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UNITED STATES
 
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
Washington, D.C. 20549
Form
10-K
 
ANNUAL REPORT PURSUANT TO SECTION 13 OR 15(d) OF THE
SECURITIES EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934
 
 
For the fiscal year ended
February 1, 2025
 
or
 
TRANSITION REPORT PURSUANT TO SECTION 13 OR 15(d)
 
OF THE SECURITIES EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934
Commission File Number
1-31340
The Cato Corporation
Registrant
 
 
 
Delaware
 
56-0484485
State of Incorporation
 
I.R.S. Employer Identification Number
 
8100 Denmark Road
Charlotte
,
North Carolina
28273-5975
Address of Principal Executive Offices
 
704
/
554-8510
Registrant’s Telephone
 
Number
Securities registered pursuant to Section 12(b) of the Act:
Title of each class
Trading Symbol(s)
Name of each exchange on which registered
Class A - Common Stock, par value $.033 per share
CATO
New York Stock Exchange
Securities registered pursuant to Section 12(g) of the Act:
None
 
Indicate by check mark if the Registrant is a well-known seasoned issuer, as defined in Rule 405 of the Securities Act.
 
Yes
 
No
 
Indicate by check mark if the Registrant is not required to file reports pursuant to Section 13 or Section 15(d) of the Exchange Act.
 
Yes
 
No
 
Indicate by check mark whether the Registrant (1) has
 
filed all reports required to be filed
 
by Section 13 or 15(d) of the Securities Exchange
 
Act of
1934 during
 
the preceding
 
12 months (or
 
for such
 
shorter period
 
that the
 
Registrant was
 
required to
 
file such
 
reports), and
 
(2) has been
 
subject to
such filing requirements for the past 90 days.
 
Yes
 
No
 
Indicate by
 
check mark
 
whether the
 
registrant has
 
submitted electronically
 
every Interactive
 
Data File
 
required to
 
be submitted
 
pursuant to
 
Rule
405
 
of
 
Regulation
 
S-T
 
 
232.405 of
 
this
 
chapter) during
 
the preceding
 
12
 
months
 
(or
 
for
 
such
 
shorter period
 
that
 
the
 
registrant was
 
required
 
to
submit such files). Yes
 
No
 
Indicate by check mark
 
whether the registrant is
 
a large accelerated
 
filer, an accelerated
 
filer, a non
 
-accelerated filer, a
 
smaller reporting company,
or an
 
emerging growth
 
company.
 
See the
 
definitions of
 
“large accelerated
 
filer,”
 
“accelerated filer,”
 
“smaller reporting
 
company” and
 
“emerging
growth company” in Rule 12b-2 of the Exchange Act.
 
Large accelerated filer
 
Accelerated filer
 
Emerging Growth Company
Non-accelerated filer
 
Smaller reporting company
 
If
 
an
 
emerging
 
growth
 
company,
 
indicate
 
by
 
check
 
mark
 
if
 
the
 
registrant
 
has
 
elected
 
not
 
to
 
use
 
the
 
extended
 
transition
 
period
 
for
 
complying with any new or revised financial accounting standards provided pursuant to Section 13(a) of the Exchange Act.
 
Indicate
 
by
 
check
 
mark
 
whether
 
the
 
registrant
 
has
 
filed
 
a
 
report
 
on
 
and
 
attestation
 
to
 
its
 
management’s
 
assessment
 
of
 
the
 
effectiveness
 
of
 
its
internal
 
control over
 
financial reporting
 
under Section
 
404(b) of
 
the Sarbanes-Oxley
 
Act (15
 
U.S.C. 7262(b))
 
by the
 
registered public
 
accounting
firm that prepared or issued its audit report.
 
If securities are registered
 
pursuant to Section
 
12(b) of the
 
Act, indicate by check
 
mark whether the
 
financial statements of
 
the registrant included
in the filing reflect the correction of an error to previously issued financial statements.
 
Indicate by check
 
mark whether any
 
of those error
 
corrections are restatements
 
that required a
 
recovery analysis of incentive-based
 
compensation
received by any of the registrant’s executive officers during the relevant recovery period pursuant to §240.10D-1(b).
 
Indicate by check mark whether the registrant is a shell company (as defined in Exchange Act Rule 12b-2). Yes
 
 
No
 
The
 
aggregate
 
market
 
value
 
of
 
the
 
Registrant’s
 
Class A
 
Common
 
Stock
 
held
 
by
 
non-affiliates
 
of
 
the
 
Registrant
 
as
 
of
 
August
 
3,
 
2024,
 
the
 
last
business day of
 
the Company’s
 
most recent second
 
quarter, was
 
$
88,395,998
 
based on the
 
last reported sale
 
price per share
 
on the New
 
York
 
Stock
Exchange on that date.
 
 
As of February 1, 2025, there were
18,313,929
 
shares of Class A common stock and
1,763,652
 
shares of Class B common stock outstanding.
DOCUMENTS INCORPORATED BY REFERENCE
 
Portions of the proxy statement relating to the 2025 annual meeting of shareholders are incorporated by reference into Part III.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
2
THE CATO CORPORATION
FORM 10-K
TABLE OF CONTENTS
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Page
 
 
 
 
PART
 
I
Item 1.
 
Business
 
..........................................................................................................................
 
 
 
5 – 10
 
Item 1A.
Risk Factors
 
....................................................................................................................
 
10 – 23
Item 1B.
Unresolved Staff Comments
 
...........................................................................................
 
23
Item 1C.
Cybersecurity
 
..................................................................................................................
 
23
Item 2.
 
Properties
 
........................................................................................................................
 
 
 
25
 
Item 3.
 
Legal Proceedings
 
...........................................................................................................
 
 
 
25
 
Item 3A.
 
Executive Officers of the Registrant
 
...............................................................................
 
 
 
26
 
Item 4.
Mine Safety Disclosures
 
.................................................................................................
 
26
 
PART
 
II
Item 5.
 
Market for Registrant’s Common Equity, Related Stockholder Matters and Issuer
Purchases of Equity Securities
 
........................................................................................
 
 
 
27 – 29
 
 
Item 7.
 
Management’s Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition and Results
of Operations ..................................................................................................................
 
 
 
30 – 36
 
Item 7A.
 
Quantitative and Qualitative Disclosures About Market Risk
 
........................................
 
 
 
36
 
Item 8.
 
Financial Statements and Supplementary Data ..............................................................
 
 
 
37 – 71
 
Item 9.
 
Changes in and Disagreements with Accountants on Accounting
 
and Financial
Disclosure
 
.......................................................................................................................
 
 
 
72
 
Item 9A.
 
Controls and Procedures
 
.................................................................................................
 
 
 
72
 
Item 9B.
Other Information
 
...........................................................................................................
 
73
Item 9C.
Disclosure Regarding Foreign Jurisdictions that Prevent Inspections
 
............................
 
73
 
PART
 
III
Item 10.
 
Directors, Executive Officers and Corporate Governance .............................................
 
 
 
74
 
 
Item 11.
 
Executive Compensation
 
................................................................................................
 
 
 
74
 
Item 12.
 
Security Ownership of Certain Beneficial Owners and Management and Related
Stockholder Matters
 
........................................................................................................
 
 
 
74
 
Item 13.
 
Certain Relationships and Related Transactions, and Director Independence
 
...............
 
 
 
75
 
Item 14.
 
Principal Accountant Fees and Services
 
.........................................................................
 
 
 
75
 
 
PART
 
IV
Item 15.
 
Exhibits and Financial Statement Schedules
 
..................................................................
 
 
 
76
 
 
Item 16.
Form 10-K Summary ………………………………………………………………….
78
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
3
Forward-looking Information
 
The
 
following
 
information
 
should
 
be
 
read
 
along
 
with
 
the
 
Consolidated
 
Financial
 
Statements,
including the
 
accompanying Notes
 
appearing in
 
this report.
 
Any of
 
the following
 
are “forward-looking”
statements within the meaning of Section 27A of the Securities Act of 1933, as amended,
 
and Section 21E
of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended: (1) statements in this Form 10-K and any documents
incorporated
 
by
 
reference
 
that
 
reflect
 
projections
 
or
 
expectations
 
of
 
our
 
future
 
financial
 
or
 
economic
performance;
 
(2) statements
 
that
 
are
 
not
 
historical information;
 
(3) statements
 
of
 
our
 
beliefs,
 
intentions,
plans
 
and
 
objectives for
 
future operations,
 
including those
 
contained in
 
“Management’s
 
Discussion and
Analysis of
 
Financial Condition
 
and Results
 
of
 
Operations”; (4) statements
 
relating to
 
our operations
 
or
activities
 
for
 
our
 
fiscal
 
year
 
ending
 
January
 
31,
 
2026
 
(“fiscal
 
2025”)
 
and
 
beyond,
 
including,
 
but
 
not
limited to, statements regarding expected amounts of capital expenditures and store openings, relocations,
remodels
 
and
 
closures,
 
statements regarding
 
the
 
potential
 
impact
 
of
 
the
 
COVID-19 or
 
other
 
pandemics
and related
 
responses and
 
mitigation efforts,
 
as well
 
as the
 
potential impact
 
of supply
 
chain disruptions,
extreme weather
 
conditions, trade
 
policies, inflationary
 
pressures and
 
other economic
 
conditions on
 
our
business,
 
results
 
of
 
operations
 
and
 
financial
 
condition
 
and
 
statements regarding
 
new
 
store
 
development
strategy;
 
and
 
(5) statements
 
relating
 
to
 
our
 
future
 
contingencies.
 
When
 
possible,
 
we
 
have
 
attempted
 
to
identify
 
forward-looking
 
statements
 
by
 
using
 
words
 
such
 
as
 
“will,”
 
“expects,”
 
“anticipates,”
“approximates,” “believes,” “estimates,” “hopes,”
 
“intends,” “may,”
 
“plans,” “could,” “would,”
 
“should”
and
 
any
 
variations
 
or
 
negative
 
formations
 
of
 
such
 
words
 
and
 
similar
 
expressions.
 
We
 
can
 
give
 
no
assurance
 
that actual
 
results or
 
events
 
will not
 
differ
 
materially from
 
those
 
expressed or
 
implied in
 
any
such
 
forward-looking
 
statements.
 
Forward-looking
 
statements
 
included
 
in
 
this
 
report
 
are
 
based
 
on
information available
 
to us
 
as of
 
the filing
 
date of
 
this report,
 
but subject
 
to known
 
and unknown
 
risks,
uncertainties and other factors that could cause actual results
 
to differ materially from those contemplated
by the forward-looking statements.
 
Such factors include, but are not limited to, the following:
 
any actual
or perceived
 
deterioration in
 
the conditions
 
that drive
 
consumer confidence
 
and spending,
 
including, but
not limited to, prevailing social,
 
economic, political and public health
 
conditions and uncertainties, levels
of unemployment, fuel, energy and food costs,
 
inflation, wage rates, tax rates, interest rates, home values,
consumer
 
net
 
worth
 
and
 
the
 
availability
 
of
 
credit;
 
changes
 
in
 
laws,
 
regulations
 
or
 
government
 
policies
affecting our business, including
 
but not limited to
 
tariffs and taxes; uncertainties
 
regarding the impact of
any
 
governmental
 
action
 
regarding,
 
or
 
responses
 
to,
 
the
 
foregoing
 
conditions;
 
competitive
 
factors
 
and
pricing
 
pressures;
 
our
 
ability
 
to
 
predict
 
and
 
respond
 
to
 
rapidly
 
changing
 
fashion
 
trends
 
and
 
consumer
demands; our ability to
 
successfully implement our new store
 
development strategy to increase new
 
store
openings and our ability of any such new stores to grow and perform as expected; adverse weather, public
health
 
threats
 
(including
 
the
 
COVID-19
 
or
 
other
 
pandemics)
 
or
 
similar
 
conditions
 
that
 
may
 
affect
 
our
sales
 
or
 
operations;
 
inventory
 
risks
 
due
 
to
 
shifts
 
in
 
market
 
demand,
 
including
 
the
 
ability
 
to
 
liquidate
excess
 
inventory
 
at
 
anticipated
 
margins;
 
adverse
 
developments
 
or
 
volatility
 
affecting
 
the
 
financial
services industry or broader
 
financial markets; and other
 
factors discussed under “Risk
 
Factors” in Part I,
Item 1A of this annual report on
 
Form 10-K for the fiscal year ended February 1,
 
2025 (“fiscal 2024”), as
amended
 
or
 
supplemented,
 
and
 
in
 
other
 
reports
 
we
 
file
 
with
 
or
 
furnish
 
to
 
the
 
Securities
 
and
 
Exchange
Commission (“SEC”)
 
from time
 
to time.
 
We
 
do not
 
undertake, and
 
expressly decline,
 
any obligation
 
to
update
 
any
 
such
 
forward-looking
 
information
 
contained
 
in
 
this
 
report,
 
whether
 
as
 
a
 
result
 
of
 
new
information, future events, or otherwise.
 
As used herein,
 
the terms “we,”
 
“our,”
 
“us,” the “Company”
 
or “Cato”
 
include The Cato
 
Corporation
and
 
its
 
subsidiaries,
 
unless
 
the
 
context
 
indicates
 
another
 
meaning
 
and
 
except
 
that
 
when
 
used
 
with
reference
 
to
 
common
 
stock
 
or
 
other
 
securities
 
described
 
herein
 
and
 
in
 
describing
 
the
 
positions
 
held
 
by
management of
 
the Company,
 
such terms
 
include only
 
The Cato
 
Corporation.
 
Our website
 
is located
 
at
www.catofashions.com
 
where
 
we
 
make
 
available,
 
free
 
of
 
charge,
 
our
 
annual
 
reports
 
on
 
Form 10-K,
quarterly
 
reports
 
on
 
Form 10-Q,
 
current
 
reports
 
on
 
Form 8-K,
 
proxy
 
statements
 
and
 
other
 
reports
(including amendments
 
to
 
these
 
reports) filed
 
or
 
furnished
 
pursuant to
 
Section 13(a) or
 
15(d)
 
under
 
the
Securities Exchange
 
Act of
 
1934. These
 
reports are
 
available as
 
soon as
 
reasonably practicable
 
after we
electronically file
 
these
 
materials with
 
the
 
SEC. We
 
also post
 
on our
 
website the
 
charters of
 
our
 
Audit,
 
4
Compensation
 
and
 
Corporate
 
Governance
 
and
 
Nominating
 
Committees;
 
our
 
Corporate
 
Governance
Guidelines; Code of Business Conduct and Ethics and
 
Code of Ethics for the
 
Principal Executive Officer,
Principal Financial Officer
 
and Principal Accounting
 
Officer and
 
any amendments or
 
waivers thereto for
any of our directors or executive officers; and any other publicly available corporate governance materials
contemplated
 
by
 
SEC
 
or
 
New
 
York
 
Stock
 
Exchange
 
regulations.
 
The
 
information
 
contained
 
on
 
our
website, www.catofashions.com,
 
is not,
 
and should in
 
no way be
 
construed as, a
 
part of this
 
or any other
report that we filed with or furnished to the SEC.
 
5
PART
 
I
Item 1.
 
Business:
Background
 
The
 
Company,
 
founded
 
in
 
1946,
 
operated
 
1,117
 
fashion
 
specialty
 
stores
 
at
 
February
 
1,
 
2025,
 
in
 
31
states,
 
principally
 
in
 
the
 
southeastern
 
United
 
States,
 
under
 
the
 
names
 
“Cato,”
 
“Cato
 
Fashions,”
 
“Cato
Plus,”
 
“It’s
 
Fashion,”
 
“It’s
 
Fashion
 
Metro”
 
and
 
“Versona.”
 
The
 
Cato
 
concept
 
seeks
 
to
 
offer
 
quality
fashion
 
apparel
 
and
 
accessories
 
at
 
low
 
prices
 
every
 
day,
 
in
 
junior/missy
 
and
 
plus
 
sizes.
 
The
 
Cato
concept’s stores and e-commerce website feature a broad assortment of apparel and accessories, including
dressy,
 
career,
 
and
 
casual
 
sportswear,
 
dresses,
 
coats,
 
shoes,
 
lingerie,
 
costume
 
jewelry
 
and
 
handbags.
 
A
major portion of the Cato concept’s
 
merchandise is sold under its private label and is produced by various
vendors
 
in
 
accordance
 
with
 
the
 
concept’s
 
specifications.
 
The
 
It’s
 
Fashion
 
and
 
It’s
 
Fashion
 
Metro
concepts offer fashion with a focus on the latest trendy styles for the entire family at low prices every day.
 
The
 
Versona
 
concept’s
 
stores
 
and
 
e-commerce website
 
offer
 
quality fashion
 
apparel items,
 
jewelry
 
and
accessories at
 
exceptional values
 
every day.
 
The
 
Company’s
 
stores
 
range in
 
size from
 
2,400 to
 
19,000
square
 
feet
 
and
 
are
 
located
 
primarily
 
in
 
strip
 
shopping
 
centers
 
anchored
 
by
 
national
 
discounters
 
or
market-dominant
 
grocery
 
stores.
 
The
 
Company
 
emphasizes
 
friendly
 
customer
 
service
 
and
 
coordinated
merchandise
 
presentations
 
in
 
an
 
appealing
 
store
 
environment.
 
The
 
Company
 
offers
 
its
 
own
 
credit
 
card
and layaway
 
plan. Credit
 
and layaway
 
sales under
 
the Company’s
 
plan represented
 
6% of
 
retail sales
 
in
fiscal
 
2024.
 
See
 
Note
 
13
 
to
 
the
 
Consolidated Financial
 
Statements, “Reportable
 
Segment
 
Information,”
for a discussion of information regarding the Company’s two reportable segments: Retail and Credit.
 
 
The
 
Company
 
has
 
operated
 
Cato-branded
 
retail
 
stores
 
for
 
78
 
years.
 
The
 
Company originated
 
as
 
a
family-owned business and
 
made its
 
first initial
 
public offering
 
of stock
 
in 1968.
 
In 1980,
 
the Company
went private and in 1987 again conducted an initial public offering.
Business Strategy
 
The Company’s
 
primary objective
 
is to
 
be the
 
leading fashion
 
specialty retailer
 
for fashion
 
and value
in its
 
markets. Management believes the
 
Company’s success
 
is dependent upon
 
its ability to
 
differentiate
its stores
 
from department
 
stores, mass
 
merchandise discount
 
stores and
 
competing specialty
 
stores. The
key elements of the Company’s business strategy are:
 
Merchandise
 
Assortment.
 
The
 
Company’s
 
stores
 
offer
 
a
 
wide
 
assortment
 
of
 
on-trend
 
apparel
 
and
accessory items in primarily junior/missy,
 
plus sizes, men and kids sizes, toddler to
 
boys size 20 and girls
size 16 with
 
an emphasis on color,
 
product coordination and selection.
 
Colors and styles are
 
coordinated
and presented so that outfit selection is easily made.
 
Value
 
Pricing.
 
The
 
Company offers
 
quality
 
merchandise that
 
is
 
generally priced
 
below comparable
merchandise
 
offered
 
by
 
department
 
stores
 
and
 
mall
 
specialty
 
apparel
 
chains,
 
but
 
is
 
generally
 
more
fashionable
 
than
 
merchandise
 
offered
 
by
 
discount
 
stores.
 
Management
 
believes
 
that
 
the
 
Company
 
has
positioned itself as the every day low price leader in its market
 
segment.
 
Strip
 
Shopping
 
Center
 
Locations.
The
 
Company
 
locates
 
its
 
stores
 
principally
 
in
 
convenient
 
strip
centers anchored by
 
national discounters or
 
market-dominant grocery stores
 
that attract large
 
numbers of
potential customers.
 
Customer Service.
 
Store managers
 
and sales
 
associates are
 
trained
 
to
 
provide prompt
 
and courteous
service and to assist customers in merchandise selection and wardrobe
 
coordination.
 
Credit and
 
Layaway Programs
.
 
The Company offers
 
its own credit
 
card and a
 
layaway plan to
 
make
6
the purchase of its merchandise more convenient for its customers.
Merchandising
 
Merchandising
 
The
 
Company
 
seeks
 
to
 
offer
 
a
 
broad
 
selection
 
of
 
high
 
quality
 
and
 
exceptional
 
value
 
apparel
 
and
accessories
 
to
 
suit
 
the
 
various
 
lifestyles
 
of
 
fashion
 
and
 
value-conscious
 
customers.
 
In
 
addition,
 
the
Company strives to offer on-trend fashion in exciting colors with consistent fit and
 
quality.
 
The Company’s merchandise lines
 
include dressy, career,
 
and casual sportswear, dresses,
 
coats, shoes,
lingerie, costume
 
jewelry,
 
handbags, men’s
 
wear and
 
lines for
 
kids and
 
infants. The
 
Company primarily
offers exclusive
 
merchandise with
 
fashion and
 
quality comparable
 
to mall
 
specialty stores
 
at low
 
prices,
every day.
 
The Company believes that the collaboration of its merchandising and design teams with an expanded
in-house
 
product
 
development
 
and
 
direct
 
sourcing
 
function
 
has
 
enhanced
 
merchandise
 
offerings
 
and
delivers quality,
 
exclusive on-trend
 
styles at
 
lower prices.
 
The product
 
development and
 
direct sourcing
operations provide
 
research on
 
emerging fashion
 
and color
 
trends, technical
 
services and
 
direct sourcing
options.
 
As a
 
part of
 
its merchandising
 
strategy,
 
members of
 
the Company’s
 
merchandising and
 
design staff
visit selected
 
stores to
 
monitor the
 
merchandise offerings
 
of other
 
retailers, regularly
 
communicate with
store operations
 
associates and frequently
 
confer with
 
key vendors.
 
The Company
 
also takes
 
aggressive
markdowns
 
on
 
slow-selling
 
merchandise
 
and
 
typically
 
does
 
not
 
carry
 
over
 
merchandise
 
to
 
the
 
next
season.
 
Purchasing, Allocation and Distribution
 
Although
 
the
 
Company
 
purchases
 
merchandise
 
from
 
approximately
 
620
 
suppliers,
 
most
 
of
 
its
merchandise is
 
purchased from
 
approximately 100
 
primary vendors.
 
In
 
fiscal
 
2024,
 
purchases from
 
the
Company’s
 
largest
 
vendor
 
accounted
 
for
 
approximately
 
14%
 
of
 
the
 
Company’s
 
total
 
purchases.
 
The
Company is
 
not dependent
 
on its
 
largest vendor
 
or any
 
other vendor
 
for merchandise
 
purchases, and
 
the
loss of any single vendor or group of
 
vendors would not have a material adverse effect on
 
the Company’s
operating results or financial condition. A substantial portion of the Company’s merchandise is sold under
its
 
private
 
labels
 
and
 
is
 
produced
 
by
 
various
 
vendors
 
in
 
accordance
 
with
 
the
 
Company’s
 
strict
specifications. The Company sources a majority of its
 
merchandise directly from manufacturers overseas,
primarily in
 
Southeast Asia.
 
These manufacturers
 
are dependent
 
on materials
 
that are
 
primarily sourced
from
 
China. The
 
Company purchases
 
its
 
remaining merchandise
 
from
 
domestic importers
 
and
 
vendors,
which typically
 
minimizes the
 
time necessary to
 
purchase and
 
obtain shipments; however,
 
these vendors
are
 
dependent
 
on
 
materials
 
primarily
 
sourced
 
from
 
China.
 
The
 
Company
 
opened
 
its
 
own
 
overseas
sourcing
 
operations
 
in
 
2014.
 
Although
 
a
 
significant
 
portion
 
of
 
the
 
Company’s
 
merchandise
 
is
manufactured
 
overseas,
 
primarily
 
in
 
Southeast
 
Asia,
 
the
 
Company
 
does
 
not
 
expect
 
that
 
any
 
economic,
political,
 
public
 
health
 
or
 
social
 
unrest in
 
any
 
one
 
country
 
would
 
have
 
a
 
material
 
adverse effect
 
on
 
the
Company’s
 
ability
 
to
 
obtain
 
adequate
 
supplies
 
of
 
merchandise.
 
However,
 
the
 
Company
 
can
 
give
 
no
assurance
 
that
 
any
 
changes
 
or
 
disruptions
 
in
 
its
 
merchandise
 
supply
 
chain
 
would
 
not
 
materially
 
and
adversely affect the
 
Company.
 
See “Risk Factors –
 
Risks Relating to Our
 
Business – Because we
 
source
a
 
significant
 
portion
 
of
 
our
 
merchandise
 
directly
 
and
 
indirectly
 
from
 
overseas,
 
we
 
are
 
subject
 
to
 
risks
associated
 
with
 
changes,
 
disruptions,
 
increased
 
costs
 
or
 
other
 
problems
 
affecting
 
the
 
Company’s
merchandise
 
supply
 
chain,
 
risks
 
associated
 
with
 
trade
 
policies,
 
including
 
costs
 
and
 
uncertainties
 
as
 
the
result of
 
actual or
 
threatened tariffs,
 
the risks
 
of conducting
 
international operations
 
and risks
 
that affect
the prevailing
 
social, economic,
 
political, public
 
health and
 
other conditions
 
in the
 
areas from
 
which we
source
 
merchandise.
 
These
 
risks
 
have
 
and
 
could
 
continue
 
to
 
materially
 
and
 
adversely
 
affect
 
the
7
Company’s business, results of operations and financial condition.”
 
 
An
 
important
 
component
 
of
 
the
 
Company’s
 
strategy
 
is
 
the
 
allocation
 
of
 
merchandise
 
to
 
individual
stores
 
based
 
on
 
an
 
analysis
 
of
 
sales
 
trends
 
by
 
merchandise
 
category,
 
customer
 
profiles
 
and
 
climatic
conditions.
 
A
 
merchandise
 
control
 
system
 
provides
 
current
 
information
 
on
 
the
 
sales
 
activity
 
of
 
each
merchandise
 
style
 
in
 
each
 
of
 
the
 
Company’s
 
stores.
 
Point-of-sale
 
terminals
 
in
 
the
 
stores
 
collect
 
and
transmit sales and inventory information to the Company’s central database, permitting timely response to
sales trends on a store-by-store basis.
 
All merchandise is shipped directly to the Company’s distribution
 
center in Charlotte, North Carolina,
where it
 
is inspected
 
and then
 
allocated by
 
the merchandise
 
distribution staff
 
for shipment
 
to individual
stores. The flow
 
of merchandise from
 
receipt at
 
the distribution center
 
to shipment to
 
stores is controlled
by
 
an
 
online
 
system.
 
Shipments
 
are
 
made
 
by
 
common
 
carrier,
 
and
 
each
 
store
 
receives
 
at
 
least
 
one
shipment per
 
week.
 
The centralization
 
of the
 
Company’s
 
distribution process
 
also subjects
 
it to
 
risks in
the
 
event
 
of
 
damage
 
to
 
or
 
destruction
 
of
 
its
 
distribution
 
facility
 
or
 
other
 
disruptions
 
affecting
 
the
distribution
 
center
 
or
 
the
 
flow
 
of
 
goods
 
into
 
or
 
out
 
of
 
Charlotte,
 
North
 
Carolina.
 
See
 
“Risk
 
Factors
 
Risks
 
Relating
 
to
 
Our
 
Information
 
Technology,
 
Related
 
Systems
 
and
 
Cybersecurity
 
 
A
 
disruption
 
or
shutdown of
 
our centralized
 
distribution center
 
or transportation
 
network could
 
materially and
 
adversely
affect our business and results of operations.”
 
Advertising
 
The
 
Company
 
uses
 
television,
 
in-store
 
signage,
 
graphics,
 
a
 
Company
 
website,
 
two
 
e-commerce
websites
 
and
 
social
 
media
 
as
 
its
 
primary
 
advertising
 
media.
 
The
 
Company’s
 
total
 
advertising
expenditures
 
were
 
approximately
 
0.8%,
 
1.0%
 
and
 
1.0%
 
of
 
retail
 
sales
 
for
 
fiscal
 
years
 
2024,
 
2023
 
and
2022, respectively.
Store Operations
 
The
 
Company’s
 
store
 
operations
 
management
 
team
 
consists
 
of
 
four
 
territorial
 
managers,
 
eight
regional
 
managers and
 
70 district
 
managers. Regional
 
managers receive
 
a salary
 
plus
 
a
 
bonus based
 
on
achieving targeted
 
goals for
 
sales and
 
payroll.
 
District managers
 
receive a
 
salary plus
 
a bonus
 
based on
achieving targeted
 
objectives for district
 
sales increases. Stores
 
are typically staffed
 
with a
 
manager, two
assistant
 
managers
 
and
 
additional
 
part-time
 
sales
 
associates
 
depending
 
on
 
the
 
size
 
of
 
the
 
store
 
and
seasonal
 
personnel
 
needs.
 
In
 
general,
 
store
 
managers
 
are
 
paid
 
a
 
salary
 
or
 
on
 
an
 
hourly
 
basis
 
as
 
are
 
all
other
 
store
 
personnel.
 
Store
 
managers,
 
assistant
 
managers
 
and
 
sales
 
associates
 
are
 
eligible
 
for
 
monthly
and semi-annual bonuses based on achieving targeted goals for their respective
 
store’s sales increases.
Store Locations
 
Most
 
of
 
the
 
Company’s
 
stores
 
are
 
located
 
in
 
the
 
southeastern
 
United
 
States in
 
a
 
variety of
 
markets
ranging
 
from
 
small
 
towns
 
to
 
large
 
metropolitan
 
areas
 
with
 
trade
 
area
 
populations
 
of
 
20,000
 
or
 
more.
Stores average approximately 4,500 square feet in size.
 
All of the
 
Company’s stores
 
are leased. Approximately 93% are
 
located in strip shopping
 
centers and
7% in enclosed
 
shopping malls. The
 
Company typically locates stores
 
in strip shopping
 
centers anchored
by
 
a
 
national
 
discounter,
 
primarily
 
Walmart
 
Supercenters,
 
or
 
market-dominant
 
grocery
 
stores.
 
The
Company’s strip center locations provide ample parking and shopping convenience for its customers.
 
The
 
Company’s
 
store
 
development
 
activities
 
consist
 
of
 
opening
 
new
 
stores
 
in
 
new
 
and
 
existing
markets,
 
relocating
 
selected
 
existing
 
stores
 
to
 
more
 
desirable
 
locations
 
in
 
the
 
same
 
market
 
area
 
and
closing underperforming stores. The following table sets forth information
 
with respect to the Company’s
development activities since fiscal 2020:
 
 
 
 
 
8
Store Development
Number of Stores
Beginning of
Number
Number
Number of Stores
Fiscal Year
Year
Opened
Closed
End of Year
2020………………….……...………….
1,281
 
76
 
27
1,330
2021………………….……...………….
1,330
 
6
 
25
1,311
2022……………………….……...…….
1,311
 
19
 
50
1,280
2023…………....………….……...…….
1,280
 
9
 
111
1,178
2024………….………...….……...…….
1,178
 
5
 
66
1,117
The Company periodically reviews its store base to determine whether any particular store should be
closed based on its sales
 
trends and profitability.
 
The Company intends to continue this
 
review process to
identify underperforming stores.
 
Credit and Layaway
 
Credit Card Program
The Company offers its own credit card, which accounted for 3.4%, 3.4% and 3.1% of
 
retail sales in
fiscal 2024,
 
2023 and
 
2022, respectively.
 
The Company’s
 
bad debt
 
expense,
 
net of
 
recovery,
 
was 3.9%,
3.6% and 2.0% of credit sales in fiscal 2024, 2023 and 2022, respectively.
Customers applying for the Company’s credit card are approved for credit if
 
they have a satisfactory
credit
 
record
 
and
 
the
 
Company
 
has
 
positively
 
assessed
 
the
 
customer’s
 
ability
 
to
 
make
 
the
 
required
minimum payment.
 
Customers are required to make
 
minimum monthly payments based on
 
their account
balances.
 
If
 
the
 
balance
 
is
 
not
 
paid
 
in
 
full
 
each
 
month,
 
the
 
Company
 
assesses
 
the
 
customer
 
a
 
finance
charge.
 
If
 
payments
 
are
 
not
 
received
 
on
 
time,
 
the
 
customer
 
is
 
assessed
 
a
 
late
 
fee
 
subject
 
to
 
regulatory
limits.
The
 
Company
 
introduced
 
its
 
loyalty
 
program
 
in
 
October
 
2021.
 
The
 
loyalty
 
program
 
credits
 
the
customer points based on their purchases of
 
merchandise using the Company’s proprietary
 
credit card.
 
A
point is earned for every dollar spent on merchandise purchases.
 
A
$5.00 rewards card is earned for every
250
 
points
 
accumulated
 
by
 
the
 
customer.
 
The
 
rewards
 
card
 
expires
 
90
 
days
 
after
 
the
 
rewards
 
card
 
is
issued.
 
The
 
impact
 
of
 
the
 
loyalty
 
program
 
is
 
immaterial
 
to
 
the
 
fiscal
 
2024
 
financial
 
statements.
 
The
loyalty
 
program
 
is
 
accounted
 
for
 
in
 
accordance
 
with
 
ASU
 
2014-09,
Revenue
 
from
 
Contracts
 
with
Customers (Topic 606)
.
 
Layaway Plan
Under
 
the
 
Company’s
 
layaway
 
plan,
 
merchandise
 
is
 
set
 
aside
 
for
 
customers
 
who
 
agree
 
to
 
make
periodic
 
payments.
 
The
 
Company adds
 
a
 
nonrefundable
 
administrative
 
fee
 
to
 
each
 
layaway
 
sale.
 
If
 
no
payment is made within four weeks,
 
the customer is considered to have
 
defaulted, and the merchandise is
returned
 
to
 
the
 
selling floor
 
and again
 
offered
 
for
 
sale, often
 
at
 
a reduced
 
price. All
 
payments made
 
by
customers who subsequently default on their layaway purchase are returned to the customer upon request,
less the administrative fee and a restocking fee.
 
The Company defers recognition of layaway sales to the accounting period when the customer picks
up
 
and
 
completely pays
 
for
 
layaway
 
merchandise.
 
Administrative fees
 
are
 
recognized
 
in
 
the
 
period
 
in
which the
 
layaway is
 
initiated.
 
Recognition of
 
restocking fees occurs
 
in the
 
accounting period
 
when the
customer
 
defaults
 
on
 
the
 
layaway
 
purchase.
 
Layaway
 
sales
 
represented
 
approximately
 
2.8%,
 
3.0%
 
and
2.7% of retail sales in fiscal 2024, 2023 and 2022, respectively.
9
Information Technology Systems
The
 
Company’s
 
information
 
technology
 
systems
 
provide
 
daily
 
financial
 
and
 
merchandising
information
 
that
 
is
 
used
 
by
 
management to
 
enhance
 
the
 
timeliness
 
and
 
effectiveness
 
of
 
purchasing
 
and
pricing
 
decisions.
 
