TLDR
- Dollar General (DG) stock dropped 5.8% after announcing Jerry Fleeman as its next CEO, effective January 1, 2027.
- Same-store sales grew nearly 3% in 2025, and earnings per share rose 12%.
- Fleeman currently serves as CEO of Ahold Delhaize USA, which operates Stop & Shop.
- Analysts at Telsey Advisory Group are positive on Fleeman, citing his deep U.S. consumer retail experience.
- Zacks rates DG a Value Style Score of A, with a forward P/E of 16.38 and 20 analysts raising earnings estimates in the past 60 days.
Dollar General named Jerry Fleeman as its next CEO on Tuesday, and the market didn’t take it well. The stock dropped 5.8% on the news.
Dollar General Corporation, DG
Fleeman officially takes over on January 1, 2027, succeeding Todd Vasos, who stepped in at the end of 2023 to lead a turnaround. Under Vasos, Dollar General advanced 50% from the time he took charge through late February of this year.
The reaction likely reflects how well-regarded Vasos became, rather than any specific concern about Fleeman himself.
Fleeman, 52, brings serious retail credentials. He’s currently CEO of Ahold Delhaize USA, which runs Stop & Shop and other grocery chains. The parent company’s stock is up 65% over the past five years.
Telsey Advisory Group analyst Joe Feldman backed the pick. He cited Fleeman’s “deep understanding of the U.S. consumer and competition” as well as his experience across retail strategy, operations, marketing, merchandising, and digital.
The business Fleeman is inheriting is in better shape than the headlines suggest. Same-store sales growth came in at nearly 3% for 2025, fueled by store remodels and digital ordering partnerships.
Management restored gross margins to historically normal levels through modest price increases. Earnings per share grew 12% last year.
Guidance Looks Steady
For 2026, management guided for 2.45% same-store sales growth — just a tick below the 2.5% analysts had penciled in. That’s close enough not to worry about.
Over the past six quarters, Dollar General has consistently come in about half a percentage point ahead of its own comparable sales guidance. The pattern of underpromising and overdelivering is well-established at this point.
The company has also been picking up market share in certain categories, particularly larger household items, where it’s leaning into its “value and convenience” positioning. It has raised prices, but not by more than the broader consumer goods market.
Valuation Still Looks Cheap
At just over 16 times forward earnings, DG sits well below its recent peak multiple of around 21 times — roughly in line with the S&P 500 at that level.
Zacks gives DG a Value Style Score of A and a VGM Score of A. The forward P/E sits at 16.38, and 20 analysts raised their earnings estimates for fiscal 2027 in the past 60 days. The Zacks consensus estimate now stands at $7.28 per share for that year.
DG’s average earnings surprise over recent quarters is +24.8%, which says something about how conservative management has been with its own forecasts.
Analysts currently model 8.8% annual EPS growth over the next three years, according to FactSet. The stock’s current multiple leaves room for expansion if the company keeps executing.







