal Southern Gal 5 months ago
Up she comes. Looking good. Earnings release soon
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Southern Gal Southern Gal 6 months ago
Court filings show that DLTR is buying dozens of 99 Cents store locations
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Southern Gal Southern Gal 6 months ago
Bought at $114 - $115.50

Looking to return to $140+
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Southern Gal Southern Gal 6 months ago
Dipping pretty significantly. Looking to pick up a few should it get close to $110
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Banjo50 Banjo50 7 months ago
I went to Dollar Tree to buy hotdog buns price $3.00. I walked across the street to Aldi $1.29. Almost everything at Dollar Tree is over priced. I hardly buy anything in there anymore.
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Monksdream Monksdream 8 months ago
DLTR 10Q due March 13
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TRUSTUNITS1000000 TRUSTUNITS1000000 1 year ago
Walmart fka
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TRUSTUNITS1000000 TRUSTUNITS1000000 1 year ago
LOL
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Banjo50 Banjo50 1 year ago
Yes, I did notice that they have many items that are more than the $1.25 price that everyone expects.
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TRUISM TRUISM 1 year ago
Sadly, it should now be called "DOLLARS TREE," as items get even more expensive.



TRUISM
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entertaininvesting entertaininvesting 2 years ago
lets see when they put more PR on this one. you may be right or i may be making some good $$$. i like how some hedge fund backing the deal.
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Banjo50 Banjo50 2 years ago
Looks like a scam to me. Easier to take you money to the closest toilet and flush.
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entertaininvesting entertaininvesting 2 years ago
New startup in dollar store trading in OTC, Labwire (LBWR), just announced its Q1 earning today:

https://www.otcmarkets.com/stock/LBWR/news/Labwire-Inc-Releases-Q1-2023-Financial-Results--Provides-Information-on-Pending-Acquisitions-and-Financing-Activities?id=398639

it said that $2m in 2023 projected sales - not bad from $0 in 2022.
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Banjo50 Banjo50 2 years ago
I couldn't help but notice that foot traffic in the Dollar Tree stores in my area are quite brisk. Price increases with other retailers have made many of Dollar Tree's products competitive again, even with the 25% price increase. I may have sold too early.
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Bunti Bunti 2 years ago
Nice breakout
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Bunti Bunti 2 years ago
Bull Flag was formed on the daily chart
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Rebel In The FDG Rebel In The FDG 2 years ago
Exactly how I read it.

DLTR
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Banjo50 Banjo50 2 years ago
My point is that Dollar Tree no longer offers value for a dollar spent and their frugal customers will eventually catch on.
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Rebel In The FDG Rebel In The FDG 2 years ago
Well said across the board!!!

My model Chevy truck same options has gone up $17K in the last 8 years or so…

Everything is effected ….

The only things we can control are our thoughts and actions…..

Getting some ESPP shares cheap this quarter….

—-> DLTR <—-

Good luck to you :)
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Banjo50 Banjo50 2 years ago
Unless inflation pushes prices up with Dollar Tree's competitors, I see this company losing market share. I used to spend about 60 dollars per month in Dollar Tree now I spend about $5.00. One example is lemon juice. Two years ago in was $1.00 for a 33 oz. bottle. Then $1.00 for a 32 oz. bottle. Six months later $1.00 for a 16 oz. bottle. Then $1.25 for a 16 oz. bottle. Now $1.25 for an 8 oz. squeeze bottle shaped like a lemon. Repeat this shrinkflation for everything in the store and customers eventually will realize that nothing at Dollar Tree is a bargain. I may have sold my shares too early, but I'm still glad I got out. I still have a small option position which I hope expires in my favor in January. After that I'm completely out and gone for good.
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Bunti Bunti 2 years ago
Any inputs on considering $DLTR for long term?
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Rebel In The FDG Rebel In The FDG 2 years ago
6/13/22 ****¥¥¥¥****
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Rebel In The FDG Rebel In The FDG 2 years ago
Congrats on your profits!