Management
 
uses
 
a
 
daily
 
report
 
comparing
 
actual
 
sales
 
with
 
planned
 
sales
 
and
 
a
weekly
 
ranking
 
report
 
to
 
monitor
 
and
 
control
 
purchasing
 
decisions.
 
Weekly
 
reports
 
are
 
also
 
produced
which reflect
 
sales, weeks
 
of
 
supply of
 
inventory and
 
other critical
 
data by
 
product categories,
 
by store
and by various levels of
 
responsibility reporting. Purchases are made based
 
on projected sales, but can
 
be
modified to accommodate unexpected increases or decreases in demand
 
for a particular item.
Sales information is
 
projected by merchandise
 
category and, in
 
some cases, is
 
further projected and
actual
 
performance measured
 
by
 
stock
 
keeping
 
unit
 
(SKU).
 
Merchandise
 
allocation
 
models
 
are
 
used
 
to
distribute
 
merchandise
 
to
 
individual
 
stores
 
based
 
upon
 
historical
 
sales
 
trends,
 
climatic
 
conditions,
customer demographics and targeted inventory turnover rates.
Competition
The women’s
 
retail apparel industry is
 
highly competitive. The Company believes
 
that the principal
competitive factors
 
in its
 
industry include
 
merchandise assortment
 
and presentation,
 
fashion, price,
 
store
location
 
and
 
customer
 
service. The
 
Company competes
 
with
 
retail
 
chains that
 
operate similar
 
women’s
apparel specialty stores. In addition, the Company competes with
 
mass merchandise chains, discount store
chains, major
 
department stores, off
 
-price retailers
 
and internet-based
 
retailers.
 
Although we
 
believe we
compete favorably
 
with respect
 
to the
 
principal competitive
 
factors described
 
above, many
 
of our
 
direct
and
 
indirect
 
competitors
 
are
 
well-established
 
national,
 
regional
 
or
 
local
 
chains,
 
and
 
some
 
have
substantially greater
 
financial, marketing
 
and other
 
resources.
 
The Company
 
expects its
 
stores in
 
larger
cities and metropolitan areas to face more intense competition.
Seasonality
Due
 
to
 
the
 
seasonal
 
nature
 
of
 
the
 
retail
 
business,
 
the
 
Company
 
has
 
historically
 
experienced
 
and
expects to continue to
 
experience seasonal fluctuations in its
 
revenues, operating income and
 
net income.
 
Our stores
 
typically generate a
 
higher percentage of
 
our annual net
 
sales and
 
profitability in the
 
first and
second quarters of
 
our fiscal year compared
 
to other quarters.
 
Results of a
 
period shorter than a
 
full year
may
 
not
 
be
 
indicative
 
of
 
results
 
expected
 
for
 
the
 
entire
 
year.
 
Furthermore,
 
the
 
seasonal
 
nature
 
of
 
our
business may affect comparisons between periods.
 
Regulation
The
 
Company’s
 
business
 
and
 
operations
 
subject
 
it
 
to
 
a
 
wide
 
range
 
of
 
local,
 
state,
 
national
 
and
international laws
 
and regulations
 
in a
 
variety of
 
areas, including
 
but not
 
limited to,
 
trade, licensing
 
and
permit
 
requirements,
 
import
 
and
 
export
 
matters,
 
privacy
 
and
 
data
 
protection,
 
credit
 
regulation,
environmental
 
matters,
 
recordkeeping
 
and
 
information
 
management,
 
tariffs,
 
taxes,
 
intellectual
 
property
and anti-corruption.
 
Though compliance with these
 
laws and regulations has
 
not had a
 
material effect on
our capital
 
expenditures, results
 
of operations
 
or competitive
 
position in
 
fiscal 2024,
 
the Company
 
faces
ongoing
 
risks
 
related
 
to
 
its
 
efforts
 
to
 
comply
 
with
 
these
 
laws
 
and
 
regulations
 
and
 
risks
 
related
 
to
noncompliance,
 
as
 
discussed
 
generally
 
below
 
throughout
 
the
 
“Risk
 
Factors”
 
section
 
and
 
in
 
particular
under
 
“Risk Factors – Risks Relating to Accounting and Legal Matters –
 
Our business operations subject
us
 
to
 
legal
 
compliance and
 
litigation
 
risks, as
 
well as
 
regulations and
 
regulatory enforcement
 
priorities,
which
 
could
 
result
 
in
 
increased
 
costs
 
or
 
liabilities,
 
divert
 
our
 
management’s
 
attention
 
or
 
otherwise
adversely affect our business, results of operations and financial condition.”
10
Human Capital
As
 
of
 
February
 
1,
 
2025,
 
the
 
Company
 
employed
 
approximately
 
7,000
 
full-time
 
and
 
part-time
associates. The
 
Company also
 
employs additional
 
part-time associates
 
during the
 
peak retailing
 
seasons.
The
 
Company’s
 
full-time
 
associates
 
are
 
engaged
 
in
 
various
 
executive,
 
operating,
 
and
 
administrative
functions in
 
the Home
 
Office
 
and distribution
 
center and
 
the remainder
 
are engaged
 
in store
 
operations.
The Company is
 
not a party
 
to any
 
collective bargaining agreements
 
and considers its
 
associate relations
to
 
be
 
good.
 
The
 
Company
 
offers
 
a
 
broad
 
range
 
of
 
Company-paid
 
benefits
 
to
 
its
 
associates
 
including
medical and
 
dental plans,
 
paid vacation,
 
a 401(k)
 
plan, Employee
 
Stock Purchase
 
Plan, Employee
 
Stock
Ownership
 
Plan,
 
disability
 
insurance,
 
associate
 
assistance
 
programs,
 
life
 
insurance
 
and
 
an
 
associate
discount.
 
The
 
level
 
of
 
benefits
 
and
 
eligibility
 
vary
 
depending
 
on
 
the
 
associate’s
 
full-time
 
or
 
part-time
status,
 
date
 
of
 
hire,
 
length
 
of
 
service
 
and
 
level
 
of
 
pay.
 
The
 
Company
 
endeavors
 
to
 
promote
 
an
environment where all associates can develop and flourish, to provide opportunities for advancement, and
to
 
treat
 
all
 
of
 
its
 
associates
 
with
 
dignity
 
and
 
respect.
 
The
 
Company
 
constantly
 
strives
 
to
 
improve
 
its
training
 
programs
 
to
 
develop
 
associates.
 
Over
 
80%
 
of
 
store
 
and
 
field
 
management
 
are
 
promoted
 
from
within,
 
allowing the
 
Company to
 
internally
 
staff
 
its
 
store
 
base.
 
The
 
Company has
 
training
 
programs
 
at
each
 
level
 
of
 
store
 
operations.
 
The
 
Company
 
also
 
performs
 
ongoing
 
reviews
 
of
 
its
 
safety
 
protocols,
including measures to promote the health and safety of its associates.
Item 1A.
 
Risk Factors:
An investment in our common stock involves numerous types of risks.
 
You
 
should carefully consider
the
 
following
 
risk
 
factors,
 
in
 
addition
 
to
 
the
 
other
 
information
 
contained
 
in
 
this
 
report,
 
including
 
the
disclosures
 
under
 
“Forward-looking
 
Information”
 
above
 
in
 
evaluating
 
our
 
Company
 
and
 
any
 
potential
investment
 
in
 
our
 
common
 
stock.
 
If
 
any
 
of
 
the
 
following
 
risks
 
or
 
uncertainties
 
occur
 
or
 
persist,
 
our
business, financial condition and
 
operating results could
 
be materially and
 
adversely affected, the
 
trading
price
 
of
 
our
 
common
 
stock
 
could
 
decline
 
and
 
you
 
could
 
lose
 
all
 
or
 
a
 
part
 
of
 
your
 
investment
 
in
 
our
common
 
stock.
 
The
 
risks
 
and
 
uncertainties
 
described
 
in
 
this
 
section
 
are
 
not
 
the
 
only
 
ones
 
facing
 
us.
 
Additional risks
 
and uncertainties
 
not presently
 
known to
 
us or
 
that we
 
currently deem
 
immaterial
 
may
also materially
 
and adversely
 
affect
 
our business,
 
operating results,
 
financial condition
 
and value
 
of our
common stock.
Risks Relating to Our Business:
Because we source a significant portion of our merchandise directly
 
and indirectly from overseas,
we are subject to risks associated with changes, disruptions, increased
 
costs or other problems
affecting the Company’s merchandise supply chain, risks associated with trade policies, including
costs and uncertainties as the result of actual or threatened tariffs, the risks of conducting
international operations and risks that affect the prevailing social, economic, political,
 
public
health and other conditions in the areas from which we source
 
merchandise. These risks have and
could continue to materially and adversely affect the Company’s business, results of operations
and financial condition.
 
We
 
do
 
not
 
own
 
or
 
operate
 
any
 
manufacturing
 
facilities.
 
As
 
a
 
result,
 
the
 
continued
 
success
 
of
 
our
operations
 
is
 
tied
 
to
 
our
 
timely
 
receipt
 
of
 
quality
 
merchandise
 
from
 
third
 
party
 
manufacturers
 
at
 
a
reasonable
 
cost.
 
A
 
significant
 
amount
 
of
 
our
 
merchandise
 
is
 
manufactured
 
overseas,
 
principally
 
in
Southeast
 
Asia.
 
We
 
are
 
subject
 
to
 
supply
 
chain
 
disruptions
 
affecting
 
transit
 
times
 
and
 
costs,
 
including
issues related
 
to
 
a sustained
 
drought in
 
Panama that
 
is
 
causing longer
 
transit times
 
through the
 
Panama
Canal
 
and
 
limiting
 
the
 
number
 
of
 
containers
 
on
 
a
 
vessel
 
due
 
to
 
vessel
 
draft
 
restrictions.
 
We
 
also
 
face
disruptions from
 
issues related
 
to vessels
 
transiting the
 
Suez Canal
 
and Red
 
Sea, which
 
are being
 
forced
to travel a
 
much longer distance around
 
the Cape of
 
Good Hope due
 
to the hostilities
 
in the Middle
 
East.
These
 
continued
 
issues
 
have
 
and
 
may
 
continue
 
to
 
drive
 
up
 
our
 
ocean
 
freight
 
costs,
 
delay
 
merchandise
11
deliveries,
 
and
 
impact
 
our
 
ability
 
to
 
access
 
the
 
already
 
limited
 
supply
 
of
 
ocean
 
container
 
shipping
capacity that
 
we require.
 
Additionally,
 
we may
 
be subject
 
to additional
 
costs related
 
to our
 
supply chain
such as
 
increased facility fees,
 
fuel, peak surcharg
 
es and
 
other additional charges
 
to transport
 
our goods,
which may increase our costs. We
 
also are subject to domestic supply chain disruptions, including lack of
domestic
 
intermodal
 
transportation
 
(trucks
 
and
 
drivers),
 
domestic
 
port
 
congestion,
 
including
 
increased
dwell
 
times for
 
incoming container
 
ships, lack
 
of container
 
yard capacity
 
and lack
 
of
 
available drayage
from the ports and
 
other conditions that impact our
 
domestic supply chain. These supply chain
 
risks have
and
 
may
 
continue
 
to
 
result
 
in
 
both
 
higher
 
costs
 
to
 
transport
 
our
 
merchandise and
 
delayed
 
merchandise
arrivals to our
 
stores, which adversely affect
 
our ability to
 
sell this merchandise
 
and increase markdowns
of it.
We
 
directly import
 
some of
 
this merchandise
 
and indirectly
 
import the
 
remaining merchandise
 
from
domestic vendors who acquire the merchandise from foreign
 
sources. Further, our third-party
 
vendors are
dependent
 
on
 
materials
 
primarily
 
sourced
 
from
 
China,
 
and
 
our
 
costs
 
for
 
these
 
materials
 
are
 
likely
 
to
increase as
 
a result
 
of newly implemented
 
tariffs on
 
Chinese products. We
 
are subject
 
to numerous
 
risks
that can
 
cause significant
 
delays or
 
interruptions in
 
the supply
 
of our
 
merchandise or
 
increase our
 
costs.
These risks include political unrest,
 
labor disputes, terrorism, war,
 
public health threats, including but
 
not
limited
 
to
 
communicable diseases
 
(such
 
as
 
COVID-19 or
 
other
 
pandemics), financial
 
or
 
other
 
forms
 
of
instability or
 
other events
 
resulting in
 
the
 
disruption of
 
trade from
 
countries
 
affecting our
 
supply chain,
increased
 
security
 
requirements
 
for
 
imported
 
merchandise,
 
or
 
the
 
imposition
 
of,
 
or
 
changes
 
in,
 
laws,
regulations or
 
changes in
 
duties, quotas, tariffs,
 
taxes or
 
governmental policies regarding
 
or responses
 
to
these
 
matters
 
or
 
other
 
factors
 
affecting
 
the
 
availability
 
or
 
cost
 
of
 
imports.
 
In
 
addition,
 
geopolitical
tensions,
 
sanctions,
 
prohibitions,
 
additional
 
actual
 
or
 
threatened
 
tariffs,
 
compliance
 
and
 
reporting
requirements
 
have resulted
 
in
 
increased
 
costs
 
associated
 
with
 
merchandise
 
produced
 
in
 
certain
 
regions.
Any new sanctions, tariffs and reporting requirements enacted in the future may further
 
increase our costs
associated
 
with
 
sourcing
 
products
 
from
 
those
 
regions
 
or
 
limit
 
our
 
ability
 
to
 
procure
 
the
 
products
 
we
source, and
 
our ability
 
to source
 
these products
 
from other
 
regions may
 
be limited
 
or result
 
in increased
sourcing costs. If we are unable to
 
pass these increased sourcing costs onto our vendors or
 
our customers,
it may adversely impact our results of operations.
Any actual or perceived deterioration in the conditions that drive
 
consumer confidence and
spending have and may continue to materially and adversely affect consumer demand
 
for our
apparel and accessories and our results of operations.
Consumer
 
spending
 
habits,
 
including
 
spending
 
for
 
our
 
apparel
 
and
 
accessories,
 
are
 
affected
 
by,
among other
 
things, prevailing
 
social, economic,
 
political and
 
public health
 
conditions and
 
uncertainties
(such
 
as
 
matters
 
under
 
debate
 
in
 
the
 
U.S.
 
from
 
time
 
to
 
time
 
regarding
 
budgetary,
 
spending
 
and
 
tax
policies),
 
levels
 
of
 
employment, fuel,
 
inflation,
 
interest
 
rates,
 
energy
 
and
 
food
 
costs,
 
salaries
 
and
 
wage
rates
 
and
 
other
 
sources
 
of
 
income,
 
tax
 
rates,
 
home
 
values,
 
consumer
 
net
 
worth,
 
the
 
availability
 
of
consumer
 
credit,
 
consumer
 
confidence
 
and
 
consumer
 
perceptions
 
of
 
adverse
 
changes
 
in
 
or
 
trends
affecting any of these conditions. Any perception that these conditions may be worsening or continuing to
trend negatively
 
may significantly
 
weaken many
 
of
 
these drivers
 
of consumer
 
spending habits.
 
Adverse
perceptions of
 
these conditions
 
or
 
uncertainties regarding
 
them also
 
generally cause
 
consumers to
 
defer
purchases
 
of
 
discretionary
 
items,
 
such
 
as
 
our
 
merchandise,
 
or
 
to
 
purchase
 
cheaper
 
alternatives
 
to
 
our
merchandise, all
 
of which
 
may also
 
adversely affect
 
our
 
net sales
 
and results
 
of operations.
 
In addition,
numerous events,
 
whether or
 
not
 
related to
 
actual
 
economic conditions,
 
such
 
as downturns
 
in
 
the
 
stock
markets,
 
acts
 
of
 
war
 
or
 
terrorism,
 
geopolitical
 
uncertainty
 
or
 
unrest
 
or
 
natural
 
disasters,
 
outbreaks
 
of
disease
 
or
 
similar
 
events,
 
may
 
also
 
dampen
 
consumer
 
confidence,
 
and
 
accordingly,
 
lead
 
to
 
reduced
consumer spending.
 
Any of
 
these events
 
could have
 
a material
 
adverse effect
 
on our
 
business, results
 
of
operations and financial condition.
12
Continued high interest rates have and may continue to adversely
 
impact our customers’
discretionary income or willingness to purchase discretionary items, which
 
may adversely affect
our business, margins, results of operations and financial condition.
Continued high interest rates have adversely affected our customers’ discretionary income, in part due
to increased
 
interest costs
 
associated with
 
credit accounts
 
including revolving
 
credit accounts,
 
car loans,
mortgage loans and other credit accounts. In
 
addition, the increased payments due to higher
 
interest rates,
combined
 
with
 
continued
 
inflationary
 
pressures
 
on
 
non-discretionary
 
items,
 
including
 
food,
 
fuel
 
and
shelter reduce
 
our customers’
 
discretionary income
 
and their
 
willingness to
 
purchase discretionary items
such as apparel, shoes or jewelry products. Any reduction in our customers’ discretionary
 
spending on our
products
 
could
 
erode
 
our
 
sales
 
volume
 
and
 
adversely
 
affect
 
our
 
results
 
of
 
operations
 
and
 
financial
condition.
Increased product costs, freight costs, wage increases and operating
 
costs due to inflation and
other factors, as well as limitations in our ability to offset these cost increases by increasing
 
the
retail prices of our products or otherwise, have and may continue to adversely
 
affect our business,
margins, results of operations and financial condition.
Tight
 
labor markets
 
have caused
 
wages to
 
increase
 
at the
 
store, distribution
 
center and
 
home office
levels, as
 
well as
 
making it more
 
difficult to
 
hire new
 
associates and
 
retain existing associates.
 
The tight
labor
 
market
 
and
 
continued
 
inflation
 
also
 
are
 
driving
 
up
 
our
 
operating
 
costs.
 
In
 
addition,
 
inflationary
pressures on labor and raw materials
 
used to make our products may continue
 
to increase the cost we
 
pay
for
 
our
 
products.
 
If
 
we
 
are
 
unable
 
to
 
offset
 
the
 
effects
 
of
 
these
 
increased
 
costs
 
to
 
our
 
business
 
by
increasing the
 
retail prices
 
of our
 
products, reducing other
 
expenses or
 
otherwise, our business,
 
margins,
results of operations and financial condition may be adversely affected.
Our
 
ability
 
to
 
raise
 
retail
 
prices
 
in
 
response
 
to
 
these
 
cost
 
increases
 
is
 
limited,
 
in
 
part
 
due
 
to
 
our
customers’
 
unwillingness
 
to
 
pay
 
higher
 
prices
 
for
 
discretionary
 
items
 
in
 
light
 
of
 
actual
 
or
 
perceived
effects
 
of
 
inflation
 
in
 
increasing
 
our
 
customers’
 
cost
 
of
 
essential
 
items
 
and
 
diminishing
 
customers’
disposable income, sentiment or financial outlook. Moreover,
 
the persistence or worsening of inflationary
conditions
 
and
 
high
 
interest
 
rates
 
could
 
also
 
lead
 
our
 
customers
 
to
 
reduce
 
their
 
amount
 
of
 
current
discretionary
 
spending
 
on
 
our
 
products
 
even
 
in
 
the
 
absence
 
of
 
price
 
increases,
 
which
 
could
 
erode
 
our
sales volume and adversely affect our results of operations and financial condition.
The operation of our sourcing offices in Asia presents increased operational and
 
legal risks.
In October 2014, we established our own sourcing offices in Asia. If our sourcing offices are unable to
successfully oversee
 
merchandise production
 
to
 
ensure that
 
product is
 
produced on
 
time
 
and
 
within the
Company’s
 
specifications,
 
our
 
business,
 
brand,
 
reputation,
 
costs,
 
results
 
of
 
operations
 
and
 
financial
condition could be materially and adversely affected.
In addition, the current business environment, including geopolitical issues, make operating in
 
certain
Asian
 
markets
 
challenging.
 
To
 
the
 
extent
 
we
 
explore
 
other
 
countries
 
to
 
source
 
our
 
product
 
or
 
explore
increasing
 
the
 
amount
 
of
 
product
 
sourced
 
from
 
current
 
countries,
 
we
 
may
 
be
 
subject
 
to
 
additional
increased
 
legal
 
and
 
operational risks
 
associated
 
with
 
doing
 
business
 
in
 
new
 
countries
 
or
 
increasing our
business in other countries.
Further, the activities conducted by
 
our sourcing offices outside the
 
United States subject us to foreign
operational
 
risks,
 
as
 
well
 
as
 
U.S.
 
and
 
international
 
regulations
 
and
 
compliance
 
risks,
 
as
 
discussed
elsewhere
 
in
 
this
 
“Risk
 
Factors”
 
section,
 
in
 
particular
 
below
 
under
 
“Risk
 
Factors
 
 
Risks
 
Relating
 
to
Accounting
 
and
 
Legal
 
Matters
 
 
Our
 
business
 
operations
 
subject
 
us
 
to
 
legal
 
compliance
 
and
 
litigation
risks, as well as regulations and regulatory enforcement priorities, which could result in increased costs or
13
liabilities,
 
divert
 
our
 
management’s
 
attention
 
or
 
otherwise
 
adversely
 
affect
 
our
 
business,
 
results
 
of
operations and financial condition.
Extreme weather, natural disasters, impacts of climate change, public health threats or similar
events have and may continue to adversely affect our sales or operations from time
 
to time.
Extreme
 
changes
 
in
 
weather,
 
natural
 
disasters,
 
physical
 
impacts
 
of
 
climate
 
change,
 
public
 
health
threats or
 
similar events
 
can influence
 
customer trends
 
and shopping
 
habits. For
 
example, heavy
 
rainfall
or other extreme weather conditions, including but
 
not limited to winter weather over a
 
prolonged period,
might
 
make
 
it
 
difficult
 
for
 
our
 
customers
 
to
 
travel
 
to
 
our
 
stores
 
and
 
thereby
 
reduce
 
our
 
sales
 
and
profitability.
 
Our business is
 
also susceptible to
 
unseasonable weather conditions. For
 
example, extended
periods of unseasonably
 
warm temperatures during the
 
winter season or
 
cool weather during
 
the summer
season can
 
render a
 
portion of
 
our inventory
 
incompatible with
 
those unseasonable
 
conditions. Reduced
sales
 
from extreme
 
or
 
prolonged unseasonable
 
weather
 
conditions
 
would
 
adversely affect
 
our
 
business.
The occurrence or
 
threat of extreme
 
weather, natural
 
disasters, power outages, terrorist
 
acts, outbreaks of
flu
 
or
 
other
 
communicable
 
diseases
 
(such
 
as
 
COVID-19)
 
or
 
other
 
catastrophic
 
events
 
could
 
reduce
customer
 
traffic
 
in
 
our
 
stores
 
and
 
likewise
 
disrupt
 
our
 
ability
 
to
 
conduct
 
operations,
 
which
 
would
materially and adversely affect us.
The
 
long-term
 
impacts
 
of
 
global
 
climate
 
change
 
are
 
expected
 
to
 
be
 
unpredictable
 
and
 
widespread.
The
 
potential
 
impacts
 
of
 
climate
 
change
 
present
 
a
 
variety
 
of
 
potential
 
risks.
 
The
 
physical
 
effects
 
of
climate
 
change
 
such
 
as
 
extreme
 
weather
 
and
 
drought
 
could
 
adversely
 
affect
 
our
 
results
 
of
 
operations,
including disrupting our
 
supply chain, the
 
costs of our
 
products and negatively
 
impacting our workforce.
In
 
addition,
 
the
 
potential
 
impacts
 
of
 
climate
 
change
 
present
 
transition
 
risks
 
including
 
regulatory
 
and
reputational risks. The potential cost of compliance with any future regulations may substantially increase
our costs. For example, the
 
use of certain commodities in
 
the manufacture of our products
 
and energy we
use
 
in
 
our
 
operations
 
may
 
face
 
increased
 
regulation
 
due
 
to
 
climate
 
change
 
or
 
other
 
environmental
concerns, which could increase our costs. Furthermore, any failure of or perceived failure by us to comply
with
 
any
 
potential
 
future
 
climate
 
change
 
regulatory
 
requirements,
 
including
 
stakeholder
 
expectations
regarding the environment, could adversely affect our reputation and results of operations.
Our ability to attract consumers and grow our revenues is dependent
 
on the success of our store
location strategy and our ability to successfully open new stores as planned.
Our sales are
 
dependent in part
 
on the location
 
of our stores
 
in shopping centers
 
and malls where
 
we
believe
 
our
 
consumers
 
and
 
potential
 
consumers
 
shop.
 
In
 
addition,
 
our
 
ability
 
to
 
grow
 
our
 
revenues
 
has
been substantially dependent on our ability to secure space for and open new stores in attractive locations.
Shopping centers
 
and malls
 
where we
 
currently operate
 
existing stores
 
or seek
 
to
 
open new
 
stores have
been and
 
may continue
 
to be
 
adversely affected
 
by,
 
among other
 
things, general
 
economic downturns
 
or
those
 
particularly affecting
 
the
 
commercial real
 
estate industry,
 
the
 
closing of
 
anchor
 
stores, changes
 
in
tenant
 
mix
 
and
 
changes
 
in
 
customer
 
shopping
 
preferences,
 
including
 
but
 
not
 
limited
 
to
 
an
 
increase
 
in
preference for online
 
versus in-person shopping. To
 
take advantage of
 
consumer traffic and
 
the shopping
preferences
 
of
 
our
 
consumers,
 
we
 
need
 
to
 
maintain
 
and
 
acquire
 
stores
 
in
 
desirable
 
locations
 
where
competition for suitable
 
store locations is
 
intense. A decline
 
in customer popularity
 
of the
 
strip shopping
centers where we
 
generally locate our
 
stores or in
 
availability of space in
 
desirable centers and
 
locations,
or an increase in the cost of such desired space, has limited and could further limit our ability to open new
stores,
 
adversely
 
affecting
 
consumer
 
traffic
 
and
 
reducing
 
our
 
sales
 
and
 
net
 
earnings
 
or
 
increasing
 
our
operating costs.
Our ability
 
to open
 
and operate
 
new stores
 
depends on
 
many factors,
 
some of
 
which are
 
beyond our
control.
 
These
 
factors
 
include,
 
but
 
are
 
not
 
limited
 
to,
 
our
 
ability
 
to
 
identify
 
suitable
 
store
 
locations,
negotiate acceptable lease terms, secure
 
necessary governmental permits and approvals and
 
hire and train
appropriate store
 
personnel. In
 
addition, our
 
continued expansion
 
into new
 
regions of
 
the country
 
where
14
we
 
have
 
not
 
done
 
business
 
before
 
may
 
present
 
new
 
challenges
 
in
 
competition,
 
distribution
 
and
merchandising as we enter these new markets. Our failure to successfully and timely
 
execute our plans for
opening new stores
 
or the failure
 
of these stores
 
to perform up
 
to our expectations
 
could adversely affect
our business, results of operations and financial condition.
The inability of third-party vendors to produce goods on time and to
 
the Company’s specifications
may adversely affect the Company’s business, results of operations and financial condition.
Our
 
dependence
 
on
 
third-party
 
vendors
 
to
 
manufacture
 
and
 
supply
 
our
 
merchandise
 
subjects
 
us
 
to
numerous risks that our vendors will fail to perform as we expect. For example, the deterioration in any of
our key
 
vendors’ financial condition,
 
their failure to
 
ship merchandise in
 
a timely manner
 
that meets
 
our
specifications,
 
or
 
other
 
failures
 
to
 
follow
 
our
 
vendor
 
guidelines
 
or
 
comply
 
with
 
applicable
 
laws
 
and
regulations,
 
including
 
compliant
 
labor,
 
environmental
 
practices
 
and
 
product
 
safety,
 
could
 
expose
 
us
 
to
operational, quality,
 
competitive, reputational
 
and legal
 
risks. If
 
we are
 
not able
 
to timely
 
or
 
adequately
replace the merchandise we currently
 
source with merchandise produced elsewhere,
 
or if our vendors fail
to
 
perform as
 
we
 
expect,
 
our
 
business, results
 
of
 
operations
 
and
 
financial
 
condition
 
could
 
be
 
adversely
affected.
 
Activities
 
conducted
 
by
 
us
 
or
 
on
 
our
 
behalf
 
outside
 
the
 
United
 
States
 
further
 
subject
 
us
 
to
numerous
 
U.S.
 
and
 
international
 
regulations
 
and
 
compliance
 
risks,
 
as
 
discussed
 
below
 
under
 
“Risk
Factors –
 
Risks Relating
 
to Accounting
 
and Legal
 
Matters –
 
Our business
 
operations subject
 
us to
 
legal
compliance and litigation
 
risks, as well
 
as regulations and
 
regulatory enforcement priorities,
 
which could
result in increased costs or liabilities,
 
divert our management’s attention
 
or otherwise adversely affect our
business, results of operations and financial condition.”
If we are unable to anticipate, identify and respond to rapidly changing
 
fashion trends and
customer demands in a timely manner, our business and results of operations could materially
suffer.
Customer
 
tastes
 
and
 
fashion
 
trends,
 
particularly
 
for
 
women’s
 
apparel,
 
are
 
volatile,
 
tend
 
to
 
change
rapidly
 
and
 
cannot
 
be
 
predicted
 
with
 
certainty.
 
Our
 
success
 
depends
 
in
 
part
 
upon
 
our
 
ability
 
to
consistently anticipate, design and respond to changing merchandise trends and consumer preferences in a
timely
 
manner.
 
Accordingly,
 
any
 
failure
 
by
 
us
 
to
 
anticipate,
 
identify,
 
design
 
and
 
respond
 
to
 
changing
fashion
 
trends
 
could
 
adversely
 
affect
 
consumer
 
acceptance
 
of
 
our
 
merchandise,
 
which
 
in
 
turn
 
could
adversely affect our
 
business, results of
 
operations and our
 
image with our
 
customers. If we
 
miscalculate
either the
 
market for
 
our merchandise
 
or our
 
customers’ tastes or
 
purchasing habits, we
 
may be required
to sell a significant amount of inventory at below-average markups over
 
cost, or below cost, which would
adversely affect our margins and results of operations.
Existing and increased competition in the women’s retail apparel industry may negatively impact
our business, results of operations, financial condition and
 
market share.
The
 
women’s
 
retail
 
apparel
 
industry
 
is
 
highly
 
competitive.
 
We
 
compete
 
primarily
 
with
 
discount
stores,
 
mass
 
merchandisers,
 
department
 
stores,
 
off-price
 
retailers,
 
specialty
 
stores
 
and
 
internet-based
retailers, many of which have substantially greater financial, marketing and other resources
 
than we have.
Many
 
of
 
our
 
competitors
 
offer
 
frequent
 
promotions
 
and
 
reduce
 
their
 
selling
 
prices.
 
In
 
some
 
cases,
 
our
competitors are
 
expanding into markets
 
in which
 
we have a
 
significant market presence.
 
In addition, our
competitors
 
also
 
compete
 
for
 
the
 
same
 
retail
 
store
 
space.
 
As
 
a
 
result
 
of
 
this
 
competition,
 
we
 
may
experience
 
pricing
 
pressures,
 
increased
 
marketing
 
expenditures,
 
increased
 
costs
 
to
 
open
 
new
 
stores,
 
as
well
 
as
 
loss
 
of
 
market
 
share,
 
which
 
could
 
materially
 
and
 
adversely
 
affect
 
our
 
business,
 
results
 
of
operations and financial condition.
15
Fluctuations in the price, availability and quality of inventory have and
 
may continue to result in
higher cost of goods, which the Company may not be able to pass on
 
to its customers.
The price
 
and availability
 
of raw
 
materials may
 
be impacted
 
by demand,
 
regulation, tariffs,
 
weather
and
 
crop
 
yields,
 
currency
 
value
 
fluctuations,
 
inflation,
 
as
 
well
 
as
 
other
 
factors.
 
Additionally,
manufacturers
 
have
 
and
 
may
 
continue
 
to
 
have
 
increases
 
in
 
other
 
manufacturing
 
costs,
 
such
 
as
transportation,
 
labor
 
and
 
benefit
 
costs.
 
These
 
increases
 
in
 
production
 
costs
 
may
 
result
 
in
 
higher
merchandise costs to the Company.
 
Due to the Company’s
 
limited flexibility in price point, the
 
Company
may
 
not
 
be
 
able
 
to
 
pass
 
on
 
those
 
cost
 
increases
 
to
 
the
 
consumer,
 
which
 
could
 
have
 
a
 
material
 
adverse
effect on our margins, results of operations and financial condition.
Our inability to effectively manage inventory has impacted and may continue
 
to negatively impact
our gross margin and our overall results of operations.
Factors
 
affecting
 
sales
 
include
 
fashion
 
trends,
 
customer
 
preferences,
 
calendar
 
and
 
holiday
 
shifts,
competition,
 
weather,
 
supply
 
chain
 
issues,
 
actual
 
or
 
potential
 
public
 
health
 
threats
 
and
 
economic
conditions, including
 
but not
 
limited to
 
continued high
 
interest rates
 
and persistent
 
inflation. In
 
addition,
merchandise
 
must
 
be
 
ordered
 
well
 
in
 
advance
 
of
 
the
 
applicable
 
selling
 
season
 
and
 
before
 
trends
 
are
confirmed
 
by
 
sales.
 
When
 
we
 
are
 
not
 
able
 
to
 
accurately predict
 
customers’ preferences
 
for
 
our
 
fashion
items, we may have too
 
much inventory, which
 
may cause excessive markdowns. When we
 
are unable to
accurately
 
predict
 
demand
 
for
 
our
 
merchandise,
 
we
 
may
 
end
 
up
 
with
 
inventory
 
shortages,
 
resulting
 
in
missed
 
sales.
 
