Grocery Outlet Holding Corp.
Case Overview
59 Days Left to Seek Lead Plaintiff
| Lead Plaintiff Deadline: | Lead Plaintiff Deadline: 05/15/2026 |
| Status: | Status: Investigating |
| Company Name: | Company Name: Grocery Outlet Holding Corp. |
| Court: | Court: Southern District of California |
| Case Number: | Case Number: 3:26cv02291 |
| Class Period: | Class Period: 08/05/2025 - 03/04/2026 |
| Ticker: | Ticker: GO |
| Related Attorneys: | Lead Attorneys: Thomas W. Elrod |
| Related Practices: | Related Practices: Securities |
The law firm of Kirby McInerney LLP announces that a class action lawsuit has been filed on behalf of investors who acquired Grocery Outlet Holding Corp. (“Grocery Outlet” or the “Company”) (NASDAQ:GO) securities during the period of August 5, 2025 through March 4, 2026, inclusive (“the Class Period”).
The lawsuit alleges (1) the Company had expanded too quickly into new stores; (2) the Company’s purportedly strong financial and operational growth was being artificially supported by excessive rapid store expansion; (3) as a result, the Company was unable to achieve the sustainable growth required to meet its previously set guidance; and (4) the Company’s Restructuring Plan would require further Optimization to achieve its operational goals, including significant store closures and asset write-downs.
On March 4, 2026, Grocery Outlet announced results for the fourth quarter and full fiscal year 2025, reporting full year 2025 adjusted EBITDA of $254.3 million (missing prior guidance of $258 at the low end); net sales of $4.69 billion, (missing prior guidance of $4.70 billion at the low end); comparable store sales which increased by 0.5% on a 52-week basis (missing prior guidance of 0.6% to 0.9%), and diluted adjusted earnings per share of $0.76 (missing prior guidance of $0.78 at the low end). Moreover, the Company revealed it was adding an additional “optimization plan” on top of its “restructuring plan,” and “reshaping [its] new store growth strategy” including the “closure of 36 financially underperforming stores.” Further, the Company also “determined that the long-lived assets of the Closure Stores were impaired, and recognized $110 million of non-cash charges in Impairment of long-lived assets on the condensed consolidated statements of operations and comprehensive income (loss).” Finally, the Company stated that “preceding the adoption of the Optimization Plan…we determined that the long-lived assets of the Closure Stores were impaired, and recognized $110 million of non-cash charges in Impairment of long-lived assets on the condensed consolidated statements of operations and comprehensive income (loss)… we currently estimate we will incur between $14 million and $25 million in net total restructuring charges in fiscal 2026, including between $51 million and $63 million of estimated cash expenditures primarily for lease termination fees, and between $11 million and $14 million of bad debt expense, partially offset by net non-cash write-off of right-of-use assets and lease liabilities associated with these leases of between $(48) million and $(52) million.”
On the same date, the Company held an earnings call in conjunction with releasing fourth quarter 2025 results. During the earnings call, the Company’s CEO, Defendant Potter, further revealed that the Company had “made the difficult decision to close 36 locations” in part because “it’s clear now that we expanded too quickly, and these closures are a direct correction.”
On this news, the price of Grocery Outlet shares declined by $2.45 per share, or approximately 27.9%, from $8.79 per share on March 4, 2026 to close at $6.34 on March 5, 2026.
The lawsuit alleges (1) the Company had expanded too quickly into new stores; (2) the Company’s purportedly strong financial and operational growth was being artificially supported by excessive rapid store expansion; (3) as a result, the Company was unable to achieve the sustainable growth required to meet its previously set guidance; and (4) the Company’s Restructuring Plan would require further Optimization to achieve its operational goals, including significant store closures and asset write-downs.
On March 4, 2026, Grocery Outlet announced results for the fourth quarter and full fiscal year 2025, reporting full year 2025 adjusted EBITDA of $254.3 million (missing prior guidance of $258 at the low end); net sales of $4.69 billion, (missing prior guidance of $4.70 billion at the low end); comparable store sales which increased by 0.5% on a 52-week basis (missing prior guidance of 0.6% to 0.9%), and diluted adjusted earnings per share of $0.76 (missing prior guidance of $0.78 at the low end). Moreover, the Company revealed it was adding an additional “optimization plan” on top of its “restructuring plan,” and “reshaping [its] new store growth strategy” including the “closure of 36 financially underperforming stores.” Further, the Company also “determined that the long-lived assets of the Closure Stores were impaired, and recognized $110 million of non-cash charges in Impairment of long-lived assets on the condensed consolidated statements of operations and comprehensive income (loss).” Finally, the Company stated that “preceding the adoption of the Optimization Plan…we determined that the long-lived assets of the Closure Stores were impaired, and recognized $110 million of non-cash charges in Impairment of long-lived assets on the condensed consolidated statements of operations and comprehensive income (loss)… we currently estimate we will incur between $14 million and $25 million in net total restructuring charges in fiscal 2026, including between $51 million and $63 million of estimated cash expenditures primarily for lease termination fees, and between $11 million and $14 million of bad debt expense, partially offset by net non-cash write-off of right-of-use assets and lease liabilities associated with these leases of between $(48) million and $(52) million.”
On the same date, the Company held an earnings call in conjunction with releasing fourth quarter 2025 results. During the earnings call, the Company’s CEO, Defendant Potter, further revealed that the Company had “made the difficult decision to close 36 locations” in part because “it’s clear now that we expanded too quickly, and these closures are a direct correction.”
On this news, the price of Grocery Outlet shares declined by $2.45 per share, or approximately 27.9%, from $8.79 per share on March 4, 2026 to close at $6.34 on March 5, 2026.