(((BOOM)))

$DLTR
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Banjo50 Banjo50 2 years ago
I sold my last 200 shares of Dollar Tree today for a nice profit. It may go higher, but right now cash is king. For those of you waiting for a higher price, I wish you the best, but I think Dollar Tree will go lower in the long run. Putin's war and inflation are taking a very large bite out of the market in general and Dollar Tree will be pulled down with the rest.
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blackpilled blackpilled 2 years ago
Heavy call volume. Someone bought 18k volume calls for November on 180 strike and another 8k on the $190. This stock hasn’t had its best run to come. And that’s volume not dollar amount: dollar amount do the math when each option is $400 a pop
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Rebel In The FDG Rebel In The FDG 2 years ago
Absolutely!!! Most are out of energy shots too!!! Drive where you can and survive.

DLTR

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Banjo50 Banjo50 2 years ago
Tried to buy D-cell batteries At Dollar Tree yesterday. They didn't have any. Wanted lemon lime soda. They were out. Most shelves were half empty. I left the store with nothing. It is no longer worth the attempt to buy something at Dollar Tree when Walmart and Target are right down the road with better prices and full shelves. I think, in the long run, this ends badly for the share holders.
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Rebel In The FDG Rebel In The FDG 2 years ago
Well said!!! I agree….. just drive around and do that.

Debt free and loving it!!!

DLTR
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Banjo50 Banjo50 2 years ago
Last quarter numbers were great, but how soon will it be before the frugal shoppers that are Dollar Tree's customer base realize that the 25% across the board increase has made many of the products a ripoff. Ultra Bright tooth paste 5.5 oz. 93 cents at Walmart. Reach dental floss 97 cents at Walmart. Loaf of white bread 95 cents at Aldi. Lemon juce that was $1.00 for 32 oz. bottle before the price increase is now$1.25 for 17oz. at Dollar Tree for a 100% price increase. I could go on and on.
Dolllar Tree's prices are no longer competitive. I expect this greed will bite them on the backside down the road.
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Rebel In The FDG Rebel In The FDG 3 years ago
But of course I’m biased!!! If you couldn’t tell . ;). Lol

DLTR
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Rebel In The FDG Rebel In The FDG 3 years ago
Family Dollar / Dollar tree combo stores driving sales across the board …..

that’s an easy find…

DLTR
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Rebel In The FDG Rebel In The FDG 3 years ago
FD Carries the Dollar Tree flag right now…. I encourage you to shop at more than one. Bad apples ruin it for all of us….

Good post though…. Won’t be selling.

DLTR !!!!

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Banjo50 Banjo50 3 years ago
Sell Family Dollar stores. Prices are high. Selection is poor. The check out is incredibly slow.
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pepeoil pepeoil 3 years ago
Yep, my little nest is in here for a tick under 100. I think I will unload this one and call it wonderful. It was a great ride
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rynlrt rynlrt 3 years ago
Gap at 87. My puts are looking real good from yesterday
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makinezmoney makinezmoney 3 years ago
$DLTR: HOLLLLLLLLYYYYYYY CRAP.... $DLTR Oct-1 $95-calls up 53k% !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!



JUST TODAY !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!



OMMMMMMMMMMM GGGGGGGGGGGGGGG


Was just $0.01 yesterday.............. now 5.45




GO $DLTR
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crudeoil24 crudeoil24 3 years ago
Dollar Tree shares are trading higher after the company increased its buyback program by $1.05 billion, to a total of $2.5 billion.



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CanItBThisEZ2Make CanItBThisEZ2Make 3 years ago
Dollar General is NOT a Dollar Store
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Nebuchadnezzar Nebuchadnezzar 3 years ago
nibble today, will load up in the $80s
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conix conix 3 years ago
With prices creeping up, more Americans are turning to dollar stores

Abha Bhattarai

The Washington Post
Aug. 20, 2021


Comments

Kyle Dishman can't afford to shop at the local grocery store anymore. Instead he goes to Dollar General, where he can make $40 stretch into a week's worth of groceries and the occasional can of motor oil for his Chrysler 300.

He sticks with pasta, frozen pizza and canned vegetables, fully aware that "any food you can buy for only $1 is not the greatest for you." But Dishman says prices have gone up so much that he's started rationing his food.

"When you only have a certain amount to spend, it's like, why not just go to the dollar store?" he said.

A growing number of Americans are relying on dollar stores for everyday needs, especially groceries, as the coronavirus pandemic drags into its 18th month. Chains such as Dollar General and Dollar Tree are reporting blockbuster sales and profits, and proliferating so quickly that some U.S. cities want to limit their growth. The 1,650 dollar stores expected to open this year represent nearly half of all new national retail openings, according to Coresight Research.