Our
 
inability
 
to
 
effectively
 
manage
 
inventory
 
may
 
continue
 
to
 
adversely
 
affect
 
our
 
gross
margin and results of operations.
Adverse developments affecting the financial services industry or events or concerns
 
involving
liquidity, defaults or non-performance by financial institutions or transactional counterparties
could adversely affect our business, financial condition or results of operations.
Actual
 
events
 
involving limited
 
liquidity,
 
defaults,
 
non-performance or
 
other
 
adverse
 
developments
that affect
 
financial institutions,
 
transactional counterparties
 
or other
 
companies in
 
the financial
 
services
industry
 
or
 
the
 
financial
 
services
 
industry
 
generally,
 
or
 
concerns
 
or
 
rumors
 
about
 
any
 
events
 
of
 
these
kinds
 
or
 
other
 
similar
 
risks,
 
have
 
in
 
the
 
past
 
and
 
may
 
in
 
the
 
future
 
lead
 
to
 
sporadic
 
or
 
market-wide
liquidity problems
 
that
 
could adversely
 
affect
 
us. If
 
any of
 
our transactional
 
counterparties, such
 
as
 
our
merchandise vendors
 
and their
 
factors, our
 
landlords, our
 
payment processors
 
including credit
 
card, gift
card and checks, our transportation vendors and other vendors that provide services and supplies to us, are
unable to
 
access funds
 
or lending
 
arrangements with
 
such
 
a financial
 
institution, such
 
parties’ ability
 
to
pay their obligations
 
could be adversely
 
affected. If this
 
occurred we could
 
be adversely impacted
 
by not
receiving
 
the
 
product
 
we
 
ordered
 
or
 
the
 
payments
 
generated
 
by
 
our
 
sales,
 
by
 
not
 
being
 
able
 
to
 
receive
products to our distribution center or
 
our stores in a timely
 
manner or at all, or
 
by not being able to
 
retain
services
 
from third
 
parties that
 
we
 
require. These
 
impacts
 
may adversely
 
affect
 
our
 
financial condition,
results
 
of
 
operations
 
and
 
our
 
ability
 
to
 
execute
 
our
 
business
 
strategy.
 
Furthermore,
 
these
 
adverse
developments affecting
 
the
 
financial services
 
industry or
 
related perceptions
 
may negatively
 
impact our
customers’
 
discretionary
 
income
 
or
 
our
 
customers’
 
willingness
 
to
 
purchase
 
apparel,
 
shoes
 
or
 
jewelry
products. Any
 
reduction in
 
our customers’
 
discretionary spending
 
on our
 
products could
 
erode our
 
sales
volume and adversely affect our results of operations and financial condition.
The competitive hiring environment and our failure to attract, train,
 
and retain skilled personnel
has and could continue to adversely affect our business and our financial condition.
Like most
 
retailers, we experience
 
significant associate turnover
 
rates, particularly among
 
store sales
associates
 
and
 
managers.
 
Moreover,
 
attracting
 
and
 
retaining
 
skilled
 
personnel
 
has
 
been
 
and
 
could
continue
 
to
 
be
 
challenging.
 
To
 
offset
 
this
 
turnover
 
as
 
well
 
as
 
support
 
new
 
store
 
growth,
 
we
 
must
continually attract, hire and train new store associates to meet our staffing needs.
 
A significant increase in
16
the
 
turnover
 
rate
 
among
 
our
 
store
 
sales
 
associates
 
and
 
managers
 
would
 
increase
 
our
 
recruiting
 
and
training costs, as well
 
as possibly cause a
 
decrease in our store
 
operating efficiency and productivity.
 
We
compete
 
for
 
qualified
 
store
 
associates,
 
as
 
well
 
as
 
experienced
 
management
 
personnel,
 
with
 
other
companies in our industry or other industries, many of whom
 
have greater financial resources than we do.
In
 
addition,
 
we
 
depend
 
on
 
key
 
management
 
personnel
 
to
 
oversee
 
the
 
operational
 
divisions
 
of
 
the
Company
 
for
 
the
 
support
 
of
 
our
 
existing
 
business
 
and
 
future
 
expansion.
 
The
 
success
 
of
 
executing
 
our
business strategy
 
depends in
 
large part
 
on retaining
 
key management.
 
We
 
compete for
 
key management
personnel
 
with
 
other
 
retailers, and
 
our
 
inability
 
to
 
attract
 
and
 
retain
 
qualified personnel
 
could
 
limit
 
our
ability to grow.
If
 
we
 
are
 
unable
 
to
 
retain
 
our
 
key management
 
and
 
store
 
associates or
 
attract, train,
 
or
 
retain
 
other
skilled
 
personnel in
 
the
 
future,
 
we
 
may not
 
be
 
able
 
to
 
service
 
our
 
customers effectively
 
or
 
execute
 
our
business strategy, which could adversely affect our business, operating results and financial condition.
The currently
 
competitive environment
 
for hiring
 
new associates
 
and retaining
 
existing associates
 
is
causing
 
wages
 
to
 
increase,
 
which
 
has
 
affected
 
and
 
could
 
continue
 
to
 
adversely
 
affect
 
our
 
business,
margins, operating results and financial condition if we cannot offset these cost increases.
If the Company is unable to successfully integrate new businesses into
 
its existing business, the
Company’s financial condition and results of operations will be adversely affected.
The Company’s
 
long-term business
 
strategy includes
 
opportunistic growth
 
through the
 
development
of
 
new
 
store
 
concepts.
 
This
 
growth
 
may
 
require
 
significant
 
capital
 
expenditures
 
and
 
management
attention. The Company may not
 
realize any of the anticipated
 
benefits of a new business
 
and integration
costs
 
may
 
exceed
 
anticipated
 
amounts.
 
We
 
have
 
incurred
 
substantial
 
financial
 
commitments
 
and
 
fixed
costs related to our retail stores that we will not be able to
 
recover if our stores are not successful and that
have
 
resulted
 
in
 
and
 
could
 
result
 
in
 
future
 
impairment
 
charges.
 
If
 
we
 
cannot
 
successfully
 
execute
 
our
growth strategies, our financial condition and results of operations may
 
be adversely impacted.
Risks Relating to Our Information Technology, Related Systems and Cybersecurity:
A failure or disruption relating to our information technology systems
 
could adversely affect our
business.
We
 
rely
 
on
 
our
 
existing
 
information
 
technology
 
systems
 
for
 
merchandise
 
operations,
 
including
merchandise planning,
 
replenishment, pricing, ordering,
 
markdowns and
 
product life
 
cycle management.
In addition to
 
merchandise operations, we utilize
 
our information technology systems for
 
our distribution
processes,
 
as
 
well
 
as
 
our
 
financial
 
systems,
 
including
 
accounts
 
payable,
 
general
 
ledger,
 
accounts
receivable,
 
sales, banking,
 
inventory
 
and
 
fixed
 
assets. Despite
 
the
 
precautions we
 
take,
 
our
 
information
systems are or may be vulnerable to disruption
 
or failure from numerous events, including but not limited
to, natural disasters,
 
severe weather conditions,
 
power outages, technical malfunctions,
 
cyberattacks, acts
of
 
war
 
or
 
terrorism,
 
similar
 
catastrophic
 
events
 
or
 
other
 
causes
 
beyond
 
our
 
control
 
or
 
that
 
we
 
fail
 
to
anticipate. Any disruption or failure in the operation of our information technology systems, our failure to
continue
 
to
 
upgrade
 
or
 
improve
 
such
 
systems,
 
or
 
the
 
cost
 
associated
 
with
 
maintaining,
 
repairing
 
or
improving
 
these
 
systems,
 
could
 
adversely
 
affect
 
our
 
business,
 
results
 
of
 
operations
 
and
 
financial
condition. Modifications and/or upgrades to
 
our current information technology systems may
 
also disrupt
our operations.
17
A security breach that results in unauthorized access to or disclosure
 
of employee, Company or
customer information or a ransomware attack could adversely affect our costs, reputation
 
and
results of operations, and efforts to mitigate these risks may continue to increase
 
our costs.
The
 
protection
 
of
 
employee,
 
Company
 
and
 
customer
 
data
 
is
 
critical
 
to
 
the
 
Company.
 
Any
 
security
breach, mishandling, human or programming error or other event that results in the misappropriation, loss
or
 
other
 
unauthorized
 
disclosure
 
of
 
employee,
 
Company
 
or
 
customer
 
information,
 
including
 
but
 
not
limited
 
to
 
credit
 
card
 
data
 
or
 
other
 
personally
 
identifiable
 
information,
 
could
 
severely
 
damage
 
the
Company's reputation, expose it to
 
remediation and other costs
 
and the risks of legal
 
proceedings, disrupt
its
 
operations
 
and
 
otherwise
 
adversely
 
affect
 
the
 
Company's
 
business
 
and
 
financial
 
condition.
 
The
security of certain of
 
this information also depends on
 
the ability of third-party
 
service providers, such as
those
 
we
 
use
 
to
 
process
 
credit
 
and
 
debit
 
card
 
payments
 
as
 
described
 
below
 
under
 
“We
 
are
 
subject
 
to
payment-related
 
risks,”
 
to
 
properly
 
handle
 
and
 
protect
 
such
 
information.
 
Our
 
information
 
systems
 
and
those of our
 
third-party service providers are
 
subject to ongoing and
 
persistent cybersecurity threats from
those seeking unauthorized
 
access through means
 
which are
 
continually evolving and
 
may be difficult
 
to
anticipate or detect
 
for long periods
 
of time. Despite
 
measures the Company
 
takes to
 
protect confidential
information against
 
unauthorized access
 
or disclosure, which
 
measures are
 
ongoing and
 
may continue
 
to
increase
 
our
 
costs,
 
there
 
is
 
no
 
assurance
 
that
 
such
 
measures
 
will
 
prevent
 
the
 
compromise
 
of
 
such
information. If
 
our measures
 
are unsuccessful
 
due to
 
cyberattacks or
 
otherwise, it
 
could have
 
a material
adverse
 
effect
 
on
 
the
 
Company's
 
reputation,
 
business,
 
operating
 
results,
 
financial
 
condition
 
and
 
cash
flows. In addition, the Company may be subject to ransomware attacks, which if successful could
 
result in
disruptions
 
to
 
the
 
Company’s
 
operations
 
and
 
expose
 
it
 
to
 
remediation
 
and
 
other
 
costs,
 
risks
 
of
 
legal
proceedings,
 
damage the
 
Company’s
 
reputation
 
and
 
otherwise adversely
 
affect
 
the
 
Company's business
and financial condition.
A disruption or shutdown of our centralized distribution center or
 
transportation network could
materially and adversely affect our business and results of operations.
The distribution
 
of our
 
products is centralized
 
in one
 
distribution center in
 
Charlotte, North Carolina
and
 
distributed
 
through
 
our
 
network
 
of
 
third-party
 
freight
 
carriers.
 
The
 
merchandise
 
we
 
purchase
 
is
shipped directly to
 
our distribution center,
 
where it is
 
prepared for shipment
 
to the appropriate
 
stores and
subsequently
 
delivered
 
to
 
the
 
stores
 
by
 
our
 
third-party
 
freight
 
carriers.
 
If
 
the
 
distribution
 
center
 
or
 
our
third-party freight carriers were
 
to be shut down
 
or lose significant capacity
 
for any reason, including but
not limited to, any of the causes described above under “A failure or disruption
 
relating to our information
technology
 
systems
 
could
 
adversely
 
affect
 
our
 
business,”
 
our
 
operations
 
would
 
likely
 
be
 
seriously
disrupted. Such problems could occur as
 
the result of any loss,
 
destruction or impairment of our ability to
use
 
our
 
distribution center,
 
as
 
well
 
as
 
any broader
 
problem generally
 
affecting
 
the ability
 
to
 
ship
 
goods
into our distribution center
 
or deliver goods to
 
our stores. As
 
a result, we
 
could incur significantly higher
costs and longer lead
 
times associated with distributing our
 
products to our stores during
 
the time it takes
for us to reopen or
 
replace the distribution center and/or our transportation network. Any such
 
occurrence
could adversely affect our business, results of operations and financial condition.
The Company’s failure to successfully operate its e-commerce websites or fulfill customer
expectations could adversely impact customer satisfaction, our reputation
 
and our business.
Although the
 
Company's e-commerce
 
platform provides
 
another channel
 
to
 
drive incremental
 
sales,
provides
 
existing
 
customers
 
the
 
online
 
shopping
 
experience
 
and
 
introduces
 
the
 
Company
 
to
 
a
 
new
customer base,
 
it also
 
exposes us
 
to numerous
 
risks. We
 
are subject
 
to potential
 
failures in
 
the efficient
and uninterrupted operation
 
of our
 
websites, customer contact center
 
or our distribution
 
center, including
system
 
failures
 
caused
 
by
 
telecommunication
 
system
 
providers,
 
order
 
volumes
 
that
 
exceed
 
our
 
present
system capabilities,
 
electrical outages,
 
mechanical problems and
 
human error.
 
Our e-commerce
 
platform
may also expose us
 
to greater potential for
 
security or data
 
breaches involving the unauthorized access
 
to
or
 
disclosure
 
of
 
customer
 
information,
 
as
 
discussed
 
above
 
under
 
“A
 
security
 
breach
 
that
 
results
 
in
18
unauthorized
 
access
 
to
 
or
 
disclosure
 
of
 
employee,
 
Company
 
or
 
customer
 
information
 
or
 
a
 
ransomware
attack could
 
adversely affect
 
our costs,
 
reputation and
 
results of
 
operations, and
 
efforts to
 
mitigate these
risks may
 
continue to
 
increase our
 
costs.” We
 
are also
 
subject to
 
risk related
 
to delays
 
or failures
 
in the
performance of third parties, such as shipping companies, including
 
delays associated with labor strikes or
slowdowns or
 
adverse weather
 
conditions. If
 
the Company
 
does not
 
successfully meet
 
the challenges
 
of
operating
 
e-commerce
 
websites
 
or
 
fulfilling
 
customer
 
expectations,
 
the
 
Company's
 
business
 
and
 
sales
could be adversely affected.
We are subject to payment-related risks.
We
 
accept payments using
 
a variety
 
of methods,
 
including third-party credit
 
cards, our
 
own branded
credit
 
card,
 
debit
 
cards,
 
gift
 
cards
 
and
 
physical
 
and
 
electronic
 
bank
 
checks.
 
For
 
existing
 
and
 
future
payment methods we offer to our customers, we are subject to fraud risk and
 
to additional regulations and
compliance
 
requirements
 
(including
 
obligations
 
to
 
implement
 
enhanced
 
authentication
 
processes
 
that
could
 
result
 
in
 
increased
 
costs
 
and
 
reduce
 
the
 
ease
 
of
 
use
 
of
 
certain
 
payment
 
methods).
 
For
 
certain
payment
 
methods,
 
including
 
credit
 
and
 
debit
 
cards,
 
we
 
pay
 
interchange
 
and
 
other
 
fees,
 
which
 
have
increased
 
from
 
time
 
to
 
time
 
and
 
may
 
continue
 
to
 
increase
 
over
 
time,
 
raising
 
our
 
operating
 
costs
 
and
lowering profitability. We
 
rely on third-party service providers for payment processing
 
services, including
the
 
processing
 
of
 
credit
 
and
 
debit
 
cards.
 
In
 
each
 
case,
 
it
 
could
 
disrupt
 
our
 
business if
 
these
 
third-party
service
 
providers
 
become
 
unwilling
 
or
 
unable
 
to
 
provide
 
these
 
services
 
to
 
us.
 
We
 
are
 
also
 
subject
 
to
payment
 
card
 
association
 
operating
 
rules,
 
including
 
data
 
security
 
rules,
 
certification
 
requirements
 
and
rules governing
 
electronic funds
 
transfers, which
 
could change
 
or be
 
reinterpreted to
 
make it
 
difficult or
impossible for us
 
to comply.
 
If we fail
 
to comply with
 
these rules or
 
requirements, or if
 
our data security
systems are breached or compromised, we may be liable for card-issuing banks’ costs
 
and subject to fines
and higher transaction
 
fees. In addition,
 
we may lose
 
our ability to
 
accept credit and
 
debit card payments
from our
 
customers and
 
process electronic
 
funds transfers
 
or facilitate
 
other types
 
of payments,
 
and our
business and operating results could be adversely affected.
Risks Relating to Accounting and Legal Matters:
If we fail to protect our trademarks and other intellectual property
 
rights or infringe the
intellectual property rights of others, our business, brand image,
 
growth strategy, results of
operations and financial condition could be adversely affected.
We
 
believe
 
that
 
our
 
“Cato”,
 
“It’s
 
Fashion”,
 
“It’s
 
Fashion
 
Metro”,
 
“Versona”,
 
“Cache”
 
and
 
“Body
Central”
 
trademarks
 
are
 
integral
 
to
 
our
 
store
 
designs,
 
brand
 
recognition
 
and
 
our
 
ability
 
to
 
successfully
build
 
consumer
 
loyalty.
 
Although
 
we
 
have
 
registered
 
these
 
trademarks
 
with
 
the
 
U.S.
 
Patent
 
and
Trademark Office
 
(“PTO”) and
 
have also
 
registered, or
 
applied for
 
registration of,
 
additional trademarks
with
 
the
 
PTO
 
that
 
we
 
believe
 
are
 
important
 
to
 
our
 
business,
 
we
 
cannot
 
give
 
assurance
 
that
 
these
registrations
 
will
 
prevent
 
imitation
 
of
 
our
 
trademarks,
 
merchandising
 
concepts,
 
store
 
designs
 
or
 
private
label merchandise or
 
the infringement of
 
our other intellectual
 
property rights by
 
others. Infringement of
our
 
names,
 
concepts,
 
store
 
designs
 
or
 
merchandise
 
generally,
 
or
 
particularly
 
in
 
a
 
manner
 
that
 
projects
lesser quality or carries a negative connotation of
 
our image could adversely affect our business, financial
condition and results of operations.
The
 
Company
 
is
 
from
 
time
 
to
 
time
 
subject
 
to
 
claims
 
that
 
its
 
products,
 
processes,
 
advertising,
 
or
trademarks
 
infringe
 
the
 
intellectual
 
property
 
rights
 
of
 
others.
 
The
 
defense
 
of
 
these
 
claims,
 
even
 
if
ultimately successful, may result in costly litigation, and if the Company is not successful in its defense, it
could be subject to
 
injunctions and liability for
 
damages or royalty obligations,
 
and the Company’s
 
sales,
profitability, cash flows, financial condition and reputation could be adversely affected.
19
Our business operations subject us to legal compliance and litigation risks,
 
as well as regulations
and regulatory enforcement priorities, which could result in increased
 
costs or liabilities, divert our
management’s attention or otherwise adversely affect our business, results of operations and
financial condition.
Our operations
 
are subject
 
to federal,
 
state and
 
local laws,
 
rules and
 
regulations, as
 
well as
 
U.S. and
foreign
 
laws
 
and
 
regulations
 
relating
 
to
 
our
 
activities
 
in
 
foreign
 
countries
 
from
 
which
 
we
 
source
 
our
merchandise and operate our sourcing offices. Our business is also subject to regulatory and litigation risk
in all of these
 
jurisdictions, including foreign jurisdictions that may
 
lack well-established or reliable legal
systems for resolving legal disputes. Compliance risks and litigation claims have
 
arisen and may continue
to
 
arise
 
in
 
the
 
ordinary
 
course
 
of
 
our
 
business
 
and
 
include,
 
among
 
other
 
issues,
 
intellectual
 
property
issues,
 
employment
 
issues,
 
commercial
 
disputes,
 
product-oriented
 
matters,
 
tax,
 
customer
 
relations
 
and
personal injury
 
claims. International
 
activities subject
 
us to
 
numerous U.S.
 
and international
 
regulations,
including
 
but
 
not
 
limited
 
to,
 
restrictions
 
on
 
trade,
 
license
 
and
 
permit
 
requirements,
 
import
 
and
 
export
license
 
requirements,
 
privacy
 
and
 
data
 
protection
 
laws,
 
environmental
 
laws,
 
records
 
and
 
information
management regulations, tariffs
 
and taxes
 
and anti-corruption
 
laws, violations
 
of which
 
by employees or
persons acting
 
on the
 
Company’s
 
behalf may
 
result
 
in significant
 
investigation costs,
 
severe criminal
 
or
civil
 
sanctions
 
and
 
reputational
 
harm.
 
These
 
and
 
other
 
liabilities
 
to
 
which
 
we
 
may
 
be
 
subject
 
could
negatively
 
affect
 
our
 
business,
 
operating
 
results
 
and
 
financial
 
condition.
 
These
 
matters
 
frequently
 
raise
complex factual and
 
legal issues, which
 
are subject to
 
risks and uncertainties
 
and could divert
 
significant
management
 
time.
 
The
 
Company
 
may
 
also
 
be
 
subject
 
to
 
regulatory
 
reviews
 
and
 
audits,
 
the
 
results
 
of
which could materially and adversely
 
affect our business, results of
 
operations and financial condition. In
addition, governing laws,
 
rules and regulations,
 
and interpretations of
 
existing laws are
 
subject to change
from time to time.
 
Compliance and litigation matters could result
 
in unexpected expenses and liability,
 
as
well as have an adverse effect on our operations and our reputation.
New
 
legislation
 
or
 
regulation
 
and
 
interpretation
 
of
 
existing
 
laws
 
and
 
regulations,
 
including
 
those
related to
 
data privacy
 
or sustainability
 
matters,
 
could increase
 
our costs
 
of compliance,
 
technology and
business operations.
 
The interpretation
 
of existing
 
or new
 
laws to
 
existing and
 
evolving technology
 
and
business practices can be uncertain and may lead to additional compliance
 
risk and cost.
Adverse litigation matters may adversely affect our business and our financial
 
condition.
From
 
time
 
to
 
time
 
the
 
Company
 
is
 
involved
 
in
 
litigation
 
and
 
other
 
claims
 
against
 
our
 
business.
Primarily these arise in the
 
normal course of business but are
 
subject to risks and uncertainties, and
 
could
require
 
significant
 
management
 
time.
 
The
 
Company’s
 
periodic
 
evaluation
 
of
 
litigation-related
 
matters
may change our assessment in
 
light of the discovery of
 
facts with respect to legal
 
actions pending against
us, not
 
presently known to
 
us or
 
by determination of
 
judges, juries
 
or other
 
finders of
 
fact. We
 
may also
be
 
subjected
 
to
 
legal
 
matters
 
not
 
yet
 
known
 
to
 
us.
 
Adverse
 
decisions
 
or
 
settlements
 
of
 
disputes
 
may
negatively impact our business, reputation and financial condition.
Continued scrutiny and changing expectations surrounding sustainability
 
matters from investors,
customers, government regulators and other stakeholders may impose additional
 
reporting
requirements, additional costs and compliance risks.
Public companies
 
from across
 
all industries
 
have and
 
may continue
 
to
 
face scrutiny
 
from investors,
customers,
 
regulators
 
and
 
other
 
stakeholders
 
concerning
 
sustainability
 
matters.
 
In
 
the
 
U.S.,
 
there
 
have
been
 
various
 
new
 
rules
 
or
 
proposals
 
for
 
new
 
or
 
enhanced
 
disclosure
 
requirements
 
regarding
 
climate
emissions,
 
sustainability,
 
workforce
 
composition
 
and
 
related
 
metrics,
 
among
 
other
 
topics.
 
Complying
with
 
these
 
complex
 
reporting
 
obligations
 
or
 
expectations
 
could
 
increase
 
our
 
costs
 
associated
 
with
compliance, disclosure and reporting. Furthermore, evolving laws, regulations or stakeholder expectations
may
 
result
 
in
 
uncertain,
 
potentially
 
burdensome,
 
and
 
changing
 
reporting
 
requirements
 
or
 
expectations,
20
and
 
our
 
failure
 
to
 
comply
 
with
 
such
 
requirements
 
or
 
expectations
 
may
 
adversely
 
affect
 
our
 
reputation,
business or financial performance.
Changes to accounting rules and regulations may adversely affect our reported
 
results of
operations and financial condition.
Changes
 
to
 
U.S.
 
Generally
 
Accepted
 
Accounting
 
Principles
 
and
 
SEC
 
accounting,
 
disclosure
 
and
reporting
 
rules
 
are
 
common
 
and
 
have
 
become
 
more
 
frequent
 
and
 
significant
 
in
 
the
 
past
 
several
 
years.
Changes in accounting rules, disclosures
 
or regulations and varying interpretations of
 
existing accounting
rules, disclosures
 
and regulations
 
have significantly
 
affected
 
our reported
 
financial statements
 
and those
of
 
other
 
participants
 
in
 
the
 
retail
 
industry
 
in
 
the
 
past
 
and
 
may
 
continue
 
to
 
do
 
so
 
in
 
the
 
future.
 
Future
changes
 
to
 
accounting
 
rules,
 
disclosures
 
or
 
regulations
 
may
 
adversely
 
affect
 
our
 
reported
 
results
 
of
operations and financial position or perceptions of our performance and
 
financial condition.
Maintaining and improving our internal control over financial reporting
 
and other requirements
necessary to operate as a public company may strain our resources, and
 
any material failure in
these controls may negatively impact our business, the price of our common
 
stock and market
confidence in our reported financial information.
As a public
 
company, we
 
are subject to
 
the reporting requirements of
 
the Securities Exchange Act
 
of
1934, the
 
Sarbanes-Oxley Act
 
of 2002,
 
the rules
 
of the
 
SEC and
 
New York
 
Stock Exchange
 
and certain
aspects of the Dodd-Frank Wall
 
Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act (the “Dodd-Frank Act”) and
related rule-making that
 
has been and
 
may continue to
 
be implemented over
 
the next several
 
years under
the mandates of the Dodd-Frank Act. The
 
requirements of these rules and regulations have increased, and
may continue to increase, our compliance costs and
 
place significant strain on our personnel, systems and
resources.
 
To
 
satisfy
 
the
 
SEC’s
 
rules
 
implementing
 
the
 
requirements
 
of
 
Section
 
404
 
of
 
the
 
Sarbanes-
Oxley Act
 
of
 
2002, we
 
must continue
 
to
 
document, test,
 
monitor and
 
enhance our
 
internal control
 
over
financial reporting, which is
 
a costly and time-consuming effort
 
that must be re-evaluated
 
frequently. We
cannot give
 
assurance that
 
our disclosure
 
controls and
 
procedures and
 
our internal
 
control over
 
financial
reporting, as
 
defined by applicable
 
SEC rules,
 
will be adequate
 
in the future.
 
Any failure
 
to maintain the
effectiveness
 
of
 
internal
 
control
 
over
 
financial
 
reporting
 
or
 
to
 
comply
 
with
 
the
 
other
 
various
 
laws
 
and
regulations to
 
which we
 
are and
 
will continue
 
to be
 
subject, or
 
to
 
which we
 
may become
 
subject in
 
the
future,
 
as
 
a
 
public
 
company
 
could
 
have
 
an
 
adverse
 
material
 
impact
 
on
 
our
 
business,
 
our
 
financial
condition and
 
the price
 
of our
 
common stock.
 
In addition,
 
our efforts
 
to comply
 
with these
 
existing and
new requirements could significantly increase our compliance costs.
Changes in tax and accounting laws and the mix and level of earnings
 
in any of the jurisdictions in
which we operate and the outcome of tax audits can cause fluctuations in
 
our overall tax rate,
which impact our reported earnings.
We
 
are subject to income
 
taxes in the
 
United States and numerous
 
domestic states, as well
 
as foreign
jurisdictions. In
 
addition, our
 
products are
 
subject to
 
import and
 
excise duties
 
and/or sales,
 
consumption
or value-added taxes in many jurisdictions. Significant judgment is required to determine and estimate tax
liabilities,
 
and
 
there
 
are
 
many
 
transactions
 
and
 
calculations
 
where
 
the
 
ultimate
 
tax
 
termination
 
is
uncertain. We
 
record tax
 
expense based
 
on our
 
estimates of
 
future payments,
 
which include
 
reserves for
estimates of probable settlements of domestic
 
and foreign tax audits. At any
 
one time, many tax years
 
are
subject
 
to
 
audit
 
by
 
various
 
taxing
 
jurisdictions.
 
Adverse
 
determinations
 
in
 
these
 
audits
 
may
 
have
 
an
adverse effect
 
on our
 
reported financial results
 
in the
 
period such
 
determinations are
 
made, as
 
well as
 
in
future periods.
 
In addition, our
 
effective tax
 
rate may be
 
materially impacted by
 
changes in tax
 
rates and
duties,
 
the
 
mix
 
and
 
level
 
of
 
earnings
 
or
 
losses
 
by
 
taxing
 
jurisdictions,
 
or
 
by
 
changes
 
to
 
existing
accounting rules
 
or
 
regulations. As
 
a result,
 
we
 
expect
 
that throughout
 
the
 
year there
 
could
 
be
 
ongoing
variability in
 
our quarterly
 
tax rates
 
as events
 
occur and
 
exposures are
 
evaluated. Changes
 
to foreign
 
or
domestic tax
 
and accounting laws
 
and regulations, the
 
outcome of
 
tax audits and
 
changes in the
 
mix and
21
level
 
of
 
earnings
 
by
 
jurisdictions
 
could
 
have
 
a
 
material
 
impact
 
on
 
our
 
effective
 
tax
 
rate,
 
financial
condition, results of operations or cash flows.
Risks Relating to Our Investments and Liquidity:
We may experience market conditions or other events that could adversely impact the valuation
and liquidity of, and our ability to access, our short-term investments,
 
cash and cash equivalents
and our revolving line of credit.
Our
 
short-term investments
 
and cash
 
equivalents are
 
primarily comprised
 
of investments
 
in
 
federal,
state, municipal and corporate debt securities. The value of those securities may be adversely impacted by
factors
 
relating
 
to
 
these
 
securities,
 
similar
 
securities
 
or
 
the
 
broader
 
credit
 
markets
 
in
 
general.
 
Many
 
of
these factors
 
are beyond our
 
control, and include
 
but are
 
not limited to
 
changes to credit
 
ratings, rates of
default, collateral
 
value, discount
 
rates, and
 
strength and
 
quality of
 
market credit
 
and liquidity,
 
potential
disruptions in the capital
 
markets and changes in the
 
underlying economic, financial and other
 
conditions
that drive
 
these factors.
 
As federal,
 
state and
 
municipal entities
 
struggle with
 
declining tax
 
revenues and
budget deficits,
 
we cannot
 
be assured
 
of our
 
ability to
 
timely access
 
these investments
 
if the
 
market for
these issues
 
declines. Similarly,
 
the default
 
by issuers
 
of the
 
debt securities
 
we hold
 
or similar
 
securities
could
 
impair
 
the
 
value
 
or
 
liquidity of
 
our
 
investments.
 
The
 
development
 
or
 
persistence of
 
any
 
of
 
these
conditions could
 
adversely affect
 
our financial
 
condition, results
 
of operations
 
and ability
 
to execute
 
our
business
 
strategy.
 
In
 
addition,
 
we
 
have
 
significant
 
amounts
 
of
 
cash
 
and
 
cash
 
equivalents
 
at
 
financial
institutions that
 
are
 
in excess
 
of
 
the federally
 
insured limits.
 
An economic
 
downturn or
 
development of
adverse
 
conditions
 
affecting
 
the
 
financial
 
sector
 
and
 
stability
 
of
 
financial
 
institutions
 
could
 
cause
 
us
 
to
experience losses on our deposits.
Our ability
 
to access
 
credit markets
 
and our
 
revolving line
 
of credit,
 
either generally
 
or on
 
favorable
market terms, may be
 
impacted by the
 
factors discussed in
 
the preceding paragraph, as
 
well as continued
compliance with covenants under
 
our revolving credit agreement. The
 
development or persistence of
 
any
of these
 
adverse factors or
 
failure to
 
comply with covenants
 
on which our
 
borrowing is conditioned
 
may
adversely affect
 
our financial
 
condition, results of
 
operations and
 
our ability
 
to access
 
our revolving
 
line
of credit and to execute our business strategy.
The terms of our asset-based revolving credit facility (“ABL Facility”)
 
restrict our operations and
financial flexibility, which could adversely affect our ability to respond to changes in our business
and to manage our operations.
We
 
are
 
subject
 
to
 
the
 
borrowing
 
terms
 
of
 
our
 
ABL
 
Facility,
 
which
 
is
 
limited
 
by
 
a
 
borrowing
 
base
consisting of certain eligible accounts
 
receivable and eligible inventory,
 
reduced by specified reserves, as
follows:
90% of eligible credit card receivables, plus
90% of the
 
net recovery percentage
 
of eligible inventory
 
multiplied by the
 
most recent appraised
value of such inventory, calculated at the lower of (a) cost computed on a first-in first-out basis or
(b) market value (net of intercompany profits and certain other adjustments),
 
minus
applicable reserves.
In
 
addition,
 
the
 
ABL Facility
 
prohibits
 
minimum excess
 
availability at
 
any time
 
to
 
be
 
less than
 
the
greater of
 
(i) 10%
 
of the
 
loan cap
 
(defined as
 
the lesser
 
of (A)
 
the borrowing
 
base at
 
such time
 
and (B)
$35 million (as of the date hereof)) and (ii) $5 million.
In addition, the covenants under
 
our ABL Facility include
 
restrictions that, among other things,
 
limit
our ability
 
to incur
 
additional indebtedness,
 
create liens
 
on assets,
 
make investments,
 
loans or
 
advances,
engage in mergers, consolidations, sell assets,
 
make acquisitions, pay dividends and make other restricted
22
payments,
 
and
 
enter
 
in
 
to
 
transactions
 
with
 
affiliates.
 
A
 
failure
 
by
 
us
 
to
 
comply
 
with
 
these
 
covenants
could result
 
in an
 
event of
 
default, which
 
could adversely
 
affect our
 
ability to
 
respond to
 
changes in
 
our
business and
 
manage our
 
operations. Upon the
 
occurrence of
 
an event
 
of default,
 
the lenders
 
could elect
to declare all
 
amounts outstanding to
 
be immediately due
 
and payable and
 
exercise other remedies
 
as set
forth under
 
our ABL
 
Facility,
 
including without
 
limitation foreclosing
 
on the
 
collateral pledged
 
to
 
such
lenders. If
 
the indebtedness
 
under our
 
ABL Facility
 
was to
 
be accelerated,
 
our future
 
financial condition
could be materially adversely affected.
Risks Relating to the Market Value of Our Common Stock:
Our operating results are subject to seasonal and quarterly fluctuations,
 
which could adversely
affect the market price of our common stock.
Our business
 
varies with
 
general seasonal
 
trends that
 
are characteristic
 
of the
 
retail apparel
 
industry.
As a
 
result, our
 
stores typically
 
generate a
 
higher percentage
 
of our
 
annual net
 
sales and
 
profitability in
the
 
first
 
and
 
second
 
quarters
 
of
 
our
 
fiscal
 
year
 
compared
 
to
 
other
 
quarters.
 
Accordingly,
 
our
 
operating
results for
 
any one
 
fiscal period
 
are not
 
necessarily indicative
 
of results
 
to
 
be expected
 
from any
 
future
period,
 
and
 
such
 
seasonal
 
and
 
quarterly
 
fluctuations
 
could
 
adversely
 
affect
 
the
 
market
 
price
 
of
 
our
common stock.
We cannot provide assurance that we will pay dividends, or that if paid, any dividend payments will
be consistent with historical levels.
The declaration and payment of any dividend is subject to the approval of our Board of Directors.
 
