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Williams-Sonoma, Inc. (WSM) — Q4 2024 Results: Solid Margin Execution, Positive Q4 Comp, Tariff Headwind in 2025 Guidance
WilliamsSonoma Inc [WSM] NYSE USD
What changed this quarter
Williams‑Sonoma reported a strong finish to fiscal 2024 with Q4 net revenue of $2.462 billion, a positive same‑store sales comp of +3.1% and Q4 diluted EPS of $3.28. The company delivered a best‑in‑class operating margin of 21.5% for the quarter, driven by improved merchandise margins, supply‑chain efficiencies and occupancy leverage. Balance sheet and liquidity remain conservative: $1.21 billion cash, total debt $1.347 billion and modest net debt of ~$134 million. Management issued FY‑25 guidance that assumes flat to +3% comps and operating margin of 17.4%–17.8%, explicitly incorporating existing tariff measures. The business shows resilient cash generation (Q4 free cash flow $566 million) and continued shareholder returns (dividend increase and share repurchase authorization). Key near‑term headwinds are tariff impacts and macro uncertainty; primary upside levers are product newness, B2B momentum and further supply‑chain optimization.
Revenue and net income
Key insights
Q4 net revenue $2,462.2M; gross profit $1,165.6M (47.3%); operating income $530.1M (21.5%); net income $410.7M (16.7%); diluted EPS $3.28. Operating cash flow $633.5M; capital expenditures $67.2M; free cash flow $566.3M. Cash & equivalents $1,212.98M; total assets $5,301.61M; total liabilities $3,159.19M; total stockholders' equity $2,142.42M; total debt $1,347.32M; net debt $134.34M. Key ratios: current ratio 1.44; ROE 19.2%; gross margin 47.3%; operating margin 21.5%; cash conversion cycle ~52 days.
Gross margin trend
Expense breakdown
Key financial ratios
Management commentary
Management emphasized a positive Q4 comp of +3.1% (14‑week comp basis), outperformance versus an industry decline, and record quarterly operating margin of 21.5%. Drivers called out: strong seasonal assortment, improved furniture availability, effective collaborations, accelerating B2B (>$1bn run‑rate; double‑digit growth), and supply‑chain savings. Full‑year 2024 commentary: record annual operating margin (17.9% ex‑one‑time freight accrual), EPS growth, free cash flow generation and ~100% of 2024 free cash flow returned via buybacks/dividends. FY‑25 guidance assumes comps flat to +3%, operating margin 17.4%–17.8% (includes existing tariffs), capex $275–300M, a 16% increase in the quarterly dividend to $0.66 and $1.2bn share repurchase capacity. Management highlighted AI and in‑house marketing as levers for SG&A efficiency and reiterated focus on omni‑channel experience, design‑led products and expanding emerging brands (Rejuvenation, Williams‑Sonoma Home, Mark and Graham).
"In Q4, our comp came in above expectations at positive 3.1%. Also in the quarter, we exceeded profitability estimates with an operating margin of 21.5% and earnings per share of $3.28."
Laura Alber, President & CEO
"For 2025, we are guiding our comps to be flat to a positive 3% with operating margin between 17.4% and 17.8%. Our guidance includes the additional tariffs implemented as of this call."
Jeff Howie, CFO
Forward guidance
Fiscal 2025: comps flat to +3%; total net revenues +/- 1.5% year‑over‑year (reflecting a 53‑week to 52‑week comparison); operating margin target 17.4%–17.8% (explicitly includes 20% China tariffs, 25% Mexico/Canada tariffs and 25% metal tariffs); capital expenditures $275–300M (85% on e‑commerce, retail optimization and supply chain); quarterly dividend increased to $0.66; opportunistic share repurchases with $1.2bn authorization available.
Peer margin comparison
Competitive snapshot
| Company | Gross margin | Operating margin | ROE | P/E |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| WSM | 47.34% | 21.50% | 19.20% | 16.13% |
| AZO | 52.50% | 20.90% | -19.00% | 15.01% |
| ULTA | 38.20% | 14.80% | 15.80% | 12.12% |
| BBY | 20.90% | 1.56% | 4.17% | 39.19% |
| RH | 44.70% | 8.66% | -8.51% | 140.27% |
| DKS | 35.00% | 9.94% | 9.38% | 16.10% |
| ORLY | 51.30% | 18.00% | -40.20% | 31.38% |
| WOOF | 38.00% | 1.12% | -1.24% | -17.07% |
Investment outlook
Neutral-to-Constructive (12–18 month view). Williams‑Sonoma exhibits a durable operating model with strong margins, robust free cash flow and a conservative balance sheet. Q4 demonstrated concrete improvements in top‑line momentum and margin execution; management has provided reasonable FY‑25 guidance that factors in tariff headwinds. Key upside catalysts: sustained positive comps, B2B acceleration and additional supply‑chain/SG&A efficiencies (including AI benefits). Primary downside risks: tariff escalation, a material deterioration in discretionary consumer spending or execution missteps on inventory and pricing. Given current valuation multiples and the embedded tariff risk in guidance, a constructive investment case requires continued execution on comp growth and margin preservation. Investors seeking exposure to high‑quality, design‑led home retail should weigh WSM’s cash generation and capital return profile against sensitivity to macro/tariff shocks; appropriate positioning could be a buy-on-weakness or accumulate for investors comfortable with retail cyclicality and near‑term policy risk.
Strengths
- High gross and operating margin structure (Q4 gross margin 47.3%; operating margin 21.5%) supported by product differentiation and full‑price selling discipline.
- Vertically oriented design and sourcing capability enabling exclusive assortments and faster product cycles.
- Strong cash generation and conservative net leverage (net debt ~ $134m) allowing ongoing capital returns and reinvestment.
- Multi‑brand portfolio with diversified exposure (Williams‑Sonoma, Pottery Barn, West Elm, emerging brands) and accelerating B2B channel (> $1bn).
Weaknesses
- Exposure to discretionary spending and housing-related furniture demand, which can be cyclical.
- Concentration of some manufacturing and sourcing complexity; tariff sensitivity despite mitigation actions.
- High valuation metrics versus book (price/book ~12.4) reduce margin for execution misses.
Opportunities
- Further margin expansion from additional supply chain efficiencies and AI‑driven SG&A savings.
- Scaling emerging brands (e.g., Rejuvenation) and B2B projects that can materially increase top line and diversify revenue mix.
- Domestic upholstery/manufacturing capabilities can shorten lead times and improve gross margin capture in furniture categories.
Threats
- Escalation or broadening of tariffs and trade policy that exceed current guidance assumptions.
- Macroeconomic slowdown reducing discretionary spend, particularly on furniture and high‑ticket items.
- Competitive pressures from online pure‑plays and other omnichannel retailers that may engage in aggressive discounting.