Foot traffic at the largest such chain, Dollar General, is up 32% from pre-pandemic levels, far outpacing the 3% increase at Walmart, one of the few retail winners of last year, according to Placer.ai, which analyzes shopping patterns using location data from 30 million devices.

Analysts say the explosive rise of dollar stores is yet another example of how the pandemic has reshaped the economy and widened the gulf between the wealthiest and poorest Americans. Rising grocery prices - inflation is up 5.4% from last year - coupled with disproportionately high job losses among low-income workers have left many of the most vulnerable Americans in even worse shape.

"It's a striking disparity: In this country, there is now dollar-store land and there is Whole Foods land," said Stacy Mitchell, co-director of the Institute for Local Self-Reliance, a nonprofit advocacy group. "And if you live in Whole Foods land, it's very hard for people to understand just how desperate circumstances are for the rest of the country."

Dollar stores, which sell any number of name-brand items, including snacks, toys and holiday decor, have been proliferating for years, particularly in impoverished and rural areas where they are often the only major retailers. The pandemic, though, ushered an influx of new shoppers - including many who had previously been able to buy in larger, more cost-efficient quantities at big-box chains. But with smaller paychecks and rising prices, they say it's no longer feasible to stock up elsewhere.

Executives at Dollar General say they began seeing a rise in new customers last March, just as much of the country began shutting down because of the pandemic. Its newest shoppers tend to be younger, have higher incomes and be more ethnically diverse, according to spokeswoman Crystal Luce.


Dishman, 29, who works at a Vans outlet store in West Carrollton, Ohio, said his hours were nearly halved during the pandemic, from about 35 hours a week to 20. He's been picking up food-delivery gigs with Grub Hub, but has had to do away with trips to Kroger, where he used to spend about $150 every two weeks for his two-member household.

"Prices are going sky-high and my income is going in the opposite direction," he said. "That makes buying food, even at the dollar store, kind of rough."

There are more than 34,000 dollar stores in the United States, more than all Walmart, Starbucks and McDonald's businesses combined. The two largest chains - Dollar General and Dollar Tree, which owns Family Dollar - make up the vast majority of them, with more than 32,000 locations. Many are concentrated in lower-income areas, and analysts say it's increasingly common to see three, four and even five dollar stores within a few blocks of one another, making it difficult for smaller chains and grocery stores, which have thinner margins, to compete.

And despite their names, many dollar chains, including Family Dollar and Dollar General, sell items that cost $10 or more. Dollar Tree remains the only major retailer that continues to price its entire inventory for $1.

"It's one thing to have a dollar store or a couple of dollar stores in a neighborhood, but when you've got them at the density levels we're seeing, it's really difficult for grocery stores to open and succeed," said Mitchell of ILSR. "Dollar stores are the No. 1 driver of 'food deserts' at this point."

Food deserts, generally defined as urban areas in which the closest grocery store is more than a mile away, tend to concentrate in low-income neighborhoods. Several cities, including Tulsa, New Orleans, Mesquite, Texas, and Birmingham, Ala., have passed legislation restricting dollar stores from opening within one or two miles of existing locations. Other areas, like Oklahoma City's Ward 7, are requiring that new discount stores either have a pharmacy or dedicate at least 500 square feet to fresh vegetables, fruit and meat.

"We need more than just processed foods in our communities," said Nikki Nice, an Oklahoma City council member.

The life expectancy in a particular Zip code in northeast Oklahoma City without fresh groceries is 18 years lower than in other parts of the city, she said, adding that the three-dollar stores in the area sell packaged foods such as bread, milk and cheese, but no fresh produce. Dollar General, for example, sells fresh groceries in about 7% of its stores.

"We need better options, particularly in Black communities and other intentionally ignored neighborhoods, where we have been tremendously impacted by the lack of fresh groceries," Nice said.

The pandemic has accelerated the dominance of the country's largest retailers, including Walmart, Amazon, Kroger and Target, to the detriment of small and regional operations. That dynamic, analysts say, has been pronounced in small towns across the country. Major chains have been better positioned to handle supply chain disruptions, rising costs and labor shortages.