Our
Board of
 
Directors regularly
 
evaluates
 
our ability
 
to
 
pay a
 
dividend based
 
on many
 
factors,
 
such as
 
but
not
 
limited
 
to,
 
applicable
 
legal
 
requirements,
 
the
 
financial
 
position
 
of
 
the
 
Company,
 
contractual
restrictions
 
and
 
our
 
capital
 
allocation
 
strategy.
 
Our
 
Board
 
of
 
Directors
 
most
 
recently
 
suspended
 
the
payment of quarterly dividends in November 2024 and may continue to suspend the
 
payment of dividends
if it deems such an action to
 
be in the best interests of the
 
Company and its shareholders. There can be no
assurance that a cash dividend will be declared in the future in any particular
 
amount, or at all.
Conditions in the stock market generally, or particularly relating to our industry, Company or
common stock, may materially and adversely affect the market price of our
 
common stock and
make its trading price more volatile.
The trading
 
price of
 
our common
 
stock at
 
times has
 
been, and
 
is likely
 
to continue
 
to be,
 
subject to
significant volatility.
 
A variety of
 
factors may cause
 
the price
 
of our
 
common stock to
 
fluctuate, perhaps
substantially,
 
including,
 
but
 
not
 
limited
 
to,
 
those
 
discussed
 
elsewhere
 
in
 
this
 
report,
 
as
 
well
 
as
 
the
following: low
 
trading volume;
 
general market
 
fluctuations resulting
 
from factors
 
not directly
 
related to
our operations or the inherent value of
 
our common stock; announcements of developments related to our
business; fluctuations in our reported operating results; general conditions or trends affecting or perceived
to affect
 
the fashion and
 
retail industry; conditions or
 
trends affecting or
 
perceived to affect
 
the domestic
or global
 
economy or
 
the domestic
 
or global
 
credit or
 
capital markets;
 
changes in
 
financial estimates
 
or
the scope
 
of coverage
 
given to
 
our Company
 
by securities
 
analysts; negative
 
commentary regarding
 
our
Company
 
and
 
corresponding
 
short-selling
 
market
 
behavior;
 
adverse
 
customer
 
relations
 
developments;
significant changes in our senior management team; and legal proceedings.
 
Over the past several years the
stock market in general, and the market for shares of equity securities of many retailers in particular,
 
have
experienced extreme price
 
fluctuations that
 
have at times
 
been unrelated to
 
the operating performance
 
of
those companies.
 
Such fluctuations
 
and market
 
volatility based
 
on these
 
or other
 
factors may
 
materially
and adversely
 
affect the
 
market price
 
of our
 
common stock.
 
Further,
 
securities class
 
action litigation
 
has
often
 
been
 
initiated
 
against
 
companies
 
following
 
periods
 
of
 
volatility
 
in
 
their
 
stock
 
price.
 
This
 
type
 
of
litigation,
 
should
 
it
 
materialize,
 
could
 
result
 
in
 
substantial
 
costs
 
and
 
divert
 
our
 
management’s
 
attention
23
and
 
resources,
 
and
 
could
 
also
 
require
 
us
 
to
 
make subst
 
antial
 
payments
 
to
 
justify
 
judgments
 
or
 
to
 
settle
litigation. The threat of class action litigation could also cause the price of
 
our common stock to decline.
 
The interests of our principal shareholder may limit the ability of other
 
shareholders to influence
the direction of the Company and otherwise affect our corporate governance and
 
the market price
of our common stock.
Our common stock
 
consists of two
 
classes: Class
 
A and
 
Class B.
 
Holders of
 
Class A common
 
stock
are entitled to one vote per share, and holders of Class B common stock are entitled to
 
10 votes per share,
on all matters to be voted on by our common shareholders. All of the shares of Class B common stock are
beneficially owned by
 
John P.
 
D. Cato. As
 
a result, Mr.
 
Cato owns a
 
significant economic interest in
 
the
Company and
 
the
 
majority
 
of
 
the
 
total
 
voting
 
power
 
of
 
our
 
outstanding
 
common
 
stock
 
at
 
53.3%
 
as
 
of
March
 
24,
 
2025.
 
In
 
addition,
 
Mr.
 
Cato
 
serves
 
as
 
Chairman
 
of
 
the
 
Board
 
of
 
Directors,
 
President
 
and
Chief Executive
 
Officer.
 
As a
 
result, Mr.
 
Cato has
 
the ability
 
to substantially
 
influence or
 
determine the
outcome of all
 
matters requiring approval by
 
the shareholders, including the
 
election of directors
 
and the
approval
 
of
 
mergers
 
and
 
other
 
business
 
combinations
 
or
 
other
 
significant
 
Company
 
transactions.
 
Mr.
Cato may
 
have interests
 
that differ
 
from those
 
of other
 
shareholders and
 
may vote
 
in a
 
way with
 
which
other
 
shareholders disagree
 
or
 
perceive as
 
adverse to
 
their
 
interests. The
 
concentration of
 
voting power
held by
 
Mr.
 
Cato could
 
discourage potential
 
investors from
 
acquiring our
 
common stock
 
and could
 
also
have the
 
effect of
 
preventing, discouraging or
 
deferring a
 
change in
 
control of
 
the Company,
 
even if
 
the
change in
 
control might
 
benefit the
 
shareholders generally.
 
This ownership
 
concentration may adversely
impact the trading
 
of our
 
Class A common stock
 
because of
 
perceptions of a
 
conflict of interest,
 
thereby
depressing
 
the
 
value
 
of
 
our
 
Class
 
A
 
common
 
stock.
 
Mr.
 
Cato
 
also
 
has
 
the
 
ability
 
to
 
control
 
the
management of
 
the Company
 
as a
 
result
 
of his
 
position as
 
Chief Executive
 
Officer.
 
Further,
 
we qualify
for
 
exemption
 
as
 
a
 
“controlled
 
company”
 
from
 
compliance
 
with
 
certain
 
New
 
York
 
Stock
 
Exchange
corporate
 
governance
 
listing
 
standards,
 
including
 
the
 
requirements
 
that
 
we
 
have
 
a
 
majority
 
of
independent
 
directors
 
on
 
our
 
Board,
 
an
 
independent
 
compensation
 
committee
 
and
 
an
 
independent
corporate
 
governance
 
and
 
nominating
 
committee.
 
Although
 
we
 
currently
 
intend
 
to
 
continue
 
to
 
comply
with these listing
 
standards even though
 
we are a
 
controlled company,
 
there can be
 
no assurance that
 
we
will continue
 
to comply
 
with these
 
optional listing
 
standards in
 
the future.
 
If we
 
elected to
 
utilize these
“controlled
 
company”
 
exceptions,
 
our
 
other
 
shareholders
 
could
 
lose
 
the
 
benefit
 
of
 
these
 
corporate
governance requirements and the market value of our common
 
stock could be adversely affected.
Item 1B.
 
Unresolved Staff Comments:
 
None.
Item 1C.
 
Cybersecurity:
Risk Management Strategy
 
We
 
recognize
 
the
 
importance
 
of
 
effectively
 
managing
 
cybersecurity
 
risk
 
in
 
protecting
 
our
 
business,
customers
 
and
 
employees,
 
and
 
we
manage
 
cybersecurity
 
risk
 
as
 
part
 
of
 
our
 
overall
 
risk
 
management
strategy
 
and
 
compliance
 
processes.
 
We
 
maintain
 
a
 
process
 
designed
 
to
 
identify,
 
assess
 
and
 
manage
material
 
risks
 
from
 
cybersecurity
 
threats,
 
including
 
risks
 
relating
 
to
 
theft
 
of
 
customer
 
data,
 
primarily
payment cards, disruption to
 
business operations or
 
financial reporting systems, fraud,
 
extortion, external
exposure
 
of
 
employee
 
data
 
and
 
violation
 
of
 
privacy
 
laws.
 
In
 
recent
 
years,
 
we
 
have
 
increased
 
our
investments
 
in
 
cybersecurity risk
 
management and
 
have developed
 
an
 
enterprise cybersecurity
 
program
designed
 
to
 
detect,
 
identify,
 
classify
 
and
 
mitigate
 
cybersecurity
 
and
 
other
 
data
 
security
 
threats.
 
This
program classifies potential
 
threats by risk
 
levels, and we
 
typically prioritize our
 
threat mitigation efforts
based on those risk classifications. In the event we identify a potential cybersecurity, privacy or other data
security
 
issue,
 
we
 
have
 
defined
 
procedures
 
for
 
responding
 
to
 
such
 
issues,
 
including
 
procedures
 
that
address
 
when and
 
how to
 
engage with
 
Company executives,
 
our
 
Board of
 
Directors, other
 
stakeholders
24
and law
 
enforcement when
 
responding to
 
such issues.
 
Additionally,
 
various aspects
 
of our
 
cybersecurity
program,
 
particularly
 
compliance
 
with
 
the
 
Payment
 
Card
 
Industry
 
standards,
 
are
 
regularly
 
reviewed
 
by
independent
 
third
 
parties.
 
We
 
also
 
maintain
 
cybersecurity
 
insurance,
 
which
 
we
 
believe
 
to
 
be
commensurate
 
with
 
our
 
size
 
and
 
the
 
nature
 
of
 
our
 
operations,
 
as
 
part
 
of
 
our
 
comprehensive
 
insurance
portfolio.
 
We
utilize
 
third-party
 
intrusion
 
detection
 
and
 
prevention
 
systems
 
and
 
vulnerability
 
and
 
penetration
testing to
 
monitor our
 
environment. We
 
also use
third-party
 
software to
 
test our
 
employees' responses to
suspicious emails and to
 
inform targeted cyber
 
awareness training.
 
Our information security and
 
privacy
policies
 
are
 
informed
 
by
 
regulatory
 
requirements
 
and
 
are
 
reviewed
 
periodically
 
for
 
compliance
 
and
alignment
 
with
 
current
 
state
 
and
 
federal
 
laws
 
and
 
regulations.
 
We
 
comply
 
with
 
applicable
 
industry
security
 
standards,
 
including the
 
Payment Card
 
Industry
 
Data
 
Security
 
Standard (“PCI
 
DSS”).
 
Because
we
 
are
 
aware
 
of
 
the
 
risks
 
associated
 
with
 
third-party
 
service
 
providers,
 
we
 
also
 
have
 
implemented
processes
 
to
 
oversee
 
and manage
 
these
 
risks.
 
We
 
conduct
 
security
 
assessments
 
of
 
third-party
 
providers
before
 
engagement
 
and
 
maintain ongoing
 
monitoring to
 
help
 
ensure
 
compliance with
 
our
 
cybersecurity
standards.
 
 
Additionally,
 
we maintain and
 
regularly review a
 
cybersecurity incident response
 
plan that
 
provides a
framework for
 
handling and
 
escalating cybersecurity
 
incidents based
 
on the
 
severity of
 
the incident
 
and
facilitates cross-functional coordination across the Company.
 
Through the
 
processes described
 
above,
 
we
 
did
not
 
identify
 
risks
 
during the
 
year
 
ended
 
February 1,
2025 from current or
 
past cybersecurity threats or cybersecurity
 
incidents that have materially affected
 
or
are
 
reasonably
 
likely
 
to
 
materially
 
affect
 
our
 
business
 
strategy,
 
results
 
of
 
operations,
 
or
 
financial
condition.
 
However,
 
we
 
face
 
ongoing
 
risks
 
from
 
certain
 
cybersecurity
 
threats
 
that,
 
if
 
realized,
 
are
reasonably likely
 
to
 
materially affect
 
our
 
business strategy,
 
results
 
of
 
operations, or
 
financial condition.
See
 
the
 
risk
 
factors
 
discussed
 
under
 
the
 
heading,
 
“Risk
 
Factors
 
 
Risks
 
Relating
 
to
 
Our
 
Information
Technology,
 
Related Systems and Cybersecurity” for further information.
Governance
 
Our
 
Board
 
of
 
Directors
 
recognizes
 
the
 
important
 
roles
 
that
 
information
 
security
 
and
 
mitigating
cybersecurity and other data security threats
 
play in our efforts
 
to protect and maintain the
 
confidentiality
and security of
 
customer, employee and
 
vendor information, as
 
well as non-public
 
information about our
Company.
Although
 
the
 
Board
 
as
 
a
 
whole
 
is
 
ultimately
responsible
 
for
 
the
 
oversight
 
of
 
our
 
risk
management
 
function,
 
the
 
Board
 
has
 
delegated
 
to
 
its
 
Audit
 
Committee
 
primary
 
responsibility
 
for
oversight
 
of
 
risk
 
assessment
 
and
 
risk
 
management,
 
including
 
risks
 
related
 
to
 
cybersecurity
 
and
 
other
technology
 
issues.
 
The
 
Audit
 
Committee
 
also
 
oversees
 
the
 
Company’s
 
internal
 
control
 
over
 
financial
reporting, including
 
with respect
 
to financial
 
reporting-related information
 
systems. The
 
Chief Financial
Officer (CFO) and Chief
 
Accounting Officer (CAO) meet regularly
 
with the Audit Committee and
 
Board
of Directors.
 
The
 
Audit
 
Committee
 
reviews
 
quarterly
 
our
 
cybersecurity
 
activities,
 
including
 
review
 
of
 
annual
external assessment
 
results, training
 
results, and
 
discussion of
 
cybersecurity risks
 
and resolutions,
 
and is
responsible
 
for elevating significant
 
matters to the
 
Board as events
 
arise.
 
The Audit
 
Committee receives
reports
 
from
 
our
 
Chief
 
Information
 
Officer
 
(CIO)
 
annually
 
regarding
 
our
 
cybersecurity
 
framework,
 
as
well as our plans to mitigate cybersecurity risks and respond to any data breaches.
 
 
From
 
a
 
management
 
perspective,
 
our
 
enterprise
 
cybersecurity
 
is
 
overseen
 
by
 
our
 
cybersecurity
committee, which is chaired by our CFO
 
and includes our CAO, CIO, Chief Information
 
Security Officer
(CISO),
 
as
 
well
 
as
 
key
 
members
 
of
 
financial
 
management,
 
information
 
technology
 
and
 
audit.
 
Our
cybersecurity infrastructure
 
is
 
overseen by
 
our
 
CISO, who
 
reports
 
to
 
our
 
CIO.
 
Our
 
CIO reports
 
to
 
our
CFO
 
and
 
has
 
served
 
in
 
various
 
roles
 
in
 
information
 
technology
 
and
 
information
 
security
 
for
 
over
 
30
25
years.
Item 2.
 
Properties:
 
The Company’s
 
distribution center
 
and general
 
offices
 
are located
 
in a
 
Company-owned building
 
of
approximately
 
552,000
 
square
 
feet
 
located
 
on
 
a
 
15-acre
 
tract
 
in
 
Charlotte,
 
North
 
Carolina.
 
The
Company’s
 
automated
 
merchandise
 
handling
 
and
 
distribution
 
activities
 
occupy
 
approximately
 
418,000
square
 
feet
 
of
 
this
 
building
 
and
 
its
 
general
 
offices
 
and
 
corporate
 
training
 
center
 
are
 
located
 
in
 
the
remaining 134,000
 
square feet.
 
A building
 
of approximately
 
24,000 square
 
feet located
 
on a
 
2-acre tract
adjacent
 
to
 
the
 
Company’s
 
existing
 
location is
 
used
 
for
 
e-commerce
 
storage.
 
The
 
Company also
 
owns
approximately
 
185
 
acres
 
of
 
land
 
in
 
York
 
County,
 
South
 
Carolina
 
as
 
a
 
potential
 
new
 
site
 
for
 
our
distribution center.
Item 3.
 
Legal Proceedings:
 
From time
 
to time,
 
claims are
 
asserted against
 
the Company
 
arising out
 
of operations
 
in the
 
ordinary
 
course
 
of
 
business.
 
The
 
Company
 
currently
 
is
 
not
 
a
 
party
 
to
 
any
 
pending
 
litigation
 
that
 
it
 
believes
 
is
likely to have a
 
material adverse effect on
 
the Company’s
 
financial position, results of
 
operations or cash
flows. See Note 15, “Commitments and Contingencies,” for more
 
information.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
26
Item 3A.
 
Executive Officers of the Registrant:
 
The executive officers of the Company and their ages as of March 31, 2025
 
are as follows:
Name
Age
 
Position
John P.
 
D. Cato............................
 
 
 
74
 
 
Chairman, President and Chief Executive Officer
Charles D. Knight........................
 
 
60
Executive Vice President, Chief Financial Officer
Gordon Smith
 
..............................
 
 
 
69
 
 
Executive Vice President, Chief Real Estate and
Store Development Officer
 
John P.
 
D. Cato
has been employed
 
as an officer
 
of the Company since
 
1981 and has
 
been a director
of
 
the
 
Company
 
since
 
1986.
 
Since
 
January
 
2004,
 
he
 
has
 
served
 
as
 
Chairman,
 
President
 
and
 
Chief
Executive Officer.
 
From May 1999 to
 
January 2004, he served
 
as President, Vice
 
Chairman of the
 
Board
and Chief Executive Officer.
 
From June 1997 to May 1999,
 
he served as President, Vice
 
Chairman of the
Board and
 
Chief Operating Officer.
 
From August 1996
 
to June
 
1997, he served
 
as Vice
 
Chairman of the
Board
 
and Chief
 
Operating Officer.
 
From 1989
 
to
 
1996, he
 
managed the
 
Company’s
 
off-price
 
concept,
serving
 
as
 
Executive Vice
 
President
 
and
 
as
 
President and
 
General Manager
 
of
 
the
 
It’s
 
Fashion
 
concept
from 1993
 
to
 
August 1996.
 
Mr. Cato
 
is
 
a former
 
director of
 
Harris Teeter
 
Supermarkets, Inc.,
 
formerly
Ruddick Corporation.
 
Charles
 
D.
 
Knight
 
has
 
been
 
employed
 
as
 
Executive
 
Vice
 
President,
 
Chief
 
Financial
 
Officer
 
by
 
the
Company
 
since
 
January
 
of
 
2022.
 
From
 
2018
 
to
 
2020,
 
he
 
served
 
in
 
various
 
roles
 
with
 
The
 
Vitamin
Shoppe,
 
first
 
as
 
Senior
 
Vice
 
President,
 
Chief
 
Accounting
 
Officer
 
from
 
2018
 
to
 
2019,
 
and
 
then
 
as
Executive Vice
 
President, Chief Financial
 
Officer from 2019
 
to 2020.
 
Prior to
 
that, he served
 
in various
roles with Toys
 
“R” Us for 28
 
years, including as Senior Vice
 
President, Corporate Controller from 2010
to 2018.
 
Gordon
 
Smith
 
has
 
been
 
employed
 
by
 
the
 
Company
 
since
 
1989.
 
Since
 
July
 
2011,
 
he
 
has
 
served
 
as
Executive Vice
 
President, Chief
 
Real
 
Estate and
 
Store Development
 
Officer.
 
From February
 
2008 until
July 2011,
 
Mr. Smith served as
 
Senior Vice President, Real
 
Estate. From October 1989 to February 2008,
Mr. Smith served as Assistant Vice President, Corporate Real Estate.
Item 4.
 
Mine Safety Disclosures:
 
No matters requiring disclosure.
27
PART
 
II
 
 
 
Item 5.
 
 
Market for Registrant’s Common Equity, Related Stockholder Matters and Issuer Purchases of
Equity Securities:
Market & Dividend Information
 
The
 
Company’s
 
Class A Common
 
Stock
 
trades
 
on the
 
New York
 
Stock
 
Exchange (“NYSE”) under
the symbol CATO.
 
 
As of March 24, 2025,
 
the approximate number of record holders of the Company’s Class A Common
Stock was 5,000 and there were 2 record holders of the Company’s Class B Common Stock.
cato-20250201p28i0
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
28
Stock Performance Graph
 
The
 
following
 
graph
 
compares
 
the
 
yearly
 
change
 
in
 
the
 
Company’s
 
cumulative
 
total
 
shareholder
return on
 
the Company’s
 
Common Stock (which
 
includes Class
 
A Stock
 
and Class
 
B Stock)
 
for each
 
of
the
 
Company’s
 
last
 
five
 
fiscal
 
years
 
with
 
(i)
 
the
 
Dow
 
Jones
 
U.S.
 
Retailers,
 
Apparel
 
Index
 
and
 
(ii)
 
the
Russell 2000 Index.
THE CATO
 
CORPORATION
STOCK PERFOMANCE TABLE
(BASE 100 – IN DOLLARS)
LAST TRADING DAY
OF THE FISCAL YEAR
THE CATO
CORPORATION
DOW JONES U.S.
RETAILERS,
 
APPL
INDEX
RUSSELL 2000
 
INDEX
1/31/2020
100
100
100
1/29/2021
73
107
130
1/28/2022
108
118
129
1/27/2023
69
129
124
2/2/2024
51
145
127
1/31/2025
28
184
152
 
The graph assumes an initial investment of $100 on January 31, 2020,
 
the last trading day prior to the
commencement of the Company’s 2020 fiscal year, and that all dividends were reinvested.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
29
Issuer Purchases of Equity Securities
 
The following table summarizes the Company’s purchases of its common stock for the three months
ended February 1, 2025:
Total Number of
Maximum Number
 
Shares Purchased as
(or Approximate Dollar
Total Number
 
Part of Publicly
Value) of Shares that may
 
of Shares
Average Price
Announced Plans or
yet be Purchased Under
Period
Purchased
Paid per Share (1)
 
Programs (2)
the Plans or Programs (2)
November 2024
96,306
$
3.32
96,306
December 2024
320,271
3.35
320,271
January 2025
28,799
3.50
28,799
Total
445,376
$
3.35
445,376
997,455
(1)
Prices include trading costs.
(2)
During
 
the
 
fourth
 
quarter
 
ended
 
February
 
1,
 
2025,
 
the
 
Company
 
repurchased
 
and
 
retired
 
445,376
shares
 
under
 
this
 
program
 
for
 
approximately
 
$1,491,984
 
or
 
an
 
average
 
market
 
price
 
of
 
$3.35
 
per
share. As of the
 
fourth quarter ended February
 
1, 2025, the Company
 
had 997,455 shares remaining
in open authorizations. There is no specified expiration date
 
for the Company’s repurchase program.
The
 
Board
 
of
 
Directors
 
authorized
 
an
 
increase
 
of
 
1,000,000
 
shares
 
in
 
the
 
Company’s
 
share
repurchase program on December 23, 2024.
 
 
 
 
 
 
30
Item 7.
 
Management's Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition and Results
 
of Operations:
 
Management’s
 
Discussion and
 
Analysis of
 
Financial Condition
 
and Results
 
of Operations
 
is intended
to provide information to assist readers in better
 
understanding and evaluating our financial condition and
results
 
of
 
operations.
 
The
 
following
 
information
 
should
 
be
 
read
 
in
 
conjunction
 
with
 
the
 
Consolidated
Financial Statements, including the accompanying Notes appearing in
 
Part II, Item 8 of this
 
annual report
on Form 10-K.
 
This section of the annual report
 
on Form 10-K generally discusses fiscal 2024
 
and fiscal
2023
 
and
 
year-to-year
 
comparisons
 
between
 
fiscal
 
2024
 
and
 
fiscal
 
2023,
 
as
 
well
 
as
 
certain
 
fiscal
 
2022
items.
 
Discussions
 
of
 
fiscal
 
2022
 
items
 
and
 
year-to-year
 
comparisons
 
between
 
fiscal
 
2023
 
and
 
fiscal
2022 that are not included
 
in this Form 10-K can
 
be found in “Management’s
 
Discussion and Analysis of
Financial
 
Condition
 
and
 
Results
 
of
 
Operations”
 
in
 
Part
 
II,
 
Item
 
7
 
of
 
the
 
Company’s
 
annual
 
report
 
on
Form 10-K for the fiscal year ended February 3, 2024.
Recent Developments
Inflationary Cost Pressure and High Interest Rates
 
The
 
pressure
 
on
 
our
 
customers’
 
disposable
 
income
 
continued
 
in
 
fiscal
 
2024,
 
due
 
to
 
prolonged
 
and
persistently high prices caused by high inflation
 
rates, especially related to housing, groceries and
 
fuel, as
well as
 
high interest
 
rates.
 
These high
 
interest rates
 
have adversely
 
affected the
 
availability and
 
cost of
credit for our customers, including
 
revolving credit and auto loans,
 
and continue to negatively impact
 
our
customers’ disposable income.
 
Our customers’
 
willingness to purchase
 
our products may
 
continue to
 
be
negatively impacted by these inflationary pressures and high interest
 
rates.
Although
 
interest
 
rates
 
and
 
inflation
 
have
 
decreased,
 
we
 
believe
 
the
 
pressure
 
on
 
our
 
customers’
disposable income
 
adversely impacted
 
fiscal 2024
 
and will
 
likely continue
 
to have
 
a negative
 
impact on
consumer behavior and, by extension, our results of operations and financial condition during
 
at least part
of fiscal 2025.
Merchandise Supply Chain and Tariff Pressures
 
A significant amount of
 
our merchandise is manufactured
 
overseas, principally in Southeast
 
Asia, and
traverses
 
through
 
the
 
Panama
 
Canal
 
or
 
the
 
Suez
 
Canal.
 
In
 
the
 
first
 
quarter
 
of
 
2024,
 
the
 
drought
conditions
 
experienced
 
in
 
the
 
region
 
surrounding
 
the
 
Panama
 
Canal
 
reduced
 
the
 
number
 
of
 
transits
 
by
approximately 37% and
 
also reduced the
 
permissible draft of
 
vessels transiting the
 
Panama Canal, which
reduced the volume
 
and number of
 
containers carried by container
 
ships and increased
 
our costs.
 
These
conditions improved as
 
the Panama
 
Canal authority
 
increased the
 
daily transits
 
and the
 
permissible draft
of vessels, raising the number of
 
transits to 95% of pre-drought operations in the
 
second quarter and back
to pre-drought
 
levels in
 
the third
 
and fourth
 
quarters. The
 
hostilities affecting
 
the region
 
surrounding the
Suez Canal are causing container ships to travel longer distances around the Cape of Good Hope, which is
increasing lead times for merchandise and
 
our costs to ship these
 
goods, as well as decreasing the
 
pool of
containers
 
available.
 
The
 
combination
 
of
 
these
 
situations
 
has
 
negatively
 
impacted
 
fiscal
 
2024.
 
In
addition,
 
the
 
third
 
and
 
fourth
 
quarters
 
were
 
impacted
 
by
 
later
 
shipments
 
in
 
part
 
due
 
to
 
congestion
 
at
certain Asian
 
ports. In
 
the third
 
quarter,
 
our shipments
 
were negatively
 
impacted by
 
the U.S.
 
port strike
on
 
the
 
east coast
 
and civil
 
unrest in
 
some Asian
 
countries that
 
caused
 
merchandise to
 
miss its
 
shipping
windows.
 
Though
 
conditions
 
incrementally
 
improved
 
in
 
the
 
fourth
 
quarter,
 
we
 
believe
 
the
 
totality
 
of
these conditions
 
will likely
 
continue to
 
have a
 
negative impact on
 
our results
 
of operations
 
and financial
condition for the foreseeable future.
In
 
addition
 
to
 
the
 
supply
 
chain
 
issues,
 
the
 
newly
 
implemented
 
additional
 
provisional
 
tariffs
 
on
Chinese products may have several impacts on the results
 
of our financial operations. Our costs associated
with products made in China are likely to increase. These cost increases will negatively impact our results
of
 
operations
 
and
 
financial
 
condition
 
unless
 
we
 
are
 
able
 
to
 
mitigate
 
these
 
costs
 
by
 
having
 
our
 
vendors
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
31
share
 
the
 
costs
 
of
 
tariffs,
 
increase
 
retail
 
pricing
 
or
 
move
 
production
 
to
 
another
 
county.
 
Certain
 
product
categories
 
such
 
as
 
shoes
 
and
 
handbags
 
will
 
be
 
difficult
 
to
 
source
 
in
 
other
 
countries.
 
These
 
provisional
tariffs
 
may also
 
cause supply
 
chain issues,
 
as companies
 
move production
 
from China.
 
Potential supply
chain
 
issues
 
such
 
as
 
products being
 
late
 
due
 
to
 
port congestion,
 
longer
 
transit times
 
and
 
dwell
 
times
 
at
port,
 
and
 
container
 
availability
 
may
 
impact
 
the
 
costs
 
we
 
pay
 
for
 
ocean
 
freight
 
or
 
the
 
timeliness
 
of
 
our
product deliveries, any of which may
 
negatively impact our results of operations
 
and financial condition.
Results of Operations
 
The table below sets forth certain financial data of the Company
 
expressed as a percentage of
retail sales for the years indicated:
Fiscal Year Ended
February 1, 2025
February 3, 2024
Retail sales …………………………………………………………..
100.0
%
100.0
%
Other revenue…………………………………………………………
1.2
1.1
Total revenues ……………………………………………………….
101.2
101.1
Cost of goods sold …………………………………………………..
68.0
66.3
Selling, general and administrative………………………………….
36.1
36.1
Depreciation …………………………………………………………
1.5
1.4
Interest and other income ……………………………………………
1.8
0.7
Loss before income taxes …………………………………………
(2.5)
(2.0)
Net loss…………………………………………………………..
(2.8)
%
(3.4)
%
Fiscal 2024 Compared to Fiscal 2023
 
Retail sales
 
decreased by
 
8.3% to
 
$642.1 million
 
in fiscal
 
2024 compared
 
to $700.3
 
million in
 
fiscal
2023. Fiscal 2024 had 52 weeks versus 53 weeks in fiscal 2023. The decrease in retail sales
 
in fiscal 2024
was
 
primarily
 
due
 
to
 
a
 
3.2%
 
decrease
 
in
 
same-store sales,
 
from closed stores in
 
2023
 
and
 
an
 
additional
week
 
of
 
sales
 
in
 
2023.
 
Same-store
 
sales
 
for
 
the
 
fiscal
 
year
 
2024
 
decreased
 
primarily
 
due
 
to
 
lower
transactions, partially offset by fewer returns and slightly higher average sales per transaction. Same-store
sales
 
includes
 
stores
 
that
 
have
 
been
 
open
 
more
 
than
 
15
 
months.
 
Stores
 
that
 
have
 
been
 
relocated
 
or
expanded
 
are
 
also
 
included in
 
the
 
same-store sales
 
calculation
 
after
 
they
 
have
 
been
 
open
 
more
 
than
 
15
months.
 
In fiscal 2024 and fiscal 2023, e-commerce sales were less than 5%
 
of total sales and same-store
sales. The
 
method of
 
calculating same-store sales
 
varies across the
 
retail industry.
 
As a
 
result, our same-
store sales
 
calculation may
 
not be
 
comparable to
 
similarly titled
 
measures reported
 
by other
 
companies.
 
Total
 
revenues, comprised of
 
retail sales
 
and other
 
revenue (principally finance
 
charges and
 
late fees
 
on
customer accounts receivable,
 
gift card breakage, shipping
 
charges for e-commerce purchases
 
and layaway
fees), decreased by 8.2% to
 
$649.8 million in
 
fiscal 2024 compared to
 
$708.1 million in
 
fiscal 2023. The
Company
 
operated
 
1,117
 
stores
 
at
 
February
 
1,
 
2025
 
compared
 
to
 
1,178
 
stores
 
operated
 
at
 
February
 
3,
2024.
 
In fiscal 2024, the Company opened five new stores and closed 66
 
stores.
 
Other revenue,
 
a component
 
of total
 
revenues, remained
 
flat at
 
$7.7 million
 
in fiscal
 
2024 compared
to fiscal 2023.
 
Credit
 
revenue
 
of
 
$2.7
 
million
 
represented
 
0.4%
 
of
 
total
 
revenue
 
in
 
fiscal
 
2024,
 
a
 
$0.1
 
million
increase compared to fiscal 2023 credit
 
revenue of $2.6 million or 0.4% of
 
total revenue.
 
The increase in
credit revenue was
 
primarily due to
 
increases in finance
 
charges and late
 
fee income as
 
a result of
 
higher
accounts
 
receivable
 
balances.
 
Credit
 
revenue
 
is
 
comprised
 
of
 
interest
 
earned
 
on
 
the
 
Company’s
 
private
label credit
 
card portfolio
 
and related
 
fee income.
 
Related expenses
 
include
 
principally payroll,
 
postage
and
 
other
 
administrative
 
expenses
 
and
 
totaled
 
$1.6
 
million
 
in
 
fiscal
 
2024
 
compared
 
to
 
$1.6
 
million
 
in
fiscal 2023.
 
Total credit
 
segment income before taxes was $2.2 million in fiscal
 
2024 and $1.7 million in
32
fiscal 2023.
 
 
Cost
 
of
 
goods sold
 
was $436.4
 
million, or
 
68.0% of
 
retail
 
sales, in
 
fiscal
 
2024 compared
 
to
 
$464.3
million, or 66.3% of retail sales, in fiscal 2023. The increase in cost of goods sold as a percentage of sales
resulted primarily
 
from higher
 
distribution and
 
freight costs,
 
increased sales
 
of markdown
 
priced goods,
and deleveraging
 
of occupancy
 
and buying
 
costs. Cost
 
of goods
 
sold includes
 
merchandise costs,
 
net of
discounts
 
and
 
allowances,
 
buying
 
costs,
 
distribution
 
costs,
 
occupancy
 
costs,
 
and
 
freight
 
and
 
inventory
shrinkage.
 
Net
 
merchandise
 
costs
 
and
 
in-bound
 
freight
 
are
 
capitalized
 
as
 
inventory
 
costs.
 
Buying
 
and
distribution costs include payroll, payroll-related costs and operating expenses for the buying departments
and
 
distribution
 
center.
 
Occupancy
 
expenses
 
include
 
rent,
 
real
 
estate
 
taxes,
 
insurance,
 
common
 
area
maintenance,
 
utilities
 
and
 
maintenance
 
for
 
stores
 
and
 
distribution
 
facilities.
 
Total
 
gross
 
margin
 
dollars
(retail sales
 
less cost
 
of goods
 
sold and excluding
 
depreciation) decreased by
 
12.8% to
 
$205.7 million in
fiscal 2024 from $236.0
 
million in fiscal
 
2023. Gross margin as
 
presented may not
 
be comparable to
 
that
of other companies.
 
 
Selling, general
 
and administrative expenses
 
(“SG&A”), which
 
primarily include corporate
 
and store
payroll,
 
related
 
payroll
 
taxes
 
and
 
benefits,
 
insurance,
 
supplies,
 
advertising,
 
bank
 
and
 
credit
 
card
processing fees were
 
$231.5 million in
 
fiscal 2024 compared
 
to $252.8 million
 
in fiscal 2023,
 
a decrease
of
 
8.4%.
 
