Tractor Supply just reported Q3 2025 earnings, and here’s the plot twist: tariffs and rising shipping costs should’ve crushed their margins, but they didn’t. Instead, gross margin actually expanded 15 bps YoY—how? Selective price hikes + tight cost control + a chunk of domestically sourced products that dodged tariff bullets.
But here’s the catch: TSCO is only halfway through the tariff impact cycle. Management is doing surgical price increases and customers aren’t pushing back yet, but that won’t last forever. Meanwhile, SG&A expenses tanked 29 bps due to higher incentive pay and lower sale-leaseback gains—not exactly sustainable.
The real test comes in 2026. Management’s calling it a “more normalized” year, expecting gross margin to keep expanding if top-line growth hits low-2% range and new initiatives like Direct Sales start paying for themselves. That’s optimistic but possible.
Valuation-wise? TSCO trades at a P/E of 46.8 vs industry average of 23.3—pricey. Consensus expects 2026 earnings up 10.5% YoY, but they’ve missed earnings 1.8% on average over the last four quarters.
The bottom line: Tractor Supply is navigating supply chaos better than peers right now, but margins staying this fat depends entirely on whether they can keep raising prices without losing customers. One slip-up and this narrative flips quick.
This page may contain third-party content, which is provided for information purposes only (not representations/warranties) and should not be considered as an endorsement of its views by Gate, nor as financial or professional advice. See Disclaimer for details.
Can Tractor Supply Keep Its Margins Tight When Costs Keep Rising?
Tractor Supply just reported Q3 2025 earnings, and here’s the plot twist: tariffs and rising shipping costs should’ve crushed their margins, but they didn’t. Instead, gross margin actually expanded 15 bps YoY—how? Selective price hikes + tight cost control + a chunk of domestically sourced products that dodged tariff bullets.
But here’s the catch: TSCO is only halfway through the tariff impact cycle. Management is doing surgical price increases and customers aren’t pushing back yet, but that won’t last forever. Meanwhile, SG&A expenses tanked 29 bps due to higher incentive pay and lower sale-leaseback gains—not exactly sustainable.
The real test comes in 2026. Management’s calling it a “more normalized” year, expecting gross margin to keep expanding if top-line growth hits low-2% range and new initiatives like Direct Sales start paying for themselves. That’s optimistic but possible.
Valuation-wise? TSCO trades at a P/E of 46.8 vs industry average of 23.3—pricey. Consensus expects 2026 earnings up 10.5% YoY, but they’ve missed earnings 1.8% on average over the last four quarters.
The bottom line: Tractor Supply is navigating supply chaos better than peers right now, but margins staying this fat depends entirely on whether they can keep raising prices without losing customers. One slip-up and this narrative flips quick.