Academy Sports’ Poised To Capture Trade-Down Consumers

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Academy Sports + Outdoors has big advantages heading into the rest of 2025 as the retailer continues to gain ground as a value-oriented U.S. sporting goods retailer.

That’s the conclusion from Jefferies analyst Jonathan Matuszewski, who describes Academy as a destination retailer. And while the current retail backdrop against rising tariffs suggests consumer uncertainty and cost headwinds over the near term, the analyst reiterated his “Buy” rating on shares of the stock as he is upbeat about the retailer over the medium-term.

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According to Matuszewski, he sees tailwinds from higher-income consumers trading down and the biggest merchandise refresh in company’s history.

He said the retailer saw an uptick in business from $100,000-plus households in the third quarter, and noted that the “magnitude was amplified” in the fourth quarter.

Academy’s primary competitors include Dick’s Sporting Goods, Walmart, Kohl’s, Target and Macy’s. Also considered competitors are the Hibbett and Big 5 banners, as well as Bass Pro/Cabela’s and Sportsman’s Warehouse.

“Academy sees a growing customer file from $100K+ households increasingly trading down to make budgets stretch farther,” Matuszewski said. “Academy’s perception among consumers meaningfully improves with the debut of highly-requested brands like Converse, Jordan, and others.”

That’s in comparison to 2022 when the retailer’s average customer earned $79,000 annually, with nearly 30 percent earning less than $50,000.

Looking ahead, the analyst also noted that “high-growth athletic footwear and apparel vendors increasingly view Academy as a value-added retail distribution partner with a unique customer demographic,” adding that both average ticket and average order value are rising as enhanced merchandising moves “Better” and “Best” price points stock-keeping units toward 50 percent of the assortment mix over time. He also expects that both recently acquired trade-down customers will “remain loyal for years to come” and that the active customer file continues to grow as householder budgets remain stretched.

Academy also stands to benefit from its company-owned brands, where private label can provide a value-branded strategy through every day low prices. The analyst said Academy’s portfolio of 19 owned brands generate “more revenue than its entire footwear category, with several generating more than $100 million annually.” These brands have solidified the retailer as a destination option, and they have filled voids left by national brands, which in turn support’s Academy’s merchandise margin expansion.