As
 
a
 
percent
 
of
 
retail
 
sales,
 
SG&A
 
was
 
36.1%
 
compared
 
to
 
36.1%
 
in
 
the
 
prior
 
year.
 
The
decrease in SG&A expense in fiscal 2024 was primarily attributable to decreased incentive compensation,
insurance, closed store and impairment expenses, partially offset by increased professional
 
fees.
 
Depreciation
 
expense
 
was
 
$9.8
 
million
 
in
 
fiscal
 
2024
 
compared
 
to
 
$9.9
 
million
 
in
 
fiscal
 
2023.
Depreciation expense
 
decreased slightly
 
from fiscal
 
2023 due
 
to fully
 
depreciated older
 
stores and
 
prior
period impairments of leasehold improvements and fixtures,
 
partially offset by the distribution
 
center and
information technology expenditures.
 
Interest and other
 
income increased to
 
$11.8 million
 
in fiscal 2024
 
compared to $5.1
 
million in fiscal
2023. The increase is
 
primarily attributable to a $3.2
 
million net gain on
 
sale of land held
 
for investment,
gains on
 
the disposal
 
of the
 
Company’s
 
corporate aircraft
 
and certain
 
equity securities,
 
as well
 
as higher
interest earned on the Company’s investments.
 
Income tax
 
expense was
 
$1.9 million,
 
or 0.3%
 
of retail
 
sales in
 
fiscal 2024
 
compared to
 
income tax
expense
 
of
 
$10.1
 
million, or
 
1.4%
 
of
 
retail
 
sales
 
in
 
fiscal
 
2023.
 
The
 
income
 
tax
 
expense
 
decrease
 
was
primarily due
 
to a
 
valuation allowance
 
recorded against
 
U.S. federal
 
and state
 
deferred tax
 
assets in
 
the
prior
 
fiscal
 
year
 
due to
 
a
 
pre-tax loss,
 
partially offset
 
by foreign
 
rate
 
differential. The
 
effective
 
tax
 
rate
was (12.1%)
 
(Expense) in fiscal
 
2024 compared to
 
(73.5%)
 
(Expense) in fiscal
 
2023. See Note
 
12 to
 
the
Consolidated Financial Statements, “Income Taxes,” for further details.
Off-Balance Sheet Arrangements
 
None.
Critical Accounting Policies and Estimates
 
The Company’s
 
accounting policies are
 
more fully described
 
in Note
 
1 to the
 
Consolidated Financial
Statements.
 
As
 
disclosed
 
in
 
Note
 
1
 
to
 
the
 
Consolidated
 
Financial
 
Statements,
 
the
 
preparation
 
of
 
the
Company’s
 
financial
 
statements
 
in
 
conformity
 
with
 
generally
 
accepted
 
accounting
 
principles
 
in
 
the
United
 
States
 
(“GAAP”)
 
requires
 
management
 
to
 
make
 
estimates
 
and
 
assumptions
 
about
 
future
 
events
that
 
affect
 
the
 
amounts reported
 
in
 
the
 
financial statements
 
and
 
accompanying notes.
 
Future events
 
and
their
 
effects
 
cannot
 
be
 
determined
 
with
 
absolute
 
certainty.
 
Therefore,
 
the
 
determination
 
of
 
estimates
requires
 
the
 
exercise
 
of
 
judgment.
 
Actual
 
results
 
inevitably
 
will
 
differ
 
from
 
those
 
estimates,
 
and
 
such
differences
 
may
 
be
 
material
 
to
 
the
 
financial
 
statements.
 
The
 
most
 
significant
 
accounting
 
estimates
33
inherent in the preparation of the Company’s financial statements include the calculation of potential asset
impairment, income tax
 
valuation allowances, reserves relating
 
to self-insured health
 
insurance, workers’
compensation, general
 
and auto
 
insurance liabilities,
 
uncertain tax
 
positions, the
 
allowance for
 
customer
credit losses, and inventory shrinkage.
 
The Company’s critical accounting policies and estimates are discussed with the Audit Committee.
Allowance for Customer Credit Losses
 
The Company evaluates
 
the collectability
 
of customer
 
accounts receivable
 
and records
 
an allowance
for customer
 
credit losses
 
based on
 
the accounts
 
receivable aging and
 
estimates of
 
actual write-offs.
 
The
allowance is
 
reviewed for
 
adequacy and
 
adjusted, as
 
necessary,
 
on a
 
quarterly basis.
 
The Company
 
also
provides
 
for
 
estimated
 
uncollectible
 
late
 
fees
 
charged
 
based
 
on
 
historical
 
write-offs.
 
The
 
Company’s
financial results
 
can be
 
impacted by
 
changes in
 
customer loss
 
write-off experience
 
and the
 
aging of
 
the
accounts receivable portfolio.
 
 
Merchandise Inventories
 
The Company’s
 
inventory is
 
valued using
 
the weighted-average
 
cost method
 
and is
 
stated at
 
the net
realizable value. Physical inventories
 
are conducted throughout the
 
year to calculate actual
 
shrinkage and
inventory on hand. Actual shrinkage results are used to estimate inventory shrinkage, which is accrued for
the
 
period between
 
the
 
last physical
 
inventory and
 
the
 
financial reporting
 
date. The
 
Company regularly
reviews
 
its
 
inventory
 
levels
 
to
 
identify
 
slow
 
moving
 
merchandise
 
and
 
uses
 
markdowns
 
to
 
clear
 
slow
moving inventory.
 
 
Lease Accounting
The Company determines whether an arrangement is a lease at inception. The Company has operating
leases for
 
stores,
 
offices,
 
warehouse space
 
and equipment.
 
Its leases
 
have remaining
 
lease terms
 
of
 
one
year to 10 years, some of which
 
include options to extend the lease term for
 
up to five years, and some of
which
 
include
 
options
 
to
 
terminate
 
the
 
lease
 
within
 
one
 
year.
 
The
 
Company considers
 
these
 
options
 
in
determining
 
the
 
lease term
 
used
 
to
 
establish its
 
right-of-use assets
 
and lease
 
liabilities. The
 
Company’s
lease agreements do not contain any material residual value guarantees or material
 
restrictive covenants.
As
 
most
 
of
 
the
 
Company’s
 
leases
 
do
 
not
 
provide
 
an
 
implicit
 
rate,
 
the
 
Company
 
uses
 
its
 
estimated
incremental
 
borrowing
 
rate
 
based
 
on
 
the
 
information
 
available
 
at
 
commencement
 
date
 
of
 
the
 
lease
 
in
determining the present
 
value of lease
 
payments.
 
See Note
 
11 to
 
the Consolidated Financial
 
Statements,
“Leases,” for further information.
 
Impairment of Long-Lived Assets
 
The
 
Company invests
 
in
 
leaseholds,
 
right-of use
 
assets
 
and
 
equipment primarily
 
in
 
connection
 
with
the opening and remodeling of stores
 
and in computer software and hardware. The
 
Company periodically
reviews its store
 
locations and estimates
 
the recoverability of
 
its long-lived assets,
 
which primarily relate
to
 
Fixtures
 
and
 
equipment,
 
Leasehold
 
improvements,
 
Right-of-use
 
assets
 
net
 
of
 
Lease
 
liabilities
 
and
Information
 
technology
 
equipment
 
and
 
software.
 
An
 
impairment
 
charge
 
is
 
recorded
 
for
 
the
 
amount
 
by
which the
 
carrying value
 
exceeds the
 
estimated fair
 
value when
 
the Company
 
determines that
 
projected
cash flows associated with those long-lived assets will not be sufficient to recover
 
the carrying value. This
determination is based on a
 
number of factors, including the store’s
 
historical operating results and future
projected cash flows, which include contribution margin projections.
 
The Company assesses the fair value
of each lease
 
by considering market
 
rents and
 
any lease terms
 
that may adjust
 
market rents under
 
certain
conditions, such as the loss of
 
an anchor tenant or a leased
 
space in a shopping center not
 
meeting certain
criteria. Further,
 
in determining when
 
to close a
 
store, the Company considers
 
real estate development
 
in
34
the
 
area and
 
perceived local
 
market conditions,
 
which can
 
be difficult
 
to
 
predict and
 
may be
 
subject
 
to
change.
 
Insurance Liabilities
 
The
 
Company
 
is
 
primarily
 
self-insured
 
for
 
healthcare,
 
workers’
 
compensation
 
and
 
general
 
liability
costs. These costs are
 
significant primarily due to the
 
large number of the
 
Company’s retail locations
 
and
associates. The Company’s
 
self-insurance liabilities are
 
based on the
 
total estimated costs
 
of claims filed
and
 
estimates
 
of
 
claims
 
incurred
 
but
 
not
 
reported,
 
less
 
amounts
 
paid
 
against
 
such
 
claims,
 
and
 
are
 
not
discounted.
 
Management
 
reviews
 
current
 
and
 
historical
 
claims
 
data
 
in
 
developing
 
its
 
estimates.
 
The
Company
 
also
 
uses
 
information
 
provided
 
by
 
outside
 
actuaries
 
with
 
respect
 
to
 
healthcare,
 
workers’
compensation and general liability claims.
 
If the underlying facts and
 
circumstances of the claims change
or
 
the
 
historical
 
experience
 
upon
 
which
 
insurance
 
provisions
 
are
 
recorded
 
is
 
not
 
indicative
 
of
 
future
trends, then
 
the Company
 
may be
 
required to
 
make adjustments
 
to the
 
provision for
 
insurance costs
 
that
could
 
be
 
material
 
to
 
the
 
Company’s
 
reported
 
financial condition
 
and
 
results
 
of
 
operations.
 
Historically,
actual results have not significantly deviated from estimates.
 
Uncertain Tax Positions
 
The Company records
 
liabilities for
 
uncertain tax
 
positions primarily
 
related to
 
state income
 
taxes as
of the balance sheet
 
date.
 
These liabilities reflect the
 
Company’s best
 
estimate of its ultimate
 
income tax
liability
 
based
 
on
 
the
 
tax
 
codes,
 
regulations,
 
and
 
pronouncements
 
of
 
the
 
jurisdictions
 
in
 
which
 
we
 
do
business.
 
Estimating our ultimate tax liability involves significant judgments regarding the
 
application of
complex tax
 
regulations across
 
many jurisdictions.
 
Despite the
 
Company’s
 
belief that
 
the estimates
 
and
judgments
 
are
 
reasonable,
 
differences
 
between
 
the
 
estimated
 
and
 
actual
 
tax
 
liabilities
 
can
 
and
 
do
 
exist
from time to time.
 
These differences may arise from settlements
 
of tax audits, expiration of the statute of
limitations, and the evolution and application of the
 
various jurisdictional tax codes and regulations.
 
Any
differences will
 
be recorded
 
in the
 
period in
 
which they become
 
known and
 
could have
 
a material
 
effect
on the results of operations in the period the adjustment is recorded.
 
Deferred Tax Valuation
 
Allowance
 
The
 
Company
 
assesses
 
the
 
likelihood
 
that
 
deferred
 
tax
 
assets
 
will
 
be
 
realized
 
in
 
light
 
of
 
the
Company’s
 
current
 
financial
 
performance
 
and
 
projected
 
future
 
financial
 
performance.
 
Based
 
on
 
this
assessment, the
 
Company then
 
determines if
 
a valuation
 
allowance should
 
be recorded.
 
If the
 
Company
concludes
 
that
 
it
 
is
 
more
 
likely
 
than
 
not
 
that
 
the
 
Company
 
will
 
not
 
be
 
able
 
to
 
realize
 
its
 
tax
 
deferred
assets, a valuation allowance is recorded for the proportion of the deferred tax asset it determines may not
be realized.
 
This evaluation
 
requires significant
 
judgment and
 
involves the
 
consideration of
 
all available
positive
 
and
 
negative
 
evidence,
 
including
 
our
 
historical
 
operating
 
results,
 
the
 
existence
 
of
 
cumulative
losses
 
in
 
recent
 
years,
 
ongoing
 
prudent
 
and
 
feasible
 
tax
 
planning
 
strategies,
 
and
 
projections
 
of
 
future
taxable income.
Liquidity, Capital Resources and Market Risk
 
The Company
 
believes that
 
its cash,
 
cash equivalents
 
and short-term
 
investments, together
 
with cash
flows from
 
operations and
 
its new
 
asset-backed revolving line
 
of credit
 
(see below),
 
will be
 
adequate to
fund
 
the
 
Company’s
 
regular
 
operating
 
requirements,
 
including
 
$64.6
 
million
 
of
 
lease
 
obligations
 
and
planned investments of $7.3 million of capital expenditures,
 
for the next twelve months from the issuance
of this report.
 
 
Cash
 
used
 
in
 
operating
 
activities
 
during
 
fiscal
 
2024
 
was
 
$19.7
 
million
 
as
 
compared
 
to
 
$0.5 million
provided in fiscal 2023 and $13.4 million provided in fiscal 2022. Cash used in operating activities during
2024 was
 
primarily attributable
 
to net
 
income adjusted
 
for depreciation,
 
changes in
 
working capital
 
and
35
subtraction of
 
net income
 
for non-operating
 
gains on
 
sale of
 
assets held
 
for investment.
 
The decrease
 
of
$20.2
 
million
 
for
 
fiscal
 
2024
 
compared
 
to
 
fiscal
 
2023
 
is
 
primarily due
 
to
 
an
 
increase in
 
merchandise
inventories
 
and
 
gains
 
on
 
sale
 
of
 
assets
 
held
 
for
 
investments,
 
partially
 
offset
 
by
 
an
 
increase
 
in
 
accounts
payable.
 
At
 
February 1,
 
2025,
 
the
 
Company had
 
working
 
capital
 
of
 
$34.9 million compared
 
to
 
$55.1 million
and $74.7 million at February 3,
 
2024 and January 28, 2023, respectively.
 
The decrease
 
in working
 
capital
compared to the prior
 
year is primarily due
 
to lower short-term investments and
 
accounts receivables, higher
accounts payable and accrued expenses, partially offset
 
by higher inventory and lower current
 
lease liability.
 
 
At February 1,
 
2025, the Company
 
had an
 
unsecured revolving credit
 
agreement, which provided
 
for
borrowings of
 
up to
 
$35.0 million less
 
the
 
balance of
 
any revocable
 
letters of
 
credit related
 
to
 
purchase
commitments, and
 
was committed
 
through May
 
2027.
 
The credit
 
agreement contained
 
various financial
covenants and limitations, including the maintenance of specific financial
 
ratios with which the Company
was not in compliance as of
 
February 1, 2025. There were no
 
borrowings outstanding,
 
or any outstanding
letters of
 
credit,
 
under this
 
credit facility
 
as
 
of the
 
fiscal year
 
ended February
 
1, 2025
 
or
 
the fiscal
 
year
ended
 
February 3,
 
2024.
 
On
 
March
 
13,
 
2025,
 
the
 
Company terminated
 
the
 
unsecured revolving
 
line
 
of
credit when it entered into a
 
new $35.0 million asset-backed revolving line
 
of credit (the “ABL Facility”)
secured primarily by
 
inventory and third-party
 
credit card receivables.
 
As of March
 
31, 2025 there
 
were
no
 
borrowings
 
under
 
the
 
ABL
 
Facility
 
and
 
availability
 
under
 
the
 
ABL
 
Facility
 
was
 
$30.0
 
million.
 
For
additional information regarding the ABL Facility, see Note 1 to the Consolidated Financial Statements.
 
The
 
Company
 
had
 
no
 
outstanding
 
revocable
 
letters
 
of
 
credit
 
relating
 
to
 
purchase
 
commitments
 
at
February 1, 2025 or at February 3, 2024.
 
On April 25,
 
2024, the Company amended
 
the now terminated
 
unsecured revolving credit agreement
to modify a definition used in calculating the Company’s
 
minimum EBITDAR coverage ratio to add back
certain
 
income
 
tax
 
receivables
 
included
 
in
 
the
 
calculation
 
of
 
the
 
ratio.
 
On
 
November
 
1,
 
2024,
 
the
Company
 
amended
 
the
 
now
 
terminated
 
unsecured
 
revolving
 
credit
 
agreement
 
to
 
lower
 
the
 
minimum
EBITDAR
 
coverage
 
ratio
 
and
 
the
 
corresponding minimum
 
cash
 
and
 
investments
 
used
 
to
 
determine the
EBITDAR coverage ratio in exchange for a secured position in any
 
future borrowings.
 
Expenditures
 
for
 
property
 
and
 
equipment
 
totaled
 
$7.9
 
million,
 
$12.5
 
million
 
and
 
$19.4
 
million
 
in
fiscal 2024, 2023
 
and
 
2022, respectively.
 
The decrease in
 
expenditures for fiscal
 
2024 was primarily
 
due
to finishing projects related to
 
investments in the distribution center and
 
information technology.
 
 
Net
 
cash
 
provided
 
by
 
investing
 
activities
 
totaled
 
$29.0
 
million
 
for
 
fiscal
 
2024
 
compared
 
to
 
$19.8
million provided in
 
fiscal 2023 and
 
$16.0 million provided
 
in fiscal
 
2022.
 
In fiscal 2024,
 
the increase in
cash
 
provided
 
was
 
primarily
 
attributable
 
to
 
sales
 
of
 
other
 
assets
 
and
 
the
 
net
 
sales
 
of
 
short-term
investments and other assets, partially offset by expenditures for property and equipment.
 
Net cash used in financing activities totaled
 
$14.1 million in fiscal 2024 compared to
 
net cash used of
$16.1
 
million
 
for
 
fiscal
 
2023
 
and
 
$29.3
 
million
 
for
 
fiscal
 
2022.
 
The decrease in
 
cash used during
 
fiscal
2024
 
was
 
primarily
 
due
 
to
 
reduction
 
in
 
dividends
 
paid,
 
partially
 
offset
 
by
 
an
 
increase
 
in
 
share
 
repurchase
amounts.
 
The Company does not use derivative financial instruments.
 
 
See
 
Note
 
4
 
to
 
the
 
Consolidated
 
Financial
 
Statements,
 
“Fair
 
Value
 
Measurements,”
 
for
 
information
regarding the Company’s financial assets that are measured at fair value.
 
The
 
Company’s
 
investment
 
portfolio
 
was
 
primarily
 
invested
 
in
 
corporate
 
bonds
 
and
 
taxable
governmental debt securities held in managed accounts
 
with underlying ratings of A or
 
better at February
36
1, 2025. The state,
 
municipal and corporate bonds and
 
asset-backed securities have contractual maturities
which range from nine days to 2.8 years.
 
The U.S. Treasury notes have contractual maturities which range
from 13 days to 2.5 years. These securities are classified as available-for-sale and are recorded as Short-term
investments and Other
 
assets on the
 
accompanying Consolidated Balance
 
Sheets. These assets
 
are carried at
fair
 
value
 
with
 
unrealized
 
gains
 
and
 
losses
 
reported
 
net
 
of
 
taxes
 
in
 
Accumulated
 
other
 
comprehensive
income.
 
 
Additionally,
 
at
 
February
 
1,
 
2025
 
and
 
February
 
3,
 
2024,
 
the
 
Company
 
had
 
$0.0
 
million
 
and
 
$1.1
million of
 
corporate equities,
 
respectively,
 
which are
 
recorded
 
within Other
 
assets in
 
the
 
accompanying
Consolidated Balance Sheets.
 
 
Level
 
1
 
category
 
securities
 
are
 
measured
 
at
 
fair
 
value
 
using
 
quoted
 
active
 
market
 
prices.
 
Level
 
2
investment
 
securities
 
include
 
corporate,
 
state
 
and
 
municipal
 
bonds
 
for
 
which
 
quoted
 
prices
 
may
 
not
 
be
available on active exchanges for identical
 
instruments.
 
Their fair value is principally based on market
 
values
determined by management with the assistance
 
of a third-party pricing service.
 
Since quoted prices in active
markets
 
for
 
identical
 
assets
 
are
 
not
 
available,
 
these
 
prices
 
are
 
determined
 
by
 
the
 
pricing
 
service
 
using
observable market information such as quotes from less active markets and/or quoted prices of securities with
similar characteristics, among other factors.
Deferred
 
compensation plan
 
assets
 
consist
 
primarily of
 
life
 
insurance
 
policies. These
 
life
 
insurance
policies are valued based on the cash surrender value of the insurance contract, which is determined based
on
 
such
 
factors
 
as
 
the
 
fair
 
value
 
of
 
the
 
underlying
 
assets
 
and
 
discounted
 
cash
 
flow
 
and
 
are
 
therefore
classified
 
within
 
Level
 
3
 
of
 
the
 
valuation
 
hierarchy.
 
The
 
Level
 
3
 
liability
 
associated
 
with
 
the
 
life
insurance
 
policies
 
represents
 
a
 
deferred
 
compensation
 
obligation,
 
the
 
value
 
of
 
which
 
is
 
tracked
 
via
underlying
 
insurance
 
funds’
 
net
 
asset
 
values,
 
as
 
recorded
 
in
 
Other
 
noncurrent
 
liabilities
 
in
 
the
Consolidated Balance Sheets. These
 
funds are designed
 
to mirror the
 
return of existing
 
mutual funds and
money market funds that are observable and actively traded.
 
Contractual Obligations
 
Contractual
 
obligations
 
for
 
future
 
payments
 
at
 
February
 
1,
 
2025
 
relate
 
primarily
 
to
 
operating
 
lease
commitments for
 
store leases.
 
Operating leases
 
represent minimum
 
required lease
 
payments under
 
non-
cancellable
 
lease
 
terms.
 
Most
 
store
 
leases
 
also
 
require
 
payment
 
of
 
related
 
operating
 
expenses
 
such
 
as
taxes, utilities, insurance and maintenance, which are not included in our estimated lease obligations.
 
See
Note
 
11
 
to
 
the
 
Consolidated
 
Financial
 
Statements,
 
“Leases”
 
for
 
the
 
maturities
 
of
 
our
 
operating
 
lease
obligations.
Recent Accounting Pronouncements
 
See
 
Note 1
 
to
 
the
 
Consolidated Financial
 
Statements,
 
“Summary of
 
Significant Accounting
 
Policies,
Recently Adopted Accounting Policies and Recently Issued Accounting
 
Pronouncements.”
Item 7A.
 
Quantitative and Qualitative Disclosures About Market Risk:
 
The
 
Company
 
is
 
subject
 
to
 
market
 
rate
 
risk
 
from
 
exposure
 
to
 
changes
 
in
 
interest
 
rates
 
based
 
on
 
its
financing, investing and
 
cash management activities,
 
but the Company
 
does not
 
believe such exposure
 
is
material.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
37
 
Item 8.
 
Financial Statements and Supplementary Data:
INDEX TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS AND SCHEDULE
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Page
 
 
Report of Independent Registered Public Accounting Firm (PCAOB ID
238
) .....................................
 
 
 
38
 
Consolidated Statements of Income (Loss) and Comprehensive Income (Loss)
 
for the fiscal
 
 
years ended February 1, 2025, February 3, 2024 and January 28, 2023 ................................
 
...........
 
 
 
41
 
Consolidated Balance Sheets at February 1, 2025 and February 3, 2024
 
.............................................
 
 
 
42
 
Consolidated Statements of Cash Flows for the fiscal years ended February 1, 2025,
 
February 3, 2024
 
and January 28, 2023................................
 
................................................................
 
.........................
 
 
 
43
 
Consolidated Statements of Stockholders’ Equity for the fiscal years ended February 1,
 
2025,
 
 
February 3, 2024 and January 28, 2023 ................................................................
 
............................
 
 
 
44
 
Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements ..........................................................................................
 
 
 
45
 
Schedule II — Valuation
 
and Qualifying Accounts for the fiscal years ended February 1, 2025,
 
 
February 3, 2024 and January 28, 2023 ................................................................
 
............................
 
 
 
80
 
38
Report of Independent Registered Public Accounting Firm
 
To the Board of Directors and Stockholders of The Cato Corporation
Opinions on the Financial Statements and Internal Control over Financial
 
Reporting
We have audited the accompanying consolidated balance sheets of The Cato Corporation and its
subsidiaries (the "Company") as of February 1, 2025 and February 3, 2024,
 
and the related consolidated
statements of income (loss) and comprehensive income (loss), of stockholders'
 
equity and of cash flows
for each of the three years in the period ended February 1, 2025, including
 
the related notes and financial
statement schedule listed in the accompanying index (collectively referred
 
to as the "consolidated
financial statements"). We also have audited the Company's internal control over financial reporting as of
February 1, 2025, based on criteria established in
Internal Control - Integrated Framework
 
(2013) issued
by the Committee of Sponsoring Organizations of the Treadway Commission (COSO).
In our opinion, the consolidated financial statements referred to above
 
present fairly, in all material
respects, the financial position of the Company as of February
 
1, 2025 and February 3, 2024, and the
results of its operations and its cash flows for each of the three years
 
in the period ended February 1, 2025
in conformity with accounting principles generally accepted in the United
 
States of America. Also in our
opinion, the Company maintained, in all material respects, effective internal control
 
over financial
reporting as of February 1, 2025, based on criteria established
 
in
Internal Control - Integrated Framework
(2013) issued by the COSO.
Basis for Opinions
The Company's management is responsible for these consolidated financial
 
statements, for maintaining
effective internal control over financial reporting, and for its assessment of the effectiveness of internal
control over financial reporting, included in Management’s Report on Internal Control Over Financial
Reporting appearing under Item 9A. Our responsibility is to express opinions
 
on the Company’s
consolidated financial statements and on the Company's internal control over
 
financial reporting based on
our audits. We are a public accounting firm registered with the Public Company Accounting Oversight
Board (United States) (PCAOB) and are required to be independent with
 
respect to the Company in
accordance with the U.S. federal securities laws and the applicable rules
 
and regulations of the Securities
and Exchange Commission and the PCAOB.
We conducted our audits in accordance with the standards of the PCAOB. Those standards require that
we plan and perform the audits to obtain reasonable assurance about
 
whether the consolidated financial
statements are free of material misstatement, whether due to error or fraud,
 
and whether effective internal
control over financial reporting was maintained in all material respects.
Our audits of the consolidated financial statements included performing
 
procedures to assess the risks of
material misstatement of the consolidated financial statements, whether
 
due to error or fraud, and
performing procedures that respond to those risks. Such procedures
 
included examining, on a test basis,
evidence regarding the amounts and disclosures in the consolidated financial
 
statements. Our audits also
included evaluating the accounting principles used and significant
 
estimates made by management, as
well as evaluating the overall presentation of the consolidated
 
financial statements. Our audit of internal
control over financial reporting included obtaining an understanding
 
of internal control over financial
reporting, assessing the risk that a material weakness exists, and testing
 
and evaluating the design and
operating effectiveness of internal control based on the assessed risk. Our audits
 
also included performing
such other procedures as we considered necessary in the circumstances. We believe that our audits
provide a reasonable basis for our opinions.
39
Definition and Limitations of Internal Control over Financial Reporting
A company’s internal control over financial reporting is a process designed to provide reasonable
assurance regarding the reliability of financial reporting
 
and the preparation of financial statements for
external purposes in accordance with generally accepted accounting
 
principles. A company’s internal
control over financial reporting includes those policies and procedures
 
that (i) pertain to the maintenance
of records that, in reasonable detail, accurately and fairly reflect the transactions
 
and dispositions of the
assets of the company; (ii) provide reasonable assurance that transactions
 
are recorded as necessary to
permit preparation of financial statements in accordance with generally
 
accepted accounting principles,
and that receipts and expenditures of the company are being made
 
only in accordance with authorizations
of management and directors of the company; and (iii) provide
 
reasonable assurance regarding prevention
or timely detection of unauthorized acquisition, use, or disposition
 
of the company’s assets that could
have a material effect on the financial statements.
Because of its inherent limitations, internal control over financial reporting
 
may not prevent or detect
misstatements. Also, projections of any evaluation of effectiveness to future periods
 
are subject to the risk
that controls may become inadequate because of changes in conditions, or
 
that the degree of compliance
with the policies or procedures may deteriorate.
Critical Audit Matters
The critical audit matter communicated below is a matter arising
 
from the current period audit of the
consolidated financial statements that was communicated or required to
 
be communicated to the audit
committee and that (i) relates to accounts or disclosures that are material to
 
the consolidated financial
statements and (ii) involved our especially challenging, subjective, or
 
complex judgments. The
communication of critical audit matters does not alter in any way
 
our opinion on the consolidated
financial statements, taken as a whole, and we are not, by communicating
 
the critical audit matter below,
providing a separate opinion on the critical audit matter or on the accounts
 
or disclosures to which it
relates.
Impairment of Long-Lived Assets - Store Location Asset Groupings
As described in Notes 1 and 6 to the consolidated financial statements,
 
the Company’s consolidated
property and equipment, net balance was $60.3 million, of which the store
 
locations were a portion, and
consolidated operating lease right-of-use assets, net balance was $148.9
 
million as of February 1, 2025.
The Company invests in leaseholds, right-of-use assets and equipment,
 
primarily in connection with the
opening and remodeling of stores, and in computer software and hardware.
 
The Company periodically
reviews its store locations and estimates the recoverability
 
of its long-lived assets, which primarily relate
to fixtures and equipment, leasehold improvements, right-of-use assets net
 
of lease liabilities, and
information technology equipment and software. An impairment
 
charge is recorded for the amount by
which the carrying value exceeds the estimated fair value when management
 
determines that projected
cash flows associated with those long-lived assets will not be sufficient to recover
 
the carrying value. This
determination is based on a number of factors, including the store’s historical operating results and future
projected cash flows, which include contribution margin projections. The Company
 
assesses the fair value
of each lease by considering market rents and any lease terms
 
that may adjust market rents under certain
conditions such as the loss of an anchor tenant or a leased space in a shopping
 
center not meeting certain
criteria. An impairment charge for store assets of $0.8 million was recorded during
 
the year ended
February 1, 2025.
The principal considerations for our determination that performing
 
procedures relating to impairment of
long-lived assets – store location asset groupings is a critical audit
 
matter are (i) the significant judgment
by management when determining the fair value measurement of the
 
store location asset groupings,
which led to (ii) a high degree of auditor judgment, subjectivity, and effort in performing procedures and
evaluating management’s projected cash flow assumptions related to contribution margin projections.
40
Addressing the matter involved performing procedures and evaluating
 
audit evidence in connection with
forming our overall opinion on the consolidated financial statements.
 
These procedures included testing
the effectiveness of controls relating to management’s long-lived assets – store location recoverability test
and determination of the fair value of the asset groupings.
 
These procedures also included, among others,
(i) testing the completeness and accuracy of underlying data used in
 
the projected cash flows and store
location asset groupings, (ii) evaluating the reasonableness of management’s assumptions related to
contribution margin projections by considering current and historical performance
 
of the store location
asset groupings and whether the assumptions were consistent with evidence
 
obtained in other areas of the
audit, (iii) evaluating the appropriateness of the projected cash flow model,
 
and (iv) evaluating
management’s assessment of the fair value of the leased assets included in the store location asset
groupings.
/s/
PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP
Charlotte, North Carolina
March 31, 2025
We have served as the Company’s
 
auditor since 2003.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
41
THE CATO CORPORATION
CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS
 
OF INCOME (LOSS) AND
COMPREHENSIVE INCOME (LOSS)
Fiscal Year Ended
February 1, 2025
February 3, 2024
January 28, 2023
(Dollars in thousands, except per share data)
REVENUES
 
Retail sales
$
642,140
$
700,318
$
752,370
 
Other revenue (principally finance charges,
 
 
late fees and layaway charges)
7,666
7,741
6,890
 
Total revenues
649,806
708,059
759,260
COSTS AND EXPENSES, NET
 
Cost of goods sold (exclusive of
 
 
depreciation shown below)
436,440
464,313
509,664
 
Selling, general and administrative (exclusive
 
 
of depreciation shown below)
231,430
252,742
242,561
 
Depreciation
9,817
9,871
11,080
 
Interest expense
59
35
87
 
Interest and other income
(11,827)
(5,101)
(5,902)
 
Costs and expenses, net
665,919
721,860
757,490
Income (loss) before income taxes
(16,113)
(13,801)
1,770
Income tax expense
1,944
10,140
1,741
Net income (loss)
$
(18,057)
$
(23,941)
$
29
Basic earnings (loss) per share
$
(0.97)
$
(1.17)
$
-
Diluted earnings (loss) per share
$
(0.97)
$
(1.17)
$
-
Dividends per share
$
0.51
$
0.68
$
0.68
Comprehensive income:
Net income (loss)
$
(18,057)
$
(23,941)
$
29
Unrealized gain (loss) on available-for-sale
 
securities, net of deferred income taxes of
 
$
0
, $
489
, and ($
287
) for fiscal 2024, 2023
 
and 2022, respectively
(242)
1,633
(958)
Comprehensive loss
$
(18,299)
$
(22,308)
$
(929)
See notes to consolidated financial statements.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
42
THE CATO CORPORATION
CONSOLIDATED BALANCE SHEETS
February 1, 2025
February 3, 2024
(Dollars in thousands)
ASSETS
Current Assets:
Cash and cash equivalents
 
$
20,279
$
23,940
Short-term investments
57,423
79,012
Restricted cash
2,799
3,973
Accounts receivable, net of allowance for customer credit losses of $
581
 
at
 
February 1, 2025 and $
705
 
at February 3, 2024
24,540
29,751
Merchandise inventories
 
110,739
98,603
Prepaid expenses and other current assets
7,406
7,783
 
Total Current Assets
 
223,186
243,062
Property and equipment – net
 
60,326
64,022
Other assets
 
19,979
25,047
Right-of-Use assets - net
148,870
154,686
 
Total Assets
 
$
452,361
$
486,817
LIABILITIES AND STOCKHOLDERS' EQUITY
Current Liabilities:
Accounts payable
 
$
88,641
$
87,821
Accrued expenses
 
41,717
37,404
Accrued bonus and benefits
 
326
1,675
Current lease liability
57,555
61,108
 
Total Current Liabilities
 
188,239
188,008
Other noncurrent liabilities
13,485
14,475
Lease liability
88,341
92,013
Commitments and contingencies
-
-
Stockholders' Equity:
Preferred stock, $
100
 
par value per share,
100,000
 
shares authorized,
 
none issued
 
-
-
Class A common stock, $
0.033
 
par value per share,
50,000,000
 
shares authorized;
18,313,929
 
and
18,802,742
 
shares issued at
 
February 1, 2025 and February 3, 2024, respectively
619
635
Convertible Class B common stock, $
0.033
 
par value per share,
 
15,000,000
 
shares authorized;
1,763,652
 
shares issued at
 
February 1, 2025 and February 3, 2024
59
59
Additional paid-in capital
 
129,530
126,953
Retained earnings
 
31,935
64,279
Accumulated other comprehensive income
 
153
395
 
Total Stockholders' Equity
 
162,296
192,321
 
Total Liabilities and Stockholders’ Equity
 
$
452,361
$
486,817
See notes to consolidated financial statements.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
43
THE CATO CORPORATION
CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS
 
OF CASH FLOWS
Fiscal Year Ended
February 1, 2025
February 3, 2024
January 28, 2023
(Dollars in thousands)
Operating Activities:
Net income (loss)
$
(18,057)
$
(23,941)
$
29
Adjustments to reconcile net income (loss) to net cash (used in) provided
 
by operating activities:
 
Depreciation
9,817
9,871
11,080
 
Provision for customer credit losses
654
554
280
 
Purchase premium and premium amortization of investments
(1,131)
(711)
537
 
(Gain) Loss on sale of assets held for investment
(5,343)
8
-
 
Share based compensation
2,283
4,170
2,606
 
Deferred income taxes
-
8,724
386
 
Loss on disposal of property and equipment
192
84
199
 
Impairment of assets
786
1,811
884
 
Changes in operating assets and liabilities which provided
 
(used) cash:
 
Accounts receivable
1,357
(608)
29,034
 
Merchandise inventories
(12,136)
13,453
12,851
 
Prepaid and other assets
(212)
(216)
1,543
 
Operating lease right-of-use assets and liabilities
(1,410)
(2,056)
(2,573)
 
Accrued income taxes
-
(613)
(307)
 
Accounts payable, accrued expenses and other liabilities
3,455
(10,053)
(43,179)
Net cash (used in) provided by operating activities
(19,745)
477
13,370
Investing Activities:
Expenditures for property and equipment
 
(7,872)
(12,532)
(19,433)
Purchase of short-term investments
(39,612)
(48,055)
(54,734)
Sales of short-term investments
62,782
80,371
90,190
Sales of other assets
13,667
(8)
-
Net cash provided by investing activities
28,965
19,776
16,023
Financing Activities:
Dividends paid
(10,516)
(13,954)
(14,369)
Repurchase of common stock
(3,877)
(2,562)
(15,216)
Proceeds from employee stock purchase plan
338
384
307
Net cash used in financing activities
(14,055)
(16,132)
(29,278)
Net (decrease) increase in cash, cash equivalents, and restricted cash
(4,835)
4,121
115
Cash, cash equivalents, and restricted cash at beginning of period
27,913
23,792
23,677
Cash, cash equivalents, and restricted cash at end of period
 
$
23,078
$
27,913
$
23,792
Non-cash activity:
Accrued property and equipment expenditures
$
329
$
942
$
685
Accrued treasury stock
27
-
-
See notes to consolidated financial statements.
 
