DG NYSE
Dollar General Corporation

What happened
-3.69% 2026-03-05

From 2026-03-05 session.

Falls sharply ahead of quarterly earnings report

Dollar General Corporation reported third quarter 2025 financial results on December 4, 2025. Net sales increased 4.6% to $10.6 billion, same-store sales increased 2.5%, operating profit increased 31.5% to $425.9 million, and diluted earnings per share increased 43.8% to $1.28. Year-to-date cash flows from operations increased 28.4% to $2.8 billion.

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What does Dollar General Corporation do?

Dollar General operates nearly 21,000 discount retail stores across the United States, primarily serving cost-conscious shoppers in rural and suburban communities. The company has been on a strong recovery trajectory, with shares surging 114% over the past year on improving margins and same-store sales growth. Today's decline comes as the company prepares to report fiscal Q4 earnings, with investors weighing whether results can sustain the momentum reflected in its above-peer valuation.

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We watch DG for moves that stand out from normal trading -- the kind of day that makes you ask "WTF just happened?" When Dollar General Corporation moves beyond its usual range, our AI digs through 15-20 news sources to piece together what drove it. No predictions, no trading advice -- just a clear explanation in about 30 seconds.

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From a recent analysis

Today's decline extends the selloff that began yesterday (-6.3% on 3.6x volume) when both the MFS exposure and First Brands lawsuit were first reported. The 0.6x volume today suggests this is residual selling pressure rather than a fresh wave of institutional liquidation — the heavy conviction trade occurred yesterday. the stock is underperforming the financials sector (XLF +1.21%) by more than 5 percentage points and its peer group average (-1.5%) by 2.5 percentage points, confirming this remains a stock-specific story. The stock has now declined in seven of the last ten sessions, with the February drawdown — driven sequentially by the Bitcoin-backed bond debacle, the First Brands lawsuit, and the MFS insolvency exposure — exceeding 30% from early-month levels. The Pomerantz law firm investigation notice is a routine post-decline filing and not a contributing factor.