Growing income inequality, economists say, has also led to rising polarization among retailers. Discount chains and high-end retailers have in many cases fared much better than their midrange counterparts.

Chains such as Whole Foods Market, which is known for higher-priced organic and specialty goods, have benefited from rising home prices and a rallying stock market that have boosted the fortunes of the wealthiest Americans The Austin-based grocer is adding 43 stores to its roster of 500 this year, many of them in high-income urban areas, including 11 in California, five in New York and four in Florida.

At the other end, Dollar General, which carries national brands such as Clorox, Coca-Cola, Hanes and Nestlé, keeps costs low by renting in inexpensive parts of town and keeping stores thinly staffed, analysts said. The chain, which last year posted $33.7 billion in sales, also has tremendous buying power, allowing it to keep prices within a few percentage points of Walmart's, the world's largest retailer, according to Anthony Chukumba, an analyst at Loop Capital Markets.

"The formula for Dollar General is small, conveniently located stores with a lot of name-brand items and very sharp pricing," he said. "In tough economic times, we see folks trade down from grocery stores and convenience stores to dollar stores. With inflation pushing prices higher, we're starting to see that phenomenon again."

Dollar General's profits rose 4% to $678 million in the most recent quarter, prompting it to increase its outlook for the rest of the year. The chain, which is targeting younger, trendier shoppers with a new concept called Popshelf, is opening 1,050 stores this year and remodeling 1,750 others.

American households, on average, spent $4,643 on groceries in 2019, more than they do on rent or education, according to the most recent data available from the Bureau of Labor Statistics. That figure, economists say, is likely to have risen considerably during the pandemic, as consumers cut back on dining out.

Aside from a recent trip to Walmart, Nancie Norton has shopped exclusively at Dollar General since the coronavirus pandemic took hold early last year. She usually stops in after 9 p.m., but says she still has to wait 20 minutes in line because there are so many shoppers.

Norton, a retired teacher's aide who lives on about $1,100 a month, says she's begun cutting back from two trips a week to one. Prices are rising, she says, and quantities shrinking, which means she's having to stretch the food she does buy: milk, eggs, bread, cheese, frozen dinners and ketchup.

"I've tried to slow down a little bit and do without until I can afford to go again," said Norton, 67, who lives in Panama City, Fla., with her 98-year-old mother. She said her shopping options have been limited since Hurricane Michael destroyed a number of businesses in late 2018. "We buy everything we need at Dollar General. The things they don't have, we do without."

- - -

Shoppers streamed into a Dollar General in Mount Rainier, Md., on a recent weekday afternoon, picking up cases of paper towels, boxes of frozen pizza rolls and cans of sparkling water. One shopper, Deborah, said she'd taken two buses in search of affordable household staples. She bought batteries, a serving bowl and a cupcake at Dollar Tree before picking up cleaning spray at a nearby Dollar General. The prices at the local Giant, Safeway and Harris Teeter grocery stores have been creeping up, she said, making everyday items like paper towels and plastic wrap more expensive.

"I was going to get batteries at Harris Teeter, but they were so expensive - $7 for four - that I said, 'Let me just go to the dollar store,' " said Deborah, who did not want to be identified by her full name.

At Dollar Tree, she picked up five batteries for $1. "They used to be even cheaper," she said. "They used to come six to a pack."

In Roselle Park, N.J., Alan Gatto has begun stopping by his local dollar store almost every day now that prices are ticking up elsewhere.

And though package sizes are shrinking - paper towels, for example, have gone from 140 sheets per pack to 100 - he says prices for most everyday goods, such as cat litter and milk, are still more reasonable than at the nearby supermarket.

"It looks like inflation is coming back, so I worry about prices going up," the 75-year-old said. "But at the dollar store, a dollar is a dollar."
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CMDFundamenntal CMDFundamenntal 4 years ago
We have launched a video stacking up DLTR against some of the big boys WMT, COST, etc. Good outlook for DLTR, so hope you enjoy.

YouTube Channel : CMD Fundamental Investment
Video : Top 5 Retail Stocks In Covid-19 Growth
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Rebel In The FDG Rebel In The FDG 4 years ago
Family dollar banner dominated the quarter compared to DT. 1-2 combo!!!
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