 
 
 
44
THE CATO CORPORATION
CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS
 
OF STOCKHOLDERS' EQUITY
Accumulated
Additional
 
Other
Total
Common
Paid-In
Retained
Comprehensive
Stockholders'
Stock
Capital
Earnings
Income
Equity
(Dollars in thousands, except per share data)
Balance — January 29, 2022
$
728
$
119,540
$
134,208
$
(280)
$
254,196
Comprehensive income:
 
Net income
-
-
29
-
29
 
Unrealized loss on available-for-sale securities, net of
 
deferred income tax benefit of $
287
-
-
-
(958)
(958)
Dividends paid ($
0.68
 
per share)
-
-
(14,369)
-
(14,369)
Class A common stock sold through employee stock purchase
 
plan
-
360
-
-
360
Share-based compensation expense
4
2,531
17
-
2,552
Repurchase and retirement of treasury shares
(41)
-
(15,176)
-
(15,217)
Balance — January 28, 2023
$
691
$
122,431
$
104,709
$
(1,238)
$
226,593
Comprehensive income:
 
Net loss
-
-
(23,941)
-
(23,941)
 
Unrealized gain on available-for-sale securities, net of
 
deferred income tax expense of $
489
-
-
-
1,633
1,633
Dividends paid ($
0.68
 
per share)
-
-
(13,954)
-
(13,954)
Class A common stock sold through employee stock purchase
 
plan
2
445
-
-
447
Share-based compensation expense
10
4,077
18
-
4,105
Repurchase and retirement of treasury shares
(9)
-
(2,553)
-
(2,562)
Balance — February 3, 2024
$
694
$
126,953
$
64,279
$
395
$
192,321
Comprehensive income:
 
Net loss
-
-
(18,057)
-
(18,057)
 
Unrealized loss on available-for-sale securities, net of
 
deferred income tax benefit of $
0
-
-
-
(242)
(242)
Dividends paid ($
0.51
 
per share)
-
-
(10,516)
-
(10,516)
Class A common stock sold through employee stock purchase
 
plan
2
395
-
-
397
Share-based compensation expense
12
2,182
76
-
2,270
Repurchase and retirement of treasury shares
(30)
-
(3,847)
-
(3,877)
Balance — February 1, 2025
$
678
$
129,530
$
31,935
$
153
$
162,296
See notes to consolidated financial statements.
THE CATO CORPORATION
NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
45
1.
 
Summary of Significant Accounting Policies:
 
Principles of Consolidation:
The Consolidated Financial Statements include the accounts of The Cato
Corporation and
 
its
 
wholly-owned subsidiaries
 
(the “Company”).
 
All
 
significant intercompany
 
accounts
and transactions have been eliminated.
 
Description
 
of
 
Business
 
and
 
Fiscal
Year:
 
The
 
Company
 
has
two
 
reportable
 
segments
 
 
the
operation
 
of
 
a
 
fashion
 
specialty
 
stores
 
segment
 
(“Retail
 
Segment”)
 
and
 
a
 
credit
 
card
 
segment
 
(“Credit
Segment”). The
 
apparel specialty
 
stores operate
 
under the
 
names “Cato,”
 
“Cato Fashions,”
 
“Cato Plus,”
“It’s Fashion,” “It’s
 
Fashion Metro,” “Versona
 
 
and “Cache,” including e-commerce websites. The stores
are
 
located
 
primarily
 
in
 
strip
 
shopping
 
centers
 
principally
 
in
 
the
 
southeastern
 
United
 
States.
 
The
Company’s fiscal year ends on the Saturday nearest January 31 of the subsequent year. Fiscal year 2024 is
a
52
-week year, 2023 is a
53
-week year and 2022 is a
52
-week year.
 
Use
 
of
 
Estimates:
 
The
 
preparation
 
of
 
the
 
Company’s
 
financial
 
statements
 
in
 
conformity
 
with
accounting
 
principles
 
generally accepted
 
in
 
the
 
United
 
States
 
(“GAAP”)
 
requires
 
management to
 
make
estimates
 
and
 
assumptions
 
that
 
affect
 
the
 
reported
 
amounts
 
of
 
assets
 
and
 
liabilities
 
and
 
disclosure
 
of
contingent
 
assets
 
and
 
liabilities
 
at
 
the
 
date
 
of
 
the
 
financial
 
statements
 
and
 
the
 
reported
 
amounts
 
of
revenues
 
and
 
expenses
 
during
 
the
 
reporting
 
period.
 
Actual
 
results
 
could
 
differ
 
from
 
those
 
estimates.
Significant
 
accounting
 
estimates
 
reflected
 
in
 
the
 
Company’s
 
financial
 
statements
 
include
 
the
 
allowance
for
 
customer
 
credit
 
losses,
 
inventory
 
shrinkage,
 
the
 
calculation
 
of
 
potential
 
asset
 
impairment,
 
workers’
compensation,
 
general
 
and
 
auto
 
insurance
 
liabilities,
 
reserves
 
relating
 
to
 
self-insured
 
health
 
insurance,
uncertain tax positions and valuation allowances on deferred tax
 
assets.
 
Cash
 
and
 
Cash
 
Equivalents:
 
Cash
 
and
 
cash
 
equivalents
 
consist
 
of
 
highly
 
liquid
 
investments
 
with
original maturities of three months or less.
 
Short-Term
 
Investments:
 
Investments with
 
original maturities
 
beyond three
 
months are
 
classified
as short-term
 
investments. See
 
Note 3
 
for the
 
Company’s
 
estimated fair
 
value of,
 
and other
 
information
regarding,
 
its
 
short-term
 
investments.
The
 
Company’s
 
short-term
 
investments
 
are
 
all
 
classified
 
as
available-for-sale.
 
As
 
they
 
are
 
available
 
for
 
current
 
operations,
 
they
 
are
 
classified
 
on
 
the
 
Consolidated
Balance Sheets
 
as
 
Current Assets.
 
Available-for-sale
 
securities are
 
carried at
 
fair value,
 
with
 
unrealized
gains
 
and
 
temporary
 
losses,
 
net
 
of
 
income
 
taxes,
 
reported
 
as
 
a
 
component
 
of
 
Accumulated
 
other
comprehensive income.
 
Other than
 
temporary declines
 
in the
 
fair value
 
of investments
 
are recorded
 
as a
reduction
 
in
 
the
 
cost
 
of
 
the
 
investments
 
in
 
the
 
accompanying
 
Consolidated
 
Balance
 
Sheets
 
and
 
a
reduction
 
of
 
Interest
 
and
 
other
 
income
 
in
 
the
 
accompanying
 
Consolidated
 
Statements
 
of
 
Income
 
and
Comprehensive
 
Income.
 
The
 
cost
 
of
 
debt
 
securities
 
is
 
adjusted
 
for
 
amortization
 
of
 
premiums
 
and
accretion
 
of
 
discounts
 
to
 
maturity.
 
The
 
amortization
 
of
 
premiums,
 
accretion
 
of
 
discounts
 
and
 
realized
gains and losses are included in Interest and other income.
 
Restricted Cash:
The Company had $
2.8
 
million and $
4.0
 
million in escrow at February 1, 2025 and
February 3, 2024, respectively, as security and collateral for administration of the Company’s
 
self-insured
workers’
 
compensation
 
and
 
general
 
liability
 
coverage,
 
which
 
is
 
reported
 
as
 
Restricted
 
cash
 
on
 
the
Consolidated Balance Sheets.
 
Supplemental Cash Flow
 
Information:
Income tax
 
payments, net
 
of refunds
 
received, for
 
the fiscal
years ended
 
February 1,
 
2025, February
 
3, 2024
 
and January
 
28, 2023
 
were a
 
payment of
 
$
1,874,000
, a
payment of $
4,121,000
 
and a refund of $
29,206,000
, respectively.
 
 
Inventories:
Merchandise
 
inventories
 
are
 
stated
 
at
 
the
 
net
 
realizable
 
value
 
as
 
determined
 
by
 
the
weighted-average cost method.
 
 
THE CATO CORPORATION
NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
 
— (Continued)
46
 
Property and Equipment:
Property and equipment are
 
recorded at cost, including
 
land. Maintenance
and repairs are expensed to operations as incurred; renewals and betterments are capitalized. Depreciation
is
 
determined on
 
the
 
straight-line method
 
over the
 
estimated useful
 
lives of
 
the
 
related assets
 
excluding
leasehold improvements.
 
Leasehold improvements are amortized over the
 
shorter of the estimated useful
life or lease term.
 
For leases with renewal periods at
 
the Company’s
 
option, the Company generally uses
the
 
original
 
lease
 
term
 
plus
 
reasonably
 
assured
 
renewal
 
option
 
periods
 
(generally
 
one
 
five-year
 
option
period) to determine estimated useful lives.
 
Typical estimated useful lives are as follows:
 
`
Estimated
Classification
Useful Lives
Land improvements
 
10
 
years
Buildings
 
30
-
40
 
years
Leasehold improvements
 
5
-
10
 
years
Fixtures and equipment
 
3
-
10
 
years
Information technology equipment and software
 
3
-
10
 
years
Aircraft
20
 
years
 
Impairment
 
of
 
Long-Lived
 
Assets:
 
The
 
Company
 
invests
 
in
 
leaseholds,
 
right-of-use
 
assets
 
and
equipment primarily
 
in connection
 
with the
 
opening and
 
remodeling of
 
stores and
 
in computer
 
software
and hardware. The Company periodically reviews its store locations and estimates the recoverability of its
long-lived assets,
 
which primarily
 
relate to
 
Fixtures and
 
equipment, Leasehold
 
improvements, Right-of-
use
 
assets
 
net
 
of
 
Lease
 
liabilities
 
and
 
Information
 
technology
 
equipment
 
and
 
software.
 
An
 
impairment
charge is
 
recorded for the
 
amount by which
 
the carrying value
 
exceeds the estimated
 
fair value when
 
the
Company
 
determines
 
that
 
projected
 
cash
 
flows
 
associated
 
with
 
those
 
long-lived
 
assets
 
will
 
not
 
be
sufficient to recover the
 
carrying value. This determination is
 
based on a number of
 
factors, including the
store’s
 
historical
 
operating
 
results
 
and
 
future
 
projected
 
cash
 
flows,
 
which
 
include
 
contribution
 
margin
projections. The Company assesses the fair
 
value of each lease by
 
considering market rents and any lease
terms
 
that
 
may
 
adjust
 
market
 
rents
 
under
 
certain
 
conditions,
 
such
 
as
 
the
 
loss
 
of
 
an
 
anchor
 
tenant
 
or
 
a
leased
 
space
 
in
 
a
 
shopping
 
center
 
not
 
meeting
 
certain
 
criteria.
 
Further,
 
in
 
determining when
 
to
 
close
 
a
store, the
 
Company considers real
 
estate development
 
in the
 
area and
 
perceived local
 
market conditions,
which can
 
be difficult
 
to
 
predict and
 
may be
 
subject
 
to
 
change. Asset
 
impairment charges
 
of
 
$
786,000
,
$
1,811,000
 
and $
884,000
 
were incurred in fiscal 2024, fiscal 2023 and fiscal 2022, respectively.
 
 
Other Assets:
Other assets are comprised
 
of long-term assets, primarily
 
insurance contracts related to
deferred compensation assets and land held for investment purposes.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
`
Balance as of
February 1, 2025
February 3, 2024
(Dollars in thousands)
Other Assets
 
Deferred Compensation Investments
$
9,301
$
8,586
 
Land Held for Investment
8,679
9,334
 
Miscellaneous Investments
1,139
2,076
 
Asset Held for Sale
-
4,183
 
Other Deposits
596
604
 
Other
264
264
Total
 
Other Assets
$
19,979
$
25,047
 
Leases:
The
 
Company
 
leases
 
all
 
of
 
its
 
retail
 
stores.
 
Most
 
lease
 
agreements
 
contain
 
construction
allowances and rent escalations.
 
For purposes of recognizing incentives and minimum rental expenses on
a straight-line basis over the terms of the leases, including renewal periods considered reasonably
 
assured,
THE CATO CORPORATION
NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
 
— (Continued)
47
the Company begins amortization
 
as of the
 
initial possession date which
 
is when the Company
 
enters the
space and begins to make improvements in preparation for intended use.
 
Revenue
 
Recognition:
The
 
Company
 
recognizes
 
sales
 
at
 
the
 
point
 
of
 
purchase
 
when
 
the
 
customer
takes possession
 
of the
 
merchandise and
 
pays for
 
the purchase,
 
generally with cash
 
or credit.
 
Sales from
purchases
 
made
 
with
 
Cato
 
credit,
 
gift
 
cards
 
and
 
layaway
 
sales
 
from
 
stores
 
are
 
also
 
recorded
 
when
 
the
customer
 
takes
 
possession
 
of
 
the
 
merchandise.
 
E-commerce sales
 
are
 
recorded when
 
the
 
risk
 
of
 
loss
 
is
transferred
 
to
 
the
 
customer.
 
Gift
 
cards
 
are
 
recorded
 
as
 
deferred
 
revenue
 
until
 
they
 
are
 
redeemed
 
or
forfeited. Gift
 
cards do
 
not have
 
expiration dates.
 
Layaway sales
 
are recorded
 
as deferred
 
revenue until
the customer takes possession or forfeits the merchandise. A provision is made for estimated merchandise
returns based
 
on sales
 
volumes and
 
the Company’s
 
experience; actual
 
returns have
 
not varied
 
materially
from historical amounts. A provision is made for estimated write-offs associated with sales
 
made with the
Company’s proprietary credit card.
 
In addition, a provision is made for estimated rewards cards issued to
customers based
 
on their
 
purchases with the
 
Company’s propriety
 
credit card.
 
The rewards
 
cards issued
by the Company have a
90
-day expiration.
 
Amounts related to shipping and handling billed to
 
customers
in
 
a
 
sales
 
transaction
 
are
 
classified
 
as
 
Other
 
revenue
 
and
 
the
 
costs
 
related
 
to
 
shipping
 
product
 
to
customers (billed and accrued) are classified as Cost of goods sold.
 
In accordance with ASU 2014-09,
Revenue from Contracts with Customers (Topic
 
606)
 
(“Topic 606”),
in
 
fiscal
 
2024,
 
2023
 
and
 
2022,
 
the
 
Company
 
recognized
 
$
1,447,934
,
 
$
1,116,000
 
and
 
$
256,000
,
respectively,
 
of
 
income
 
on
 
unredeemed
 
gift
 
cards
 
(“gift
 
card
 
breakage”)
 
as
 
a
 
component
 
of
 
Other
Revenue
 
on
 
the
 
Consolidated
 
Statements
 
of
 
Income (Loss)
 
and
 
Comprehensive Income
 
(Loss).
 
Under
Topic
 
606, the
 
Company recognizes
 
gift card
 
breakage using
 
an expected
 
breakage percentage
 
based on
redeemed gift cards. See Note 2 for further information on miscellaneous
 
income.
 
The Company
 
offers
 
its own
 
proprietary credit
 
card to
 
customers. All
 
credit activity
 
is performed
 
by
the
 
Company’s
 
wholly-owned
 
subsidiaries.
 
None
 
of
 
the
 
credit
 
card
 
receivables
 
are
 
secured.
 
The
Company
 
estimated
 
customer
 
credit
 
losses
 
of
 
$
654,000
 
and
 
$
578,000
 
for
 
the
 
twelve
 
months
 
ended
February 1,
 
2025 and
 
February 3,
 
2024, respectively,
 
on sales
 
purchased on
 
the Company’s
 
proprietary
credit
 
card
 
of
 
$
21.8
 
million
 
and
 
$
23.5
 
million
 
for
 
the
 
twelve
 
months
 
ended
 
February
 
1,
 
2025
 
and
February 3, 2024, respectively.
 
The following table provides information about receivables
 
and contract liabilities from contracts with
customers (in thousands):
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
`
Balance as of
February 1, 2025
February 3, 2024
Proprietary Credit Card Receivables, net
$
10,848
$
10,909
Gift Card Liability
$
7,541
$
8,143
 
Cost of Goods Sold:
Cost of goods sold
 
includes merchandise costs, net of
 
discounts and allowances,
buying costs, distribution costs, occupancy costs, freight,
 
and inventory shrinkage. Net merchandise costs
and
 
in-bound
 
freight
 
are
 
capitalized
 
as
 
inventory
 
costs.
 
Buying
 
and
 
distribution
 
costs
 
include
 
payroll,
payroll-related
 
costs
 
and
 
operating
 
expenses
 
for
 
the
 
Company’s
 
buying
 
departments
 
and
 
distribution
center.
 
Occupancy expenses include rent, real
 
estate taxes, insurance, common area
 
maintenance, utilities
and
 
maintenance
 
for
 
stores
 
and
 
distribution
 
facilities.
 
Buying,
 
distribution,
 
occupancy
 
and
 
internal
transfer
 
costs
 
are
 
treated
 
as
 
period
 
costs
 
and
 
are
 
not
 
capitalized
 
as
 
part
 
of
 
inventory.
 
The
 
direct
 
costs
associated with shipping goods to customers are recorded as a component
 
of Cost of goods sold.
THE CATO CORPORATION
NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
 
— (Continued)
48
 
Advertising:
Advertising
 
costs
 
are
 
expensed
 
in
 
the
 
period
 
in
 
which
 
they
 
are
 
incurred.
 
Advertising
expense was approximately $
4,686,000
, $
6,277,000
 
and $
6,868,000
 
for the fiscal years ended February 1,
2025, February 3, 2024 and January 28, 2023, respectively.
 
 
Stock Repurchase Program:
 
For the fiscal year ended
 
February 1, 2025, the Company had
 
997,455
shares
 
remaining
 
in
 
open
 
authorizations.
 
There
 
is
 
no
 
specified
 
expiration
 
date
 
for
 
the
 
Company’s
repurchase
 
program. Share
 
repurchases
 
are
 
recorded in
 
Retained
 
earnings, net
 
of par
 
value.
 
From year
end
 
through
 
March
 
31,
 
2025,
 
the
 
Company
 
repurchased
264,282
 
shares
 
for
 
$
828,181
.
 
The
 
Board
 
of
Directors
 
authorized
 
an
 
increase
 
of
1,000,000
 
shares
 
in
 
the
 
Company’s
 
share
 
repurchase
 
program
 
on
December 23, 2024.
 
Earnings
 
Per
 
Share:
ASC
 
260
 
Earnings
 
Per
 
Share
 
requires
 
dual
 
presentation
 
of
 
basic
 
EPS
 
and
diluted
 
EPS
 
on
 
the
 
face
 
of
 
all
 
income
 
statements
 
for
 
all
 
entities
 
with
 
complex
 
capital
 
structures.
 
The
Company
 
has
 
presented
 
one
 
basic
 
EPS
 
and
 
one
 
diluted
 
EPS
 
amount
 
for
 
all
 
common
 
shares
 
in
 
the
accompanying Consolidated Statements of
 
Income (Loss) and
 
Comprehensive Income (Loss).
 
While the
Company’s certificate
 
of incorporation provides
 
the right for
 
the Board
 
of Directors to
 
declare dividends
on Class
 
A shares
 
without declaration
 
of commensurate
 
dividends on
 
Class B
 
shares, the
 
Company has
historically paid the same dividends
 
to both Class A and
 
Class B shareholders and the
 
Board of Directors
has resolved to
 
continue this practice.
 
Accordingly, the
 
Company’s allocation
 
of income for
 
purposes of
EPS
 
computation is
 
the
 
same for
 
Class
 
A and
 
Class B
 
shares and
 
the
 
EPS
 
amounts reported
 
herein are
applicable to both Class A and Class B shares.
 
Basic
 
EPS
 
is
 
computed
 
as
 
net
 
earnings
 
(loss)
 
less
 
earnings
 
allocated
 
to
 
non-vested
 
equity
 
awards
divided
 
by
 
the
 
weighted
 
average
 
number
 
of
 
common
 
shares
 
outstanding
 
for
 
the
 
period.
 
Diluted
 
EPS
reflects the potential dilution that could occur from common shares issuable through stock options and the
Employee Stock Purchase Plan.
 
The following table reflects
 
the basic and
 
diluted EPS calculations for
 
the fiscal years ended
 
February
1, 2025, February 3, 2024 and January 28, 2023:
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
`
Fiscal Year Ended
February 1, 2025
February 3, 2024
January 28, 2023
Numerator
(Dollars in thousands)
Net earnings (loss)
$
(18,057)
$
(23,941)
$
29
(Earnings) loss allocated to non-vested equity awards
(548)
1,347
12
Net earnings (loss) available to common stockholders
$
(18,605)
$
(22,594)
$
41
Denominator
Basic weighted average common shares outstanding
19,249,081
19,389,907
19,930,960
Diluted weighted average common shares outstanding
19,249,081
19,389,907
19,930,960
Net income (loss) per common share
Basic earnings (loss) per share
$
(0.97)
$
(1.17)
$
-
Diluted earnings (loss) per share
$
(0.97)
$
(1.17)
$
-
 
Vendor
 
Allowances:
The
 
Company
 
receives
 
certain
 
allowances
 
from
 
vendors
 
primarily
 
related
 
to
purchase discounts and markdown and
 
damage allowances. All allowances are
 
reflected in Cost of
 
goods
sold
 
as
 
earned
 
when
 
the
 
related
 
products
 
are
 
sold.
 
Cash
 
consideration
 
received
 
from
 
a
 
vendor
 
is
presumed
 
to
 
be
 
a
 
reduction
 
of
 
the
 
purchase
 
cost
 
of
 
merchandise
 
and
 
is
 
reflected
 
as
 
a
 
reduction
 
of
inventory.
 
The Company does not receive cooperative advertising allowances.
 
Income
 
Taxes:
The
 
Company
 
files
 
a
 
consolidated
 
federal
 
income
 
tax
 
return.
 
Income
 
taxes
 
are
provided
 
based
 
on
 
the
 
asset
 
and
 
liability
 
method
 
of
 
accounting,
 
whereby
 
deferred
 
income
 
taxes
 
are
THE CATO CORPORATION
NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
 
— (Continued)
49
provided
 
for
 
temporary
 
differences
 
between
 
the
 
financial
 
reporting
 
basis
 
and
 
the
 
tax
 
basis
 
of
 
the
Company’s assets and liabilities.
 
Unrecognized tax
 
benefits for
 
uncertain tax
 
positions are
 
established in
 
accordance
 
with
 
ASC 740
 
Income Taxes
 
when, despite
 
the fact
 
that the
 
tax return
 
positions are
 
supportable, the
 
Company believes
these positions may be
 
challenged and the
 
results are uncertain.
 
The Company adjusts
 
these liabilities in
light
 
of
 
changing
 
facts
 
and
 
circumstances.
 
Potential
 
accrued
 
interest
 
and
 
penalties
 
related
 
to
unrecognized
 
tax
 
benefits
 
within
 
operations
 
are
 
recognized
 
as
 
a
 
component
 
of
 
Income
 
before
 
income
taxes.
 
 
The Company assesses the
 
likelihood that deferred tax
 
assets will be
 
able to be
 
realized, and based
 
on
that assessment, the Company will determine if a valuation allowance should
 
be recorded.
 
In addition,
 
the Tax
 
Cuts and
 
Jobs
 
Act implemented
 
a
 
new minimum
 
tax
 
on
 
global intangible
 
low-
taxed income
 
(“GILTI”).
 
The Company has
 
elected to
 
account for
 
GILTI
 
tax in
 
the period
 
in which
 
it is
incurred, which is included as a component of its current year provision
 
for income taxes.
 
Deferred
 
Tax
 
Valuation
 
Allowance:
The
 
Company assesses
 
the
 
likelihood
 
that
 
deferred
 
tax
 
assets
will
 
be
 
realized
 
in
 
light
 
of
 
the
 
Company’s
 
current
 
financial
 
performance
 
and
 
projected
 
future
 
financial
performance. Based on this
 
assessment, the Company then
 
determines if a valuation
 
allowance should be
recorded.
 
If the
 
Company concludes that
 
it is
 
more likely than
 
not that
 
the Company will
 
not be
 
able to
realize its tax deferred assets, a valuation allowance is recorded for
 
the proportion of the deferred tax asset
it determines may not be realized.
 
Store
 
Opening
 
Costs:
Costs
 
relating
 
to
 
the
 
opening
 
of
 
new
 
stores
 
or
 
the
 
relocating
 
or
 
expanding
 
of
 
existing
 
stores
 
are
 
expensed
 
as
 
incurred.
 
A
 
portion
 
of
 
construction,
 
design,
 
and
 
site
selection costs are capitalized to new, relocated and remodeled stores.
 
Insurance:
The Company is self-insured with respect to employee health care, workers’ compensation
and
 
general
 
liability.
 
The
 
Company’s
 
self-insurance
 
liabilities
 
are
 
based
 
on
 
the
 
total
 
estimated
 
cost
 
of
claims filed and estimates of
 
claims incurred but not reported, less
 
amounts paid against such claims,
 
and
are
 
not discounted.
 
Management reviews
 
current and
 
historical claims
 
data in
 
developing its
 
estimates.
The Company has stop-loss
 
insurance coverage for individual claims in
 
excess of $
375,000
 
for employee
healthcare, $
350,000
 
for workers’ compensation and $
250,000
 
for general liability.
 
 
Fair Value
 
of Financial Instruments:
 
The Company’s
 
carrying values of
 
financial instruments, such
as
 
cash
 
and
 
cash
 
equivalents,
 
short-term
 
investments,
 
and
 
restricted
 
cash,
 
approximate their
 
fair
 
values
due to their short terms to maturity and/or their variable interest rates.
 
Stock Based
 
Compensation:
 
The Company records
 
compensation expense associated
 
with restricted
stock
 
and
 
other
 
forms
 
of
 
equity
 
compensation
 
in
 
accordance
 
with
 
ASC
 
718
 
-
Compensation
 
 
Stock
Compensation.
 
Compensation
 
cost
 
associated
 
with
 
stock
 
awards
 
recognized
 
in
 
all
 
years
 
presented
includes: 1) amortization related to
 
the remaining unvested portion of
 
all stock awards based
 
on the grant
date fair value and 2) adjustments for the effects of actual forfeitures versus initial
 
estimated forfeitures.
 
Subsequent
 
Events:
 
On
 
March
 
13,
 
2025,
 
the
 
Company,
 
as
 
borrower,
 
and
 
certain
 
other
 
domestic
subsidiaries,
 
as
 
borrowers
 
and
 
guarantors,
 
entered
 
into
 
a
 
Credit
 
Agreement
 
(the
 
“ABL
 
Credit
Agreement”) and
 
related
 
loan
 
documents, by
 
and
 
among the
 
Company,
 
certain
 
other
 
of
 
the
 
Company’s
domestic
 
subsidiaries,
 
and
 
Wells
 
Fargo
 
Bank,
 
National
 
Association,
 
as
 
the
 
lender
 
(the
 
“Lender”),
 
to
establish an asset-based revolving credit facility (the “ABL Facility”) in an amount up to $
35
 
million. The
proceeds from the ABL
 
Facility may be used to
 
provide funding for ongoing working capital
 
and general
THE CATO CORPORATION
NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
 
— (Continued)
50
corporate purposes. The ABL Credit Agreement replaces
 
the credit agreement, dated as of
 
May 19, 2022,
as
 
amended from
 
time to
 
time, between
 
the Company,
 
as
 
borrower,
 
certain domestic
 
subsidiaries of
 
the
Company,
 
as
 
guarantors,
 
and
 
the
 
Lender,
 
as
 
lender
 
and
 
agent
 
(the
 
“Prior
 
Credit
 
Agreement”).
 
No
principal or accrued interest was outstanding under
 
the credit facility under the Prior
 
Credit Agreement at
the time of its termination on March 13, 2025.
 
The ABL Facility may be
 
used for revolving credit
 
loans and letters of
 
credit from time to
 
time up to
a maximum principal amount of $
35
 
million, less an amount equal to the greater of (a)
10.0
% of the lesser
of the borrowing base described below and $
35
 
million and (b) $
5
 
million, subject to the other limitations
described below. The ABL Facility includes a $
15
 
million uncommitted accordion feature that permits the
borrowers,
 
under
 
certain
 
conditions,
 
to
 
solicit
 
the
 
Lender
 
to
 
provide
 
additional
 
revolving
 
loan
commitments
 
to
 
increase
 
the
 
aggregate
 
amount
 
of
 
the
 
revolving
 
loan
 
commitments
 
up
 
to
 
a
 
maximum
principal amount
 
of
 
$
50
 
million.
 
The
 
ABL Facility
 
contains
 
a
 
sub-facility that
 
allows
 
the
 
Company to
issue
 
letters
 
of
 
credit
 
in
 
an
 
aggregate
 
amount
 
not
 
to
 
exceed
 
$
5
 
million.
 
Availability
 
under
 
the
 
ABL
Facility at closing of the ABL Credit Agreement was $
30
 
million.
The
 
amount
 
available
 
under
 
the
 
ABL
 
Facility
 
is
 
limited
 
by
 
a
 
borrowing
 
base
 
consisting
 
of
 
certain
eligible credit card receivables and inventory, reduced by specified reserves, as follows:
 
90
% of eligible credit card receivable, plus
 
90
% of net recovery percentage of eligible inventory multiplied by most recent appraised value of
such
 
inventory,
 
calculated at
 
the
 
lower
 
of
 
(a)
 
cost
 
computed on
 
a
 
first-in first-out
 
basis and
 
(b)
market value (net of intercompany profits and certain other adjustments), minus
applicable reserves (as defined in the ABL Credit Agreement).
 
 
The
 
ABL Facility
 
permits borrowings
 
based
 
upon (a)
 
base
 
rate (calculated
 
as
 
the
 
greatest of
 
(i) the
federal funds rate plus
1/2%
, (ii) the SOFR rate
 
described below for an interest period of
 
one month, plus
1
%, (iii) the
 
rate of interest
 
announced, from time to
 
time, as the
 
Lender’s “prime rate”
 
and (iv)
0
%) and
(b)
 
SOFR rate
 
of
 
one, three
 
or
 
six-month interest
 
periods (with
 
SOFR defined
 
as
 
the
 
secured overnight
financing
 
rate
 
administered
 
by
 
the
 
Federal
 
Reserve
 
Bank
 
of
 
New
 
York
 
(or
 
its
 
successor)).
 
Base
 
rate
borrowings
 
bear
 
interest
 
at
 
an
 
annual
 
rate
 
equal
 
to
50
 
basis
 
points
 
above
 
base
 
rate.
 
SOFR
 
borrowings
bear interest at an annual
 
rate equal to SOFR for
 
the interest period selected plus
10
 
basis points plus
150
basis points.
 
The ABL
 
Facility charges
 
a fee
 
on unutilized
 
commitments at
 
an annual
 
rate of
37.5
 
basis
points if
 
at least
 
half of
 
the ABL
 
commitments are
 
unutilized and
 
at an
 
annual rate
 
of
25
 
basis points
 
if
less than
 
half of
 
the ABL
 
commitments are
 
unutilized.
 
In addition,
 
the ABL
 
Facility charges
 
a monthly
collateral monitoring fee and customary fees for letters of credit.
 
 
The ABL Facility
 
matures on March
 
13, 2028.
 
The ABL Facility
 
may be prepaid
 
from time to
 
time,
in
 
whole
 
or
 
in
 
part,
 
without
 
a
 
prepayment
 
penalty
 
or
 
premium.
 
In
 
addition,
 
customary
 
mandatory
prepayments
 
of
 
the
 
loans
 
under
 
the
 
ABL
 
Facility
 
are
 
required
 
upon
 
the
 
occurrence
 
of
 
certain
 
events
including, without limitation, outstanding borrowing exposures
 
exceeding the borrowing base and
 
certain
dispositions of assets outside of the ordinary course of business.
 
Accrued interest is payable (a) at the end
of each interest period for borrowings based upon the SOFR
 
rate (but not to exceed three months) and
 
(b)
monthly for borrowings based upon the base rate.
 
 
The
 
Company’s
 
obligations under
 
the
 
ABL Facility
 
(and
 
certain related
 
obligations) are
 
guaranteed
by the
 
other borrowers
 
and the
 
guarantors.
 
