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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsTaking Guns Off Shelves May Not Be So Bad for Business After All
Walmart may have decided to keep guns on its shelves following the massacre that left 22 dead in one of its El Paso locations earlier this month, but not all firearm retailers are standing pat in response to Americas mass shooting epidemic. Dicks Sporting Goods has been experimenting with ending firearm sales since it was revealed last year that the shooter who killed 17 people in Parkland, Florida, purchased a gun at one of its stores.
Pulling some guns off the shelves may not be so bad for business. The company announced Thursday that sales rose 3.2 percent in the second quarter the biggest upswing since 2016. Our key strategies and investments are working, our major head winds are behind us and weve bent the curve on sales, CEO Ed Stack said in a statement. We are very enthusiastic about our business and are pleased to increase our full year sales and earnings outlook.
Stack added that the company is continuing the strategic review of its hunt business.
Dicks removed all hunting products, including firearms, from 10 of its stores last fall, and increased that number to 135 (our of 730 total stores) earlier this year. Though Stack did not draw any direct correlation between the companys earnings and its retooled gun sales policy, the numbers seem to dispel the notion that restricting gun sales would hurt the companys long-term health. After the Parkland shooting prompted Dicks to stop selling assault-style rifles and high-capacity magazines in all of its stores last year, the company was criticized sharply by the National Rifle Association and other gun groups. What is becoming increasingly clear
is that Dicks has inserted itself into a tight spot from which it might not emerge unscathed, if it manages to survive at all, read a post on the NRAs website. The organization also tweeted that the move was a strange business model, and that it feel[s] bad for the shareholders.
But Dicks shareholders were doing just fine, and on an earnings call late last May, Stack cited the companys gun policy changes while discussing its rising stock price. Theres been a number of people who have started shopping us, or said theyre going to shop us more, because of the policy, he said. Theres definitely been some benefit of people who joined us, so to speak, because of the policy.
https://www.rollingstone.com/politics/politics-news/guns-dicks-sporting-goods-profitable-875761/
Iggo
(47,558 posts)Marengo
(3,477 posts)Google search, but as someone involved in the shooting sports for over 40 years I never considered Dicks as a source of supplies due to their pricing. Cant recall I know of anyone who actually bought a firearm from Dicks either.
Straw Man
(6,625 posts)That's a consumable, perhaps one of the few that they sell, unless they're counting on heavy wear-and-tear on sweatsocks and gym shorts.
For a while, they had good prices on shotgun shells, like $40 a case. A motivated trapshooter could easily do a case a week. That revenue loss would be permanent, while the "happy bump" they get from the gun-control crowd is likely to be temporary.