Each of
 
the Company’s
 
future domestic
 
subsidiaries is
 
also
required
 
to
 
guarantee
 
the
 
ABL
 
Facility
 
on
 
a
 
senior
 
secured
 
basis
 
(such
 
future
 
guarantors
 
and
 
the
borrowers
 
and
 
guarantors
 
referred
 
to
 
in
 
the
 
first
 
sentence
 
of
 
this
 
paragraph,
 
the
 
“Loan
 
Parties”).
 
In
addition, the
 
borrowers’ obligations are
 
secured on
 
a first-priority
 
basis by
 
all assets
 
of the
 
Loan Parties,
subject to certain exceptions.
 
THE CATO CORPORATION
NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
 
— (Continued)
51
 
Cash Dominion.
 
Under the
 
terms of
 
the
 
ABL Facility,
 
if (i)
 
an event
 
of
 
default exists
 
or (ii)
 
excess
borrowing availability
 
under
 
the
 
ABL Facility
 
(the
 
“Excess
 
Availability”)
 
falls
 
below
 
the
 
greater of
 
(a)
15.0
%
 
of
 
the
 
lesser
 
of
 
the
 
borrowing
 
base
 
and
 
$
35
 
million
 
and
 
(b)
 
$
10
 
million,
 
the
 
Loan
 
Parties
 
will
become subject
 
to
 
cash dominion,
 
which will
 
require prepayment
 
of
 
loans
 
under the
 
ABL Facility
 
with
the cash deposited in
 
certain deposit accounts of
 
the Loan Parties, including
 
a concentration account, and
will
 
restrict
 
the
 
Loan
 
Parties’
 
ability
 
to
 
transfer
 
cash
 
from
 
their
 
concentration
 
account.
 
Such
 
cash
dominion period
 
will end,
 
in the
 
case of
 
an event
 
of default,
 
when the
 
event of
 
default no
 
longer exists,
and in the case of when Excess Availability falls below the threshold described in the first sentence of this
paragraph, when Excess Availability exceeds such threshold for a period of
30
 
consecutive days.
 
Affirmative
 
and
 
Restrictive
 
Covenants.
 
The
 
ABL
 
Credit
 
Agreement
 
governing
 
the
 
ABL
 
Facility
contains
 
customary representations
 
and
 
warranties, affirmative
 
and
 
negative covenants
 
(subject, in
 
each
case,
 
to
 
exceptions
 
and
 
qualifications),
 
and
 
events
 
of
 
defaults,
 
including
 
covenants
 
that
 
limit
 
the
Company’s ability to, among other things:
 
incur additional indebtedness;
create liens on its assets;
make investments, including loans and advances to foreign subsidiaries;
 
pay dividends and make other restricted payments;
 
sell certain assets outside of the ordinary course of business;
 
consolidate, merge, sell or otherwise dispose of all or substantially all of the Company’s assets;
 
make acquisitions; and
enter into transactions with affiliates.
 
 
Restrictions
 
relating
 
to
 
permitted
 
acquisitions,
 
permitted
 
investments,
 
prepayment
 
of
 
other
indebtedness,
 
and
 
restricted
 
payments
 
are
 
substantially
 
less,
 
or
 
not
 
applicable
 
in
 
the
 
case
 
of
 
restricted
payments, if the Company can satisfy the following payment conditions: (i) there is
 
no default or event of
default under
 
the ABL
 
Facility,
 
(ii) there
 
are
no
 
revolving credit loans
 
outstanding, (iii) the
 
Loan Parties
have unrestricted
 
cash of
 
greater than
 
$
20
 
million, (iv)
 
the Lender
 
receives at
 
least three
 
business days’
prior
 
written
 
notice
 
of
 
such
 
event,
 
including
 
information
 
about
 
the
 
estimated
 
date
 
and
 
amount
 
of
 
the
payment
 
and
 
a
 
reasonable
 
description
 
of
 
such
 
event,
 
and
 
(v)
 
Lender
 
receives
 
a
 
certificate
 
certifying
compliance with the foregoing clauses and demonstrating the calculations required
 
thereby.
 
 
Recently Adopted Accounting
 
Pronouncements:
 
In November 2023,
 
the FASB
 
issued ASU
 
2023-
07, “Segment Reporting (Topic
 
280): Improvements to Reportable Segment Disclosures,”
 
which requires
enhanced
 
disclosures
 
about
 
significant
 
segment
 
expenses.
 
This
 
guidance
 
was
 
adopted
 
by
 
the
 
Company
during the
 
fourth quarter
 
of 2024
 
and requires
 
retrospective application
 
to
 
all prior
 
periods presented
 
in
the
 
financial statements.
 
Refer to
 
Note 13
 
of
 
the
 
Company's financial
 
statements in
 
this
 
Form 10-K
 
for
additional information related to segment expenses.
 
Recently Issued Accounting Pronouncements:
 
In December 2023, the
 
FASB
 
issued ASU 2023-09,
“Income Taxes (Topic
 
740): Improvements to Income Tax Disclosures,” which modifies the requirements
on income tax disclosures to require disaggregated information about
 
a reporting entity’s effective tax rate
reconciliation
 
as
 
well
 
as
 
information
 
on
 
income
 
taxes
 
paid.
 
This
 
guidance
 
is
 
effective
 
for
 
fiscal
 
years
beginning after
 
December 15, 2024
 
for all
 
public business
 
entities, with early
 
adoption and retrospective
application
 
permitted.
 
The
 
Company
 
is
 
currently
 
in
 
the
 
process
 
of
 
evaluating
 
the
 
potential
 
impact
 
of
adoption of this new guidance on its consolidated financial statements and
 
related disclosures.
 
In November
 
2024, the
 
FASB
 
issued
 
ASU 2024-03,
 
“Income Statement—Reporting
 
Comprehensive
Income—Expense
 
Disaggregation
 
Disclosures
 
(Subtopic
 
220-40):
 
Disaggregation
 
of
 
Income
 
Statement
 
 
 
 
 
 
THE CATO CORPORATION
NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
 
— (Continued)
52
Expenses,”
 
which
 
requires
 
public
 
entities
 
to
 
disclose,
 
on
 
an
 
annual
 
and
 
interim
 
basis,
 
disaggregated
information
 
in
 
the
 
footnotes
 
about
 
specified
 
information
 
related
 
to
 
certain
 
costs
 
and
 
expenses.
 
This
guidance is effective for annual periods beginning after December 15, 2026 and for interim periods within
fiscal years beginning after December 15, 2027, with early adoption permitted.
 
The Company is currently
in
 
the
 
process
 
of
 
evaluating
 
the
 
potential
 
impact
 
of
 
adoption
 
of
 
this
 
new
 
guidance
 
on
 
its
 
consolidated
financial statements and related disclosures.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
2.
 
Interest and Other Income:
The components of Interest and other income are shown below (in thousands):
Fiscal Year Ended
February 1, 2025
February 3, 2024
January 28, 2023
Dividend income
$
(75)
$
(78)
$
(47)
Interest income
(5,019)
(3,919)
(1,876)
State recovery grant
-
-
(1,431)
Insurance proceeds
-
-
(1,683)
Miscellaneous income
(1,389)
(1,079)
(896)
Net loss (gain) on investment sales
(5,344)
(25)
31
Interest and other income
$
(11,827)
$
(5,101)
$
(5,902)
 
In
 
fiscal
 
2022,
 
the
 
Company
 
received
 
$
1.4
 
million
 
from
 
the
 
state
 
of
 
North
 
Carolina’s
 
Business
Recovery
 
Program,
 
which
 
provided
 
aid
 
to
 
eligible
 
North
 
Carolina
 
businesses
 
that
 
suffered
 
significant
economic
 
damage from
 
the
 
COVID-19 pandemic.
 
Additionally,
 
in
 
fiscal
 
2022,
 
the
 
Company received
$
1.7
 
million in property insurance claims, including business interruption, from Hurricanes
 
Ida and Laura
in 2021 and 2020.
 
3.
 
Short-Term Investments:
 
At
 
February
 
1,
 
2025,
 
the
 
Company’s
 
investment
 
portfolio
 
was
 
primarily
 
invested
 
in
 
corporate
 
and
governmental debt
 
securities held
 
in managed
 
accounts.
 
These securities
 
are classified
 
as available-for-
sale as they are highly liquid and are recorded on the Consolidated Balance Sheets at estimated fair value,
with
 
unrealized
 
gains
 
and
 
temporary
 
losses
 
reported
 
net
 
of
 
taxes
 
in
 
Accumulated
 
other
 
comprehensive
income.
 
The
 
table
 
below
 
reflects
 
gross
 
accumulated
 
unrealized
 
gains
 
(losses)
 
in
 
short-term
 
investments
 
at
February 1, 2025 and February 3, 2024 (in thousands):
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
`
February 1, 2025
February 3, 2024
Debt securities
Debt securities
issued by the U.S
issued by the U.S
Government, its various
Government, its various
States, municipalities
Corporate
States, municipalities
Corporate
and agencies
debt
and agencies
debt
of each
securities
Total
of each
securities
Total
Cost basis
$
5,878
$
51,392
$
57,270
$
30,989
$
48,320
$
79,309
Unrealized gains
-
163
163
-
38
38
Unrealized (loss)
(10)
-
(10)
(335)
-
(335)
Estimated fair value
$
5,868
$
51,555
$
57,423
$
30,654
$
48,358
$
79,012
 
Accumulated
 
other
 
comprehensive
 
income
 
on
 
the
 
Consolidated
 
Balance
 
Sheets
 
reflects
 
the
accumulated
 
unrealized
 
gains
 
and
 
losses
 
in
 
short-term investments
 
in
 
addition
 
to
 
unrealized
 
gains
 
and
losses
 
from
 
equity
 
investments
 
and
 
restricted
 
cash
 
investments.
 
The
 
table
 
below
 
reflects
 
gross
accumulated unrealized
 
gains and
 
losses in
 
these investments
 
at February
 
1, 2025
 
and February
 
3, 2024
(in thousands):
THE CATO CORPORATION
NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
 
— (Continued)
53
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
`
February 1, 2025
February 3, 2024
Deferred
Unrealized
Deferred
Unrealized
Unrealized
Tax Benefit/
Net Gain/
Unrealized
Tax Benefit/
Net Gain/
Security Type
Gain/(Loss)
(Expense)
(Loss)
Gain/(Loss)
(Expense)
(Loss)
Short-Term Investments
$
153
$
-
$
153
$
(297)
$
68
$
(229)
Equity Investments
-
-
-
811
(187)
624
Total
$
153
$
-
$
153
$
514
$
(119)
$
395
 
 
 
 
THE CATO CORPORATION
NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
 
— (Continued)
54
4.
 
Fair Value Measurements:
 
The following tables set forth information regarding the Company’s financial
 
assets that are measured
at fair value as of February 1, 2025 and February 3, 2024 (in thousands):
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
`
Prices in
 
Active
Significant
 
Markets for
Other
Significant
 
Identical
Observable
Unobservable
 
February 1, 2025
Assets
Inputs
Inputs
Description
Level 1
Level 2
Level 3
Assets:
 
State/Municipal Bonds
$
1,244
$
-
$
1,244
$
-
 
Corporate Bonds
51,326
-
51,326
-
 
U.S. Treasury/Agencies Notes and Bonds
4,624
-
4,624
-
 
Cash Surrender Value of Life Insurance
9,301
-
-
9,301
 
Asset-backed Securities (ABS)
229
-
229
-
Total Assets
$
66,724
$
-
$
57,423
$
9,301
Liabilities:
 
Deferred Compensation
$
(8,548)
$
-
$
-
$
(8,548)
Total Liabilities
$
(8,548)
$
-
$
-
$
(8,548)
Prices in
 
Active
Significant
 
Markets for
Other
Significant
 
Identical
Observable
Unobservable
 
February 3, 2024
Assets
Inputs
Inputs
Description
Level 1
Level 2
Level 3
Assets:
 
State/Municipal Bonds
$
12,540
$
-
$
12,540
$
-
 
Corporate Bonds
45,400
-
45,400
-
 
U.S. Treasury/Agencies Notes and Bonds
18,114
-
18,114
-
 
Cash Surrender Value of Life Insurance
8,586
-
-
8,586
 
Asset-backed Securities (ABS)
2,958
-
2,958
-
 
Corporate Equities
1,084
1,084
-
-
Total Assets
$
88,682
$
1,084
$
79,012
$
8,586
Liabilities:
 
Deferred Compensation
$
(8,654)
$
-
$
-
$
(8,654)
Total Liabilities
$
(8,654)
$
-
$
-
$
(8,654)
 
The
 
Company’s
 
investment
 
portfolio
 
was
 
primarily
 
invested
 
in
 
corporate
 
bonds
 
and
 
taxable
governmental debt securities held in managed accounts
 
with underlying ratings of A or
 
better at February
1, 2025. The state,
 
municipal and corporate bonds and
 
asset-backed securities have contractual maturities
which range from
nine days
 
to
2.8 years
. The U.S. Treasury notes have contractual maturities which range
from
13 days
 
to
2.5 years
. These
 
securities are classified
 
as available-for-sale
 
and are
 
recorded as
 
Short-
term
 
investments
 
and Other
 
assets
 
on the
 
accompanying Consolidated
 
Balance Sheets.
 
These
 
assets
 
are
carried
 
at
 
fair
 
value
 
with
 
unrealized
 
gains
 
and
 
losses
 
reported
 
net
 
of
 
taxes
 
in
 
Accumulated
 
other
comprehensive income.
 
Additionally,
 
at
 
February
 
1,
 
2025
 
and
 
February
 
3,
 
2024,
 
the
 
Company
 
had
 
$
0.0
 
million
 
and
 
$
1.1
million of
 
corporate equities,
 
respectively,
 
which are
 
recorded within
 
Other assets
 
in the
 
accompanying
Consolidated Balance Sheets.
 
Level
 
1
 
category
 
securities
 
are
 
measured
 
at
 
fair
 
value
 
using
 
quoted
 
active
 
market
 
prices.
 
Level
 
2
THE CATO CORPORATION
NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
 
— (Continued)
55
investment
 
securities
 
include
 
corporate,
 
state
 
and
 
municipal
 
bonds
 
for
 
which
 
quoted
 
prices
 
may
 
not
 
be
available on active exchanges for identical
 
instruments.
 
Their fair value is principally based on market
 
values
determined by management with the assistance
 
of a third-party pricing service.
 
Since quoted prices in active
markets
 
for
 
identical
 
assets
 
are
 
not
 
available,
 
these
 
prices
 
are
 
determined
 
by
 
the
 
pricing
 
service
 
using
observable market information such as quotes from less active markets and/or quoted prices of securities with
similar characteristics, among other factors.
 
Deferred
 
compensation
 
plan
 
assets
 
consist
 
primarily
 
of
 
life
 
insurance
 
policies.
 
These
 
life
 
insurance
policies are valued based on the cash surrender value of the insurance contract, which is determined based
on
 
such
 
factors
 
as
 
the
 
fair
 
value
 
of
 
the
 
underlying
 
assets
 
and
 
discounted
 
cash
 
flow
 
and
 
are
 
therefore
classified
 
within
 
Level
 
3
 
of
 
the
 
valuation
 
hierarchy.
 
The
 
Level
 
3
 
liability
 
associated
 
with
 
the
 
life
insurance
 
policies
 
represents
 
a
 
deferred
 
compensation
 
obligation,
 
the
 
value
 
of
 
which
 
is
 
tracked
 
via
underlying
 
insurance
 
funds’
 
net
 
asset
 
values,
 
as
 
recorded
 
in
 
Other
 
noncurrent
 
liabilities
 
in
 
the
Consolidated Balance Sheets. These
 
funds are designed
 
to mirror the
 
return of existing
 
mutual funds and
money market funds that are observable and actively traded.
 
THE CATO CORPORATION
NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
 
— (Continued)
56
 
The following tables summarize
 
the change in fair
 
value of the Company’s
 
financial assets and liabilities
measured using Level 3 inputs for the
 
years ended February 1, 2025 and
February 3, 2024
 
(in thousands):
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
`
Fair Value
Measurements Using
Significant Unobservable
Asset Inputs (Level 3)
Cash
Surrender Value
Beginning Balance at February 3, 2024
$
8,586
 
Total gains or (losses)
 
Included in interest and other income (or
 
changes in net assets)
715
Ending Balance at February 1, 2025
$
9,301
Fair Value
Measurements Using
Significant Unobservable
Liability Inputs (Level 3)
Deferred
Compensation
Beginning Balance at February 3, 2024
$
(8,654)
 
Redemptions
1,175
 
Additions
(220)
 
Total (gains) or losses
 
Included in interest and other income (or
 
changes in net assets)
(849)
Ending Balance at February 1, 2025
$
(8,548)
Fair Value
Measurements Using
Significant Unobservable
Asset Inputs (Level 3)
Cash
Surrender Value
Beginning Balance at January 28, 2023
$
9,274
 
Withdrawals
(1,168)
 
Total gains or (losses)
 
Included in interest and other income (or
 
changes in net assets)
480
Ending Balance at February 3, 2024
$
8,586
Fair Value
Measurements Using
Significant Unobservable
Liability Inputs (Level 3)
Deferred
Compensation
Beginning Balance at January 28, 2023
$
(8,903)
 
Redemptions
1,119
 
Additions
(292)
 
Total (gains) or losses
 
Included in interest and other income (or
 
changes in net assets)
(578)
Ending Balance at February 3, 2024
$
(8,654)
THE CATO CORPORATION
NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
 
— (Continued)
57
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
5.
Accounts Receivable:
Accounts receivable consist of the following (in thousands):
February 1, 2025
February 3, 2024
Customer accounts — principally deferred payment accounts
 
$
11,428
$
11,614
Income tax receivable
5,425
6,285
Miscellaneous receivables
 
3,365
7,171
Bank card receivables
4,903
5,386
Total
 
25,121
30,456
Less allowance for customer credit losses
581
705
Accounts receivable — net
 
$
24,540
$
29,751
 
Finance charge
 
and late
 
charge
 
revenue on
 
customer deferred
 
payment accounts
 
totaled $
2,696,000
,
$
2,640,000
 
and $
2,243,000
 
for the fiscal
years ended February 1, 2025, February 3, 2024
 
and January 28,
2023,
 
respectively,
 
and
 
charges
 
against
 
the
 
allowance
 
for
 
customer
 
credit
 
losses
 
were
 
approximately
$
654,000
,
 
$
554,000
 
and
 
$
280,000
 
for
 
the
 
fiscal
 
years
 
ended
 
February
 
1,
 
2025,
 
February
 
3,
 
2024
 
and
January
 
28,
 
2023,
 
respectively.
 
Expenses
 
relating
 
to
 
the
 
allowance
 
for
 
customer
 
credit
 
losses
 
are
classified
 
as
 
a
 
component
 
of
 
Selling,
 
general
 
and
 
administrative
 
expense
 
in
 
the
 
accompanying
Consolidated Statements of Income (Loss) and Comprehensive Income
 
(Loss).
 
During fiscal 2024, the Company received $
8.6
 
million from the insurance claim settlement and sale of
its corporate
 
jet, which
 
had sustained
 
damage in
 
fiscal 2023.
 
The Company
 
recorded a
 
net gain
 
of $
3.2
million which
 
is included
 
in Interest
 
and other
 
income in
 
the accompanying
 
Consolidated Statements
 
of
Income (Loss) and Comprehensive Income (Loss) for the year ended February
 
1, 2025.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
6.
Property and Equipment:
Property and equipment consist of the following (in thousands):
February 1, 2025
February 3, 2024
Land and improvements
 
$
13,593
$
13,755
Buildings
 
35,950
35,756
Leasehold improvements
 
72,608
74,782
Fixtures and equipment
 
161,950
155,357
Information technology equipment and software
33,751
39,904
Construction in progress
 
928
18,034
Total
 
318,780
337,588
Less accumulated depreciation
 
258,454
273,566
Property and equipment — net
 
$
60,326
$
64,022
 
Construction in progress primarily represents costs related to new
 
store development,
distribution center improvements and investments in new technology.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
7.
Accrued Expenses:
Accrued expenses consist of the following (in thousands):
February 1, 2025
February 3, 2024
Accrued employment and related items
 
$
8,189
$
4,736
Property and other taxes
 
13,261
13,544
Accrued self-insurance
 
8,593
9,500
Fixed assets
329
942
Other
 
11,345
8,682
Total
 
$
41,717
$
37,404
THE CATO CORPORATION
NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
 
— (Continued)
58
8.
 
Financing Arrangements:
At February 1,
 
2025, the Company had
 
an unsecured revolving credit
 
agreement, which provided
 
for
borrowings of
 
up to
 
$
35.0
 
million less
 
the balance
 
of any
 
revocable letters
 
of credit
 
related to
 
purchase
commitments, and
 
was committed
 
through
May 2027
. The
 
credit agreement
 
contained various
 
financial
covenants and limitations, including the maintenance of specific
 
financial ratios with which the Company
was not in compliance as of
 
February 1, 2025. There were
no
 
borrowings outstanding, or any outstanding
letters of
 
credit, under
 
this credit
 
facility as
 
of the
 
fiscal year
 
ended February
 
1, 2025
 
or
 
the fiscal
 
year
ended
 
February 3,
 
2024.
 
On
 
March
 
13,
 
2025,
 
the
 
Company terminated
 
the
 
unsecured revolving
 
line
 
of
credit when it entered into
 
a new $
35.0
 
million asset-backed revolving line of credit
 
(the “ABL Facility”)
secured primarily by
 
inventory and third-party
 
credit card receivables.
 
As of March
 
31, 2025 there
 
were
no
 
borrowings
 
under
 
the
 
ABL
 
Facility
 
and
 
availability
 
under
 
the
 
ABL
 
Facility
 
was
 
$
30.0
 
million.
 
For
additional information regarding the ABL Facility, see Note 1 to the Consolidated Financial Statements.
The
 
Company
 
had
no
 
outstanding
 
revocable
 
letters
 
of
 
credit
 
relating
 
to
 
purchase
 
commitments
 
at
February 1, 2025 or at February 3, 2024.
 
On April 25,
 
2024, the Company amended
 
the now terminated
 
unsecured revolving credit agreement
to modify a definition used in calculating the Company’s
 
minimum EBITDAR coverage ratio to add back
certain
 
income
 
tax
 
receivables
 
included
 
in
 
the
 
calculation
 
of
 
the
 
ratio.
 
On
 
November
 
1,
 
2024,
 
the
Company
 
amended
 
the
 
now
 
terminated
 
unsecured
 
revolving
 
credit
 
agreement
 
to
 
lower
 
the
 
minimum
EBITDAR
 
coverage
 
ratio
 
and
 
the
 
corresponding minimum
 
cash
 
and
 
investments
 
used
 
to
 
determine the
EBITDAR coverage ratio in exchange for a secured position in any
 
future borrowings.
9.
 
Stockholders’ Equity:
 
The
 
holders
 
of
 
Class A
 
Common
 
Stock
 
are
 
entitled
 
to
one vote per share
,
 
whereas
 
the
 
holders
 
of
Class B Common Stock are entitled
 
to
ten votes per share
. Each share of
 
Class B Common Stock may be
converted at any time into one share of Class A Common Stock. Subject to the rights of
 
the holders of any
shares of
 
Preferred Stock
 
that may
 
be outstanding
 
at the
 
time, in
 
the event
 
of liquidation,
 
dissolution or
winding
 
up
 
of
 
the
 
Company,
 
holders
 
of
 
Class A
 
Common
 
Stock
 
are
 
entitled
 
to
 
receive
 
a
 
preferential
distribution of $
1.00
 
per share of the
 
net assets of the Company.
 
Cash dividends on the
 
Class B Common
Stock cannot be
 
paid unless cash
 
dividends of at
 
least an equal
 
amount are paid
 
on the Class A
 
Common
Stock.
 
The
 
Company’s
 
certificate of
 
incorporation
 
provides that
 
shares
 
of
 
Class B Common
 
Stock
 
may be
transferred
 
only
 
to
 
certain
 
“Permitted
 
Transferees”
 
consisting
 
generally
 
of
 
the
 
lineal
 
descendants
 
of
holders
 
of
 
Class B
 
Common
 
Stock,
 
trusts
 
for
 
their
 
benefit,
 
corporations
 
and
 
partnerships
 
controlled
 
by
them and the
 
Company’s employee benefit
 
plans. Any transfer
 
of Class B Common Stock
 
in violation of
these
 
restrictions,
 
including
 
a
 
transfer
 
to
 
the
 
Company,
 
results
 
in
 
the
 
automatic
 
conversion
 
of
 
the
transferred
 
shares
 
of
 
Class B
 
Common
 
Stock
 
held
 
by
 
the
 
transferee
 
into
 
an
 
equal
 
number
 
of
 
shares
 
of
Class A Common Stock.
10.
 
Employee Benefit Plans:
 
The
 
Company
 
has
 
a
 
defined
 
contribution
 
retirement
 
savings
 
plan
 
(“401(k)
 
plan”)
 
which
 
covers
 
all
associates
 
who
 
meet
 
minimum
 
age
 
and
 
service
 
requirements.
The 401(k) plan allows participants to
contribute up to 75% of their annual compensation up to the maximum elective deferral, designated by
the Internal Revenue Service.
 
The Company
 
is obligated
 
to make
 
a minimum
 
contribution to
 
cover plan
administrative expenses.
 
Further Company
 
contributions
 
are
 
at the
 
discretion of
 
the
 
Board of
 
Directors.
The Company
 
made no
 
contribution for
 
the year
 
ended February
 
1, 2025.
 
The Company’s
 
contributions
THE CATO CORPORATION
NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
 
— (Continued)
59
for
 
the
 
years
 
ended
 
February
 
3,
 
2024
 
and
 
January
 
28,
 
2023
 
were
 
approximately
 
$
1,099,000
 
and
$
1,184,000
, respectively.
 
The Company has a trusteed, non-contributory Employee Stock Ownership Plan (“ESOP”), which
covers substantially all associates who meet minimum age and service requirements.
 
The amount
 
of the
Company’s discretionary
 
contribution to the ESOP
 
is determined by the
 
Compensation Committee of the
Board of Directors and
 
can be made in
 
Company Class A Common
 
stock or cash.
 
Due to a
 
net operating
loss
 
in
 
fiscal
 
2024
 
and
 
fiscal
 
2023,
 
the
 
Committee did
 
not
 
approve
 
a
 
contribution
 
to
 
the
 
ESOP
 
for
 
the
years
 
ended
 
February 1,
 
2025
 
and
 
February 3,
 
2024.
 
The
 
Company’s
 
contribution was
 
$
32,510
 
for
 
the
year ended January 28, 2023.
 
 
The Company is primarily self-insured for healthcare.
 
These costs are significant primarily due to the
large
 
number of
 
the Company’s
 
retail locations
 
and associates.
 
The Company’s
 
self-insurance liabilities
are
 
based
 
on the
 
total
 
estimated costs
 
of
 
claims filed
 
and estimates
 
of
 
claims incurred
 
but not
 
reported,
less
 
amounts
 
paid
 
against
 
such
 
claims.
 
Management
 
reviews
 
current
 
and
 
historical
 
claims
 
data
 
in
developing its
 
estimates. If
 
the underlying
 
facts and
 
circumstances of
 
the claims
 
change or
 
the historical
trend is not indicative of future trends, then the Company may be required to
 
record additional expense or
a
 
reduction
 
to
 
expense
 
which
 
could
 
be
 
material
 
to
 
the
 
Company’s
 
reported
 
results
 
of
 
operations
 
in
 
the
period recorded. The Company funds healthcare contributions
 
to a third-party provider.
 
11.
 
Leases:
 
The Company determines whether an
 
arrangement is a lease
 
at inception. The Company has
 
operating
leases for
 
stores,
 
offices,
 
warehouse space
 
and equipment.
 
Its
 
leases
 
have remaining
 
lease terms
 
of
one
year
 
to
10 years
, some of which include options to
 
extend the lease term for
up to five years
, and some of
which
 
include
 
options
 
to
 
terminate
 
the
 
lease
within one year
.
 
The
 
Company
 
considers
 
these
 
options
 
in
determining
 
the
 
lease term
 
used
 
to
 
establish its
 
right-of-use assets
 
and lease
 
liabilities. The
 
Company’s
lease agreements do not contain any material residual value guarantees or material
 
restrictive covenants.
 
As
 
most
 
of
 
the
 
Company’s
 
leases
 
do
 
not
 
provide
 
an
 
implicit
 
rate,
 
the
 
Company
 
uses
 
its
 
estimated
incremental
 
borrowing
 
rate
 
based
 
on
 
the
 
information
 
available
 
at
 
commencement
 
date
 
of
 
the
 
lease
 
in
determining the present value of lease payments.
 
The components of lease cost are shown below (in thousands):
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
`
Fiscal Year Ended
February 1, 2025
February 3, 2024
January 28, 2023
Operating lease cost (a)
$
67,174
$
70,363
$
71,513
Variable
 
lease cost (b)
$
2,275
$
2,646
$
3,127
(a) Includes right-of-use asset amortization of ($
0.8
) million, ($
1.3
) million, and ($
1.7
) million for the twelve months ended
February 1, 2025, February 3, 2024, and January 28, 2023 respectively.
(b) Primarily relates to monthly percentage rent for stores not presented on the balance sheet.
 
Supplemental cash flow
 
information and
 
non-cash activity related
 
to the
 
Company’s operating
 
leases
are as follows (in thousands):
THE CATO CORPORATION
NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
 
— (Continued)
60
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Operating cash flow information:
Fiscal Year Ended
February 1, 2025
February 3, 2024
January 28, 2023
Cash paid for amounts included in the measurement of
lease liabilities
$
60,717
$
65,872
$
67,194
Non-cash activity:
Right-of-use assets obtained in exchange for lease
obligations, net of rent violations
$
53,419
$
44,284
$
57,628
 
THE CATO CORPORATION
NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
 
— (Continued)
61
 
Weighted-average
 
remaining lease
 
term and
 
discount rate
 
for the
 
Company’s
 
operating leases
 
are as
follows:
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
`
As of
February 1, 2025
February 3, 2024
Weighted-average remaining lease term
2.3
 
years
2.3
 
years
Weighted-average discount rate
4.83%
4.58%
 
Maturities
 
of
 
lease
 
liabilities
 
by
 
fiscal
 
year
 
for
 
the
 
Company’s
 
operating
 
leases
 
are
 
as
 
follows
 
(in
thousands):
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Fiscal Year
2025
$
64,565
2026
43,208
2027
28,057
2028
16,596
2029
7,931
Thereafter
1,280
Total lease payments
161,637
Less: Imputed interest
15,741
Present value of lease liabilities
$
145,896
12.
 
Income Taxes:
 
Unrecognized
 
tax
 
benefits
 
for
 
uncertain
 
tax
 
positions,
 
primarily
 
recorded
 
in
 
Other
 
noncurrent
liabilities, are established in accordance
 
with ASC 740 when, despite
 
the fact that the
 
tax return positions
are
 
supportable, the
 
Company believes
 
these
 
positions may
 
be
 
challenged
 
and the
 
results
 
are
 
uncertain.
 
The
 
Company adjusts
 
these
 
liabilities
 
in
 
light
 
of
 
changing
 
facts
 
and
 
circumstances.
 
As
 
of
 
February
 
1,
2025, the
 
Company had
 
gross unrecognized
 
tax benefits
 
totaling approximately
 
$
3.2
 
million.
 
Including
the gross unrecognized tax benefits,
 
and interest and penalties, $
4.3
 
million would affect the
 
effective tax
rate
 
if
 
recognized.
 
The
 
Company
 
had
 
approximately
 
$
1.7
 
million,
 
$
1.8
 
million
 
and
 
$
2.0
 
million
 
of
interest and
 
penalties accrued related
 
to uncertain tax
 
positions as of
 
February 1, 2025,
 
February 3, 2024
and
 
January
 
28,
 
2023,
 
respectively.
 
The
 
Company
 
recognizes
 
interest
 
and
 
penalties
 
related
 
to
 
the
resolution of
 
uncertain tax
 
positions as
 
a component
 
of
 
income tax
 
expense.
 
The Company
 
recognized
$
295,000
,
 
$
393,000
 
and
 
$
517,000
 
of
 
interest
 
and
 
penalties
 
in
 
the
 
Consolidated
 
Statements
 
of
 
Income
(Loss)
 
and
 
Comprehensive Income
 
(Loss)
 
for
 
the
 
years
 
ended
 
February 1,
 
2025,
 
February
 
3,
 
2024
 
and
January
 
28,
 
2023,
 
respectively.
 
The
 
Company
 
is
 
no
 
longer
 
subject
 
to
 
U.S.
 
federal
 
income
 
tax
examinations
 
for
 
years
 
before
 
2021.
 
In
 
state
 
and
 
local
 
tax
 
jurisdictions,
 
the
 
Company
 
has
 
limited
exposure before
 
2014.
 
During the
 
next 12
 
months, various
 
state and
 
local taxing
 
authorities’ statutes
 
of
limitations
 
will
 
expire
 
and
 
certain
 
state
 
examinations
 
may
 
close,
 
which
 
could
 
result
 
in
 
a
 
potential
reduction of unrecognized tax benefits for which a range cannot be determined.
 
A reconciliation
 
of the
 
beginning and
 
ending amount
 
of gross
 
unrecognized tax benefits
 
is as
 
follows
(in thousands):
 
 
 
 
 
 
THE CATO CORPORATION
NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
 
— (Continued)
62
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
`
February 1, 2025
February 3, 2024
January 28, 2023
Fiscal Year
 
Ended
Balances, beginning
$
3,897
$
4,886
$
5,286
 
Additions for tax positions of the current year
65
76
431
 
Additions for tax positions of prior years
-
-
137
Reduction for tax positions of prior years for:
 
Lapses of applicable statutes of limitations
(728)
(1,065)
(968)
Balances, ending
$
3,234
$
3,897
$
4,886
 
The provision for income taxes consists of
 
the following (in thousands):
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
`
February 1, 2025
February 3, 2024
January 28, 2023
Fiscal Year
 
Ended
Current income taxes:
 
Federal
$
(128)
$
(148)
$
(817)
 
State
395
(334)
(231)
 
Foreign
1,677
1,898
2,403
 
Total
1,944
1,416
1,355
Deferred income taxes:
 
Federal
-
6,613
200
 
State
-
2,093
186
 
Foreign
-
18
-
 
Total
-
8,724
386
Total income tax expense
$
1,944
$
10,140
$
1,741
 
 
 
THE CATO CORPORATION
NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
 
— (Continued)
63
 
Significant
 
components of
 
the
 
Company’s deferred
 
tax assets
 
and liabilities
 
as of
 
February 1,
 
2025
 
and
February 3, 2024 are as follows
 
(in thousands):
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
February 1, 2025
February 3, 2024
Deferred tax assets:
Allowance for customer credit losses
$
124
$
150
Inventory valuation
1,584
1,076
Non-deductible accrued liabilities
1,587
1,367
Other taxes
834
862
Federal benefit of uncertain tax positions
655
712
Equity compensation expense
2,750
2,975
Federal tax credits
928
379
Net operating losses
11,147
7,854
Charitable contribution carryover
264
265
Lease liabilities
33,077
34,810
Property and equipment
4,735
3,885
Amortization
1,774
1,401
Other
1,776
2,150
Total deferred
 
tax assets before valuation allowance
61,235
57,886
Valuation
 
allowance
(23,151)
(17,998)
Total deferred
 
tax assets after valuation allowance
38,084
39,888
Deferred tax liabilities:
Right-of-Use assets
38,000
39,721
Accrued self-insurance reserves
84
167
Total deferred
 
tax liabilities
38,084
39,888
Net deferred tax assets
$
-
$
-
The changes in the valuation allowance are presented below:
February 1, 2025
February 3, 2024
January 28, 2023
Valuation
 
Allowance Beginning Balance
$
(17,998)
$
(5,058)
$
(4,473)
Net Valuation
 
Allowance (Additions) / Reductions
(5,153)
(12,940)
(585)
Valuation
 
Allowance Ending Balance
$
(23,151)
$
(17,998)
$
(5,058)
As of February
 
1, 2025, the
 
Company had $
8.0
 
million of net
 
deferred tax assets
 
attributable to state
 
net
operating
 
loss
 
carryforwards
 
and
 
$
0.2
 
million
 
of
 
other
 
deferred
 
tax
 
assets
 
affecting
 
state
 
income
 
tax.
 
The
Company assessed the likelihood that deferred tax
 
assets related to state net operating
 
loss carryforwards and
other deferred tax
 
assets affecting state
 
income tax will
 
be realized. Based
 
on this assessment,
 
the Company
concluded that it is more likely than not the Company will not be able to
 
realize $
8.0
 
million and $
0.2
 
million
of the
 
net operating losses
 
and other
 
deferred assets, respectively,
 
and accordingly, has
 
recorded a
 
valuation
allowance for the same amount.
As
 
of
 
February
 
1,
 
2025,
 
the
 
Company
 
had
 
$
14.9
 
million
 
of
 
net
 
deferred tax
 
assets
 
attributable to
 
U.S.
federal net
 
operating
 
loss
 
carryforwards,
 
other
 
credit carryforwards
 
and
 
all
 
other deferred
 
tax assets
 
net of
deferred tax liabilities.
 
The Company assessed the likelihood that deferred tax
 
assets related to net operating
loss
 
carryforwards,
 
credit
 
carryforwards
 
and
 
all
 
other
 
remaining
 
deferred
 
tax
 
assets
 
net
 
of
 
deferred
 
tax
liabilities will be
 
realized.
 
Based on this
 
assessment, the Company
 
concluded that it
 
is more likely
 
than not
the
 
Company
 
will
 
not
 
be
 
able
 
to
 
realize
 
$
3.2
 
million
 
of
 
net
 
operating
 
loss
 
carryforwards,
 
$
0.9
 
million
 
of
credit carryforwards and $
10.8
 
million of remaining deferred tax assets
 
net of deferred tax liabilities.
THE CATO CORPORATION
NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
 
— (Continued)
64
The net change
 
in the valuation
 
allowance of $
5.2
 
million for the
 
year ended February
 
1, 2025
 
is due to
recording a valuation allowance of
 
$
3.9
 
million against net deferred tax assets
 
attributable to U.S. federal net
operating loss
 
carryforwards, other
 
credit carryforwards
 
and all
 
other deferred
 
tax assets
 
net of
 
deferred tax
liabilities, including $
1.3
 
million against state net operating losses. The net change in the valuation allowance
for
 
the
 
year
 
ended
 
February
 
3,
 
2024
 
is
 
U.S.
 
federal
 
net
 
operating
 
loss
 
carryforwards,
 
other
 
credit
carryforwards, all
 
other deferred
 
tax assets
 
net of
 
deferred tax
 
liabilities, state
 
net operating
 
losses and
 
state
tax credits.
As
 
of
 
February
 
1,
 
2025,
 
the
 
Company’s
 
position
 
is
 
that
 
its
 
overseas
 
subsidiaries
 
will
 
not
 
invest
undistributed
 
earnings
 
indefinitely.
 
Future
 
unremitted
 
earnings
 
when
 
distributed
 
are
 
expected
 
to
 
be
 
either
distributions
 
of
 
GILTI-previously
 
taxed income
 
or eligible
 
for
 
a
100
%
 
dividends received
 
deduction.
 
The
withholding
 
tax
 
rate
 
on
 
any
 
unremitted
 
earnings
 
is
zero
 
and
 
state
 
income
 
taxes
 
on
 
such
 
earnings
 
are
considered
 
immaterial.
 
Therefore,
 
the
 
Company
 
has
 
not
 
provided
 
deferred
 
U.S.
 
income
 
taxes
 
on
approximately $
21.3
 
million of cumulative earnings from non-U.S. subsidiaries.
 
 
 
THE CATO CORPORATION
NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
 
— (Continued)
65
 
The reconciliation of the Company’s effective
 
income tax rate with the
 
statutory rate is as follows:
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
`
February 1, 2025
February 3, 2024
January 28, 2023
Fiscal Year
 
Ended
Federal income tax rate
21.0
%
21.0
%
21.0
%
State income taxes
4.4
4.5
(36.4)
Global intangible low-taxed income
(24.6)
(33.4)
333.0
Foreign tax credit
-
0.3
(11.2)
Foreign rate differential
5.5
7.8
(74.4)
Offshore claim
11.0
15.2
(141.2)
Limitation on officer compensation
(2.7)
(3.1)
27.2
Work opportunity credit
1.9
1.5
(63.7)
Addback on wage related credits
(0.4)
(0.3)
13.4
Tax credits - Other
0.6
0.5
(14.4)
Insurance
-
-
(8.1)
Charitable contribution of inventory
-
(0.6)
-
Uncertain tax positions
4.5
7.4
(18.7)
Deferred rate change
-
-
1.1
Valuation
 
allowance
(31.0)
(96.0)
70.9
Other
(2.3)
1.7
(0.1)
Effective income tax rate
(12.1)
%
(73.5)
%
98.4
%
 
The
 
largest
 
driver
 
for
 
the
 
difference
 
between
 
the
 
Company’s
 
effective
 
income
 
tax
 
rate
 
for
 
the
 
year
ended February 1, 2025 and the
 
U.S. federal income tax rate is
 
the valuation allowance (discussed above)
recorded
 
against
 
the
 
Company’s
 
net
 
deferred
 
tax
 
assets
 
attributable
 
to
 
U.S.
 
federal
 
net
 
operating
 
loss
carryforwards, other credit carryforwards and all other deferred tax assets net
 
of deferred tax liabilities.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
13.
 
Reportable Segment Information:
The
 
Company
 
has
 
determined
 
that
 
it
 
has
four
 
operating
 
segments,
 
as
 
defined
 
under
 
ASC
 
280-10
 
Segment
 
Reporting
,
 
including Cato,
 
It’s
 
Fashion, Verso
 
na
 
and
 
Credit.
 
As
 
outlined in
 
ASC
 
280-10, the
Company
 
has
two
 
reportable
 
segments:
 
Retail
 
and
 
Credit.
 
The
 
Company
 
has
 
aggregated
 
its
three
 
retail
operating segments, including e-commerce, based on
 
the aggregation criteria outlined in ASC
 
280-10, which
states that two or more operating segments may be aggregated into a single reportable segment if aggregation
is consistent with the objective
 
and basic principles of ASC 280-10,
 
which require the segments have similar
economic characteristics, products, production processes, customers
 
and methods of distribution.
The
 
Company’s
 
retail
 
operating
 
segments
 
have
 
similar
 
economic
 
characteristics
 
and
 
similar
 
operating,
financial and
 
competitive risks.
 
The products
 
sold in
 
each retail
 
operating segment
 
are similar
 
in nature,
 
as
they
 
all
 
offer
 
women’s
 
apparel,
 
shoes
 
and
 
accessories.
 
Merchandise
 
inventory
 
of
 
the
 
Company’s
 
retail
operating
 
segments
 
is
 
sourced
 
from
 
the
 
same
 
countries
 
and
 
some
 
of
 
the
 
same
 
vendors,
 
using
 
similar
production processes.
 
Merchandise for the Company’s retail operating segments is distributed to retail stores
in a similar manner through
 
the Company’s single distribution center and is
 
subsequently sold to customers in
a similar
 
manner.
 
The Company offers its own credit
 
card to its customers and
 
all credit authorizations, payment processing
and collection efforts are performed by
 
a wholly-owned subsidiary of the
 
Company. The Company
 
does not
allocate certain corporate expenses to the Credit segment.
The
 
Company’s
 
President
 
and
 
Chief
 
Executive
 
Officer
 
is
 
the
 
Company’s
 
chief
 
operating
 
decision
maker
 
(“CODM”).
 
The
 
structure
 
described
 
above
 
reflects
 
the
 
manner
 
in
 
which
 
the
 
CODM
 
regularly
 
THE CATO CORPORATION
NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
 
— (Continued)
66
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
assesses information for
 
decision-making purposes, including
 
the allocation
 
of resources.
 
The Company
also provides corporate services, including finance, information technology, and corporate administration,
to its segments which
 
are fully allocated to
 
the retail segment.
 
Interest and other income
 
from assets held
for
 
investment
 
and
 
sale
 
are
 
not
 
included
 
in
 
assessing
 
the
 
segments’
 
performance
 
and
 
therefore
 
not
allocated to either segment.
The
 
CODM
 
manages
 
and
 
evaluates
 
the
 
segments’
 
operating
 
performance
 
based
 
on
 
segment
 
sales,
expenses, and
 
profit or
 
loss from
 
operations before
 
income taxes
 
as presented
 
in the
 
Company’s
 
annual
budget and forecasting process,
 
as well as
 
monthly analyses of budget-to-actual
 
and prior year
 
variances.
 
Segment
 
expenses
 
and
 
other
 
items
 
primarily
 
include
 
cost
 
of
 
goods
 
sold,
 
selling,
 
general
 
and
administrative
 
expenses,
 
depreciation
 
and
 
interest
 
and
 
other
 
income.
 
Assessment
 
and
 
approval
 
of
 
all
capital
 
expenditures
 
are
 
determined
 
to
 
be
 
in
 
support
 
of
 
and
 
based
 
on
 
the
 
needs
 
of
 
the
 
retail
 
segment;
however,
 
the
 
CODM
 
does
 
not
 
evaluate
 
performance
 
or
 
allocate
 
resources
 
based
 
on
 
segment
 
asset
balances; therefore, total segment assets are not presented in the tables below.
 
 
The accounting
 
policies of
 
the segments are
 
the same
 
as those
 
described in the
 
Summary of
 
Significant
Accounting Policies in
 
Note 1. The Company
 
evaluates performance based on
 
profit or loss from
 
operations
before income taxes.
 
THE CATO CORPORATION
NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
 
— (Continued)
67
The following schedule summarizes certain segment
 
information (in thousands):
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
`
Fiscal 2024
Retail
Credit
Total
Total Revenues
$
647,110
$
2,696
$
649,806
Cost of goods sold (a)
436,440
-
436,440
Selling, general, and administrative (b)
162,367
1,630
163,997
Corporate overhead
67,492
-
67,492
Depreciation
9,817
-
9,817
Interest and other income
(410)
(1,162)
(1,572)
Income (loss) before income taxes
$
(28,596)
$
2,228
$
(26,368)
Corporate interest and other income
(10,255)
Net income (loss) before income taxes
$
(16,113)
Capital expenditures
$
7,872
$
-
$
7,872
Fiscal 2023
Retail
Credit
Total
Total Revenues
$
705,419
$
2,640
$
708,059
Cost of goods sold (a)
464,313
-
464,313
Selling, general, and administrative (b)
176,205
1,632
177,837
Corporate overhead
74,940
-
74,940
Depreciation
9,871
-
9,871
Interest and other income
(267)
(737)
(1,004)
Income (loss) before income taxes
$
(19,643)
$
1,745
$
(17,898)
Corporate interest and other income
(4,097)
Net income (loss) before income taxes
$
(13,801)
Capital expenditures
$
12,532
$
-
$
12,532
Fiscal 2022
Retail
Credit
Total
Total Revenues
$
757,017
$
2,243
$
759,260
Cost of goods sold (a)
509,664
-
509,664
Selling, general, and administrative (b)
173,854
1,497
175,351
Corporate overhead
67,297
-
67,297
Depreciation
11,079
1
11,080
Interest and other income
(167)
(388)
(555)
Income (loss) before income taxes
$
(4,710)
$
1,133
$
(3,577)
Corporate interest and other income
(5,347)
Net income (loss) before income taxes
$
1,770
Capital expenditures
$
19,433
$
-
$
19,433
(a) Refer to Note 1 for additional information on the components of Cost of goods sold.
(b) Selling, general, and administrative expense include corporate and store payroll, related payroll taxes
 
and benefits, insurance, supplies, advertising, bank and credit card processing fees.
 
 
 
14.
 
Stock Based Compensation:
 
As
 
of
 
February
 
1,
 
2025,
 
the
 
Company’s
 
2018
 
Incentive
 
Compensation
 
Plan
 
was
 
available
 
for
 
the
granting
 
of
 
various
 
forms
 
of
 
equity-based awards,
 
including
 
restricted stock
 
and stock
 
options for
 
grant to
officers, directors and key employees.
 
THE CATO CORPORATION
NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
 
— (Continued)
68
 
The following table presents the number of options and shares of restricted
 
stock initially authorized
and available for grant under this plan as of February 1, 2025:
 
 
 
`
2018
Plan
Options and/or restricted stock initially authorized
4,725,000
Options and/or restricted stock available for grant:
 
 
February 3, 2024
3,147,393
 
February 1, 2025
2,797,601
In accordance with ASC 718, the fair value of restricted stock awards is estimated on the date of grant
based
 
on
 
the
 
market
 
price
 
of
 
the
 
Company’s
 
stock
 
and
 
is
 
amortized
 
to
 
compensation
 
expense
 
on
 
a
straight-line basis
 
over a
five-year
 
vesting period.
 
As of
 
February 1,
 
2025, there
 
was $
7,276,356
 
of total
unrecognized compensation
 
expense related
 
to unvested
 
restricted stock
 
awards, which
 
is expected
 
to be
recognized over a remaining weighted-average vesting period of
1.9
 
years.
 
The total grant date fair value
of
 
the
 
shares
 
recognized
 
as
 
compensation
 
expense
 
during
 
the
 
twelve
 
months
 
ended
 
February
 
1,
 
2025,
February 3,
 
2024 and
 
January 28,
 
2023 was
 
$
2,270,000
, $
4,105,000
 
and $
2,556,000
, respectively.
 
The
expenses
 
are
 
classified
 
as
 
a
 
component
 
of
 
Selling,
 
general
 
and
 
administrative
 
expenses
 
in
 
the
Consolidated Statements of Income (Loss) and Comprehensive Income
 
(Loss).
The following summary shows
 
the changes in the
 
shares of unvested
 
restricted stock outstanding
 
during
the years ended February 1, 2025,
 
February 3, 2024 and January 28, 2023:
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
`
Weighted Average
Number of
Grant Date Fair
Shares
Value Per
 
Share
Restricted stock awards at January 29, 2022
1,196,288
$
13.76
 
Granted
319,441
13.70
 
Vested
(231,638)
16.99
 
Forfeited or expired
(224,658)
13.43
 
Restricted stock awards at January 28, 2023
1,059,433
$
13.10
 
Granted
414,502
8.29
Vested
(217,238)
13.97
 
Forfeited or expired
(132,824)
11.73
 
Restricted stock awards at February 3, 2024
1,123,873
$
11.32
 
Granted
386,900
4.80
 
Vested
(232,696)
13.22
 
Forfeited or expired
(62,896)
9.21
 
Restricted stock awards at February 1, 2025
1,215,181
$
8.98
 
 
The
 
Company’s
 
Employee
 
Stock
 
Purchase
 
Plan
 
allows
 
eligible
 
full-time
 
employees
 
to
 
purchase
 
a
limited
 
number
 
of
 
shares
 
of
 
the
 
Company’s
 
Class
 
A
 
Common
 
Stock
 
during
 
each
 
semi-annual
 
offering
period at
 
a
15
% discount through
 
payroll deductions. During
 
the twelve
 
month period ended
 
February 1,
2025, the
 
Company sold
73,593
 
shares to
 
employees at an
 
average discount of
 
$
0.81
 
per share
 
under the
Employee Stock Purchase Plan.
 
The compensation expense
 
recognized for the
15
% discount given
 
under
the
 
Employee
 
Stock
 
Purchase
 
Plan
 
was
 
approximately
 
$
60,000
,
 
$
67,000
 
and
 
$
54,000
 
for
 
fiscal
 
years
2024, 2023 and 2022,
 
respectively.
 
These expenses are classified
 
as a component of
 
Selling, general and
administrative expenses.
 
15.
 
Commitments and Contingencies:
THE CATO CORPORATION
NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
 
— (Continued)
69
 
The
 
Company
 
is,
 
from
 
time
 
to
 
time,
 
involved
 
in
 
routine
 
litigation
 
incidental
 
to
 
the
 
conduct
 
of
 
its
business,
 
including
 
litigation
 
regarding
 
the
 
merchandise
 
that
 
it
 
sells,
 
litigation
 
regarding
 
intellectual
property,
 
litigation instituted
 
by persons
 
injured upon
 
premises under
 
our control,
 
litigation with
 
respect
to
 
various
 
employment
 
matters,
 
including
 
alleged
 
discrimination
 
and
 
wage
 
and
 
hour
 
litigation,
 
and
litigation with present or former employees.
 
 
Although such
 
litigation is
 
routine and
 
incidental to
 
the conduct
 
of the
 
Company’s
 
business, as
 
with
any business
 
of its
 
size with
 
a significant
 
number of
 
employees and
 
significant merchandise
 
sales, such
litigation could
 
result in
 
large
 
monetary awards.
 
Based on
 
information currently
 
available, management
does
 
not
 
believe
 
that
 
any
 
reasonably
 
possible
 
losses
 
arising
 
from current
 
pending litigation
 
will
 
have a
material adverse effect
 
on the Company’s
 
consolidated financial statements. However,
 
given the inherent
uncertainties
 
involved
 
in
 
such
 
matters,
 
an
 
adverse
 
outcome
 
in
 
one
 
or
 
more
 
of
 
such
 
matters
 
could
materially and adversely affect the Company’s
 
financial condition, results of operations and cash flows in
any
 
particular
 
reporting
 
period.
 
The
 
Company
 
accrues
 
for
 
these
 
matters
 
when
 
the
 
liability
 
is
 
deemed
probable and reasonably estimable.
16.
 
Accumulated Other Comprehensive Income:
The
 
following
 
table
 
sets
 
forth
 
information
 
regarding
 
the
 
reclassification
 
out
 
of
 
Accumulated
 
other
comprehensive income (in thousands) for the
 
year ended February 1, 2025:
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
`
Changes in Accumulated Other
 
Comprehensive Income (a)
Unrealized Gains
and (Losses) on
Available-for-Sale
Securities
Beginning Balance at February 3, 2024
$
395
 
Other comprehensive income (loss) before
 
 
reclassification
541
 
Amounts reclassified from accumulated
 
other comprehensive income (b)
(783)
Net current-period other comprehensive income
(loss)
(242)
Ending Balance at February 1, 2025
$
153
(a) All amounts are net-of-tax. Amounts in parentheses indicate a debit/reduction to
 
accumulated other
comprehensive income.
(b) Includes
$1,015
 
impact of Accumulated other comprehensive income reclassifications into Interest and
other income for net gains on available-for-sale securities.
 
The tax impact of this reclassification was $
232
.
Amounts in parentheses indicate a debit/reduction to accumulated other comprehensive income.
THE CATO CORPORATION
NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
 
— (Continued)
70
 
The following table sets forth information regarding the reclassification
 
out of Accumulated other
comprehensive income (in thousands) for the year ended February 3, 2024:
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Changes in Accumulated Other
 
Comprehensive Income (a)
Unrealized Gains
and (Losses) on
Available-for-Sale
Securities
Beginning Balance at January 28, 2023
$
(1,238)
 
Other comprehensive income (loss) before
 
 
reclassification
1,614
 
Amounts reclassified from accumulated
 
other comprehensive income (b)
19
Net current-period other comprehensive income (loss)
1,633
Ending Balance at February 3, 2024
$
395
(a) All amounts are net-of-tax. Amounts in parentheses indicate a debit/reduction to
 
accumulated other
comprehensive income.
(b) Includes $
25
 
impact of Accumulated other comprehensive income reclassifications into Interest and other
income for net gains on available-for-sale securities. The
 
tax impact of this reclassification was $
6
. Amounts in
parentheses indicate a debit/reduction to accumulated other comprehensive income.
THE CATO CORPORATION
NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
 
— (Continued)
71
 
The following table sets forth information regarding the reclassification
 
out of Accumulated other
comprehensive income (in thousands) for the year ended January 28, 2023:
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Changes in Accumulated Other
 
Comprehensive Income (a)
Unrealized Gains
and (Losses) on
Available-for-Sale
Securities
Beginning Balance at January 29, 2022
$
(280)
 
Other comprehensive income (loss) before
 
 
reclassification
(982)
 
Amounts reclassified from accumulated
 
other comprehensive income (b)
24
Net current-period other comprehensive income (loss)
(958)
Ending Balance at January 28, 2023
$
(1,238)
(a) All amounts are net-of-tax. Amounts in parentheses indicate a debit/reduction to
 
accumulated other
comprehensive income.
(b) Includes $
31
 
impact of Accumulated other comprehensive income reclassifications into Interest and other
income for net gains on available-for-sale securities. The
 
tax impact of this reclassification was $
7
. Amounts in
parentheses indicate a debit/reduction to accumulated other comprehensive income.
72
Item 9.
 
Changes in and Disagreements with Accountants on Accounting and
 
Financial Disclosure:
 
 
None.
Item 9A.
 
Controls and Procedures:
Conclusion Regarding the Effectiveness of Disclosure Controls and Procedures
 
We
 
carried out
 
an evaluation,
 
with the
 
participation of
 
our Principal
 
Executive Officer
 
and Principal
Financial Officer,
 
of the
 
effectiveness of
 
our disclosure
 
controls and
 
procedures as
 
of February
 
1, 2025.
 
Based on this
 
evaluation, our Principal
 
Executive Officer
 
and Principal Financial
 
Officer concluded that,
as
 
of
 
February 1,
 
2025, our
 
disclosure controls
 
and procedures,
 
as
 
defined in
 
Rule 13a-15(e),
 
under the
Securities Exchange Act
 
of 1934
 
(the “Exchange
 
Act”), were effective
 
to ensure that
 
information we are
required to
 
disclose in
 
the reports
 
that we
 
file or
 
submit under
 
the Exchange
 
Act is
 
recorded, processed,
summarized
 
and
 
reported
 
within
 
the
 
time
 
periods
 
specified
 
in
 
the
 
SEC’s
 
rules and
 
forms
 
and
 
that
 
such
information
 
is
 
accumulated
 
and
 
communicated
 
to
 
our
 
management,
 
including
 
our
 
Principal
 
Executive
Officer
 
and
 
Principal
 
Financial
 
Officer,
 
as
 
appropriate
 
to
 
allow
 
timely
 
decisions
 
regarding
 
required
disclosure.
Management’s Report on Internal Control Over Financial Reporting
 
Management is
 
responsible
 
for
 
establishing
 
and
 
maintaining adequate
 
internal
 
control
 
over
 
financial
reporting, as defined in Exchange Act Rule 13a-15(f).
 
Under the supervision and with the participation of
our
 
management, including
 
our
 
Principal
 
Executive Officer
 
and
 
Principal
 
Financial
 
Officer,
 
we
 
carried
out
 
an
 
evaluation
 
of
 
the
 
effectiveness
 
of
 
our
 
internal
 
control
 
over
 
financial
 
reporting
 
as
 
of
 
February
 
1,
2025
 
based
 
on
 
the
 
Internal
 
Control
 
 
Integrated
 
Framework
(2013)
 
issued
 
by
 
the
 
Committee
 
of
Sponsoring
 
Organizations
 
of
 
the
 
Treadway
 
Commission
 
(“COSO”).
 
Based
 
on
 
this
 
evaluation,
management concluded
 
that our
 
internal control
 
over financial
 
reporting was
 
effective as
 
of February
 
1,
2025.
 
PricewaterhouseCoopers
 
LLP,
 
an
 
independent
 
registered
 
public
 
accounting
 
firm,
 
has
 
audited
 
the
effectiveness of our internal
 
control over financial reporting as
 
of February 1, 2025, as
 
stated in its report
which is included herein.
Changes in Internal Control Over Financial Reporting
 
No
 
change
 
in
 
the
 
Company’s
 
internal
 
control
 
over
 
financial
 
reporting
 
(as
 
defined
 
in
 
Exchange
 
Act
Rule
 
13a-15(f))
 
has
 
occurred
 
during
 
the
 
Company’s
 
fiscal
 
quarter
 
ended
 
February
 
1,
 
2025
 
that
 
has
materially
 
affected,
 
or
 
is
 
reasonably
 
likely
 
to
 
materially
 
affect,
 
the
 
Company’s
 
internal
 
control
 
over
financial reporting.
Inherent Limitations on Effectiveness of Controls
 
The
 
Company’s
 
management,
 
including
 
its
 
Principal
 
Executive
 
Officer
 
and
 
Principal
 
Financial
Officer,
 
does not
 
expect our
 
disclosure controls
 
and procedures
 
or internal
 
controls to
 
prevent all
 
errors
and all
 
fraud. A
 
control system, no
 
matter how
 
well conceived or
 
operated, can provide
 
only reasonable,
not absolute,
 
assurance that
 
the objectives
 
of the
 
control system are
 
met. Further,
 
the design
 
of a
 
control
system
 
must
 
reflect
 
the
 
fact
 
that
 
there
 
are
 
resource
 
constraints,
 
and
 
the
 
benefits
 
of
 
controls
 
must
 
be
considered relative to their costs.
 
Because of the inherent limitations
 
in all control systems,
 
no evaluation
of
 
controls
 
can
 
provide
 
absolute
 
assurance
 
all
 
control
 
issues
 
and
 
instances
 
of
 
fraud,
 
if
 
any,
 
within
 
the
company have
 
been detected.
 
These inherent
 
limitations include
 
the realities
 
that judgments
 
in decision-
making can be faulty and that breakdowns can occur because of simple
 
error or mistake. Controls can also
be
 
circumvented
 
by
 
the
 
individual
 
acts
 
of
 
some
 
persons,
 
by
 
collusion
 
of
 
two
 
or
 
more
 
people,
 
or
 
by
management
 
override
 
of
 
the
 
controls.
 
The
 
design
 
of
 
any
 
system
 
of
 
controls
 
is
 
based
 
in
 
part
 
on
 
certain
 
73
assumptions about the likelihood
 
of future events,
 
and there can
 
be no assurance any
 
design will succeed
in
 
achieving
 
its
 
stated
 
goals
 
under
 
all
 
potential
 
future
 
conditions.
 
Over
 
time,
 
controls
 
may
 
become
inadequate because of changes
 
in conditions or
 
deterioration in the degree
 
of compliance with policies
 
or
procedures.
 
Because
 
of
 
the inherent
 
limitations in
 
a
 
cost-effective
 
control
 
system, misstatements
 
due to
error or fraud may occur and not be detected.
Item 9B.
 
Other Information:
During
 
the
 
three
 
months
 
ended
 
February
 
1,
 
2025,
 
none
 
of
 
the
 
Company’s
 
directors
 
or
 
officers
 
(as
defined
 
in
 
Rule 16a-1(f)
 
of
 
the
 
Securities
 
Exchange Act
 
of
 
1934,
 
as
 
amended)
adopted
 
or
terminated
 
a
“Rule10b5-1 trading arrangement” or a “
non
-
Rule10b5-1
 
trading arrangement” (as such terms are defined
in Item 408 of Regulation S-K).
Item 9C.
 
Disclosure Regarding Foreign Jurisdictions that Prevent Inspections
:
None.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
74
PART
 
III
 
 
Item 10.
Directors, Executive Officers and Corporate Governance:
 
Information
 
contained
 
under
 
the
 
captions
 
“Election
 
of
 
Directors,”
 
“Meetings
 
and
 
Committees,”
“Corporate
 
Governance
 
Matters”
 
and
 
“Delinquent
 
Section
 
16(a)
 
Reports”
 
in
 
the
 
Registrant’s
 
Proxy
Statement
 
for
 
its
 
2025
 
annual
 
stockholders’
 
meeting
 
(the
 
“2025
 
Proxy
 
Statement”)
 
is
 
incorporated
 
by
reference
 
in
 
response
 
to
 
this
 
Item 10.
 
The
 
information
 
in
 
response
 
to
 
this
 
Item 10
 
regarding
 
executive
officers
 
of the
 
Company is
 
contained in
 
Item 3A, Part I
 
hereof under
 
the caption
 
“Executive Officers
 
of
the Registrant.”
Item 11.
Executive Compensation:
 
Information contained under the captions
 
“2024 Executive Compensation” (except for
 
the information
under
 
the
 
heading
 
“Pay
 
Versus
 
Performance”),
 
“Fiscal
 
Year
 
2024
 
Director
 
Compensation,”
 
and
“Corporate
 
Governance
 
Matters-Compensation
 
Committee
 
Interlocks
 
and
 
Insider
 
Participation”
 
in
 
the
Company’s 2025 Proxy Statement is incorporated by reference in response to this Item.
Item 12.
Security Ownership of Certain Beneficial Owners and Management and
 
Related Stockholder
 
Matters:
Equity Compensation Plan Information
 
The
 
following
 
table
 
provides
 
information
 
about
 
stock
 
options
 
outstanding
 
and
 
shares
 
available
 
for
future awards under all of the Company’s equity compensation plans. The information is as of February
 
1,
2025.
(a)
Number of Securities to
be Issued upon
Exercise of
Outstanding Options,
Warrants and Rights
(1)
(b)
Weighted-Average
Exercise Price of
Outstanding Options,
Warrants and Rights
(1)
(c)
Number of Securities
Remaining Available
for Future Issuance
Under Equity
Compensation Plans
(Excluding Securities
Reflected in Column
(a)) (2)
Plan Category
 
 
 
Equity compensation plans approved
 
by security holders
 
-
-
2,881,975
Equity compensation plans not
 
approved by security holders
 
-
-
-
Total
 
-
-
2,881,975
 
(1)
 
There are no outstanding stock options, warrants or stock appreciation
 
rights.
 
 
(2)
 
Includes the following:
 
 
 
Under
 
the
 
Company’s
 
stock
 
incentive
 
plan,
 
referred
 
to
 
as
 
the
 
2018
 
Incentive
 
Compensation
 
Plan,
 
2,797,601
 
shares
 
are
 
available
 
for
 
grant.
 
Under
 
this
 
plan,
 
non-
qualified stock options may be granted to key associates.
 
 
Under
 
the
 
2021
 
Employee
 
Stock
 
Purchase
 
Plan,
 
84,374
 
shares
 
are
 
available.
 
Eligible
 
associates
may
 
participate
 
in
 
the
 
purchase
 
of
 
designated
 
shares
 
of
 
the
 
Company’s
 
common
 
stock.
 
The
purchase price of this stock is equal to 85% of the lower of the
 
closing price at the beginning or the
end of each semi-annual stock purchase period.
75
 
Information contained under “Security Ownership of Certain Owners
 
and Management” in the
2025 Proxy Statement is incorporated by reference in response to this Item.
Item 13.
Certain Relationships and Related Person Transactions, and Director Independence:
 
Information
 
contained
 
under
 
the
 
caption
 
“Certain
 
Relationships
 
and
 
Related
 
Person
 
Transactions,”
“Corporate
 
Governance
 
Matters-Director
 
Independence”
 
and
 
“Meetings
 
and
 
Committees”
 
in
 
the
 
2025
Proxy Statement is incorporated by reference in response to this Item.
 
Item 14.
Principal Accountant Fees and Services:
 
Information contained
 
under the
 
captions “Ratification
 
of
 
Independent Registered
 
Public Accounting
Firm-Audit Fees”
 
and
 
“-Policy on
 
Audit
 
Committee Pre-Approval
 
of
 
Audit
 
and Permissible
 
Non-Audit
Services
 
by
 
the
 
Independent
 
Registered
 
Public
 
Accounting
 
Firm”
 
in
 
the
 
2025
 
Proxy
 
Statement
 
is
incorporated by reference in response to this Item.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
76
PART
 
IV
Item 15.
Exhibits and Financial Statement Schedules:
 
(a) The following documents are filed as part of this report:
 
(1) Financial Statements:
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Page
 
 
Report of Independent Registered Public Accounting Firm
 
....................................................................
 
38
Consolidated Statements of Income (Loss) and Comprehensive Income
 
(Loss) for the fiscal
 
 
years ended February 1, 2025, February 3, 2024 and January 28, 2023
 
................................................
 
41
Consolidated Balance Sheets at February 1, 2025 and February
 
3, 2024
 
.................................................
 
42
Consolidated Statements of Cash Flows for the fiscal years ended
 
February 1, 2025, February 3, 2024
 
and January 28, 2023 ................................................................................................................................
 
43
Consolidated Statements of Stockholders’ Equity for the fiscal years ended
 
February 1, 2025,
 
February 3, 2024 and January 28, 2023
 
....................................................................................................
 
44
Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements
 
.............................................................................................
 
45
 
(2) Financial Statement Schedule: The following report and
 
financial statement schedule is filed
 
 
herewith:
Schedule II — Valuation and Qualifying Accounts .................................................................................
 
80
 
All
 
other
 
schedules
 
are
 
omitted
 
as
 
the
 
required
 
information
 
is
 
inapplicable
 
or
 
the
 
information
 
is
presented in the Consolidated Financial Statements or related Notes thereto.
 
(3) Index to Exhibits: The
 
following exhibits listed in
 
the Index below are
 
filed with this report
 
or, as
noted, incorporated by reference herein.
 
The Company will supply copies of the following exhibits to any
shareholder upon receipt of a written request addressed to the Corporate Secretary,
 
The Cato Corporation,
8100 Denmark
 
Road, Charlotte,
 
NC 28273
 
and the
 
payment of
 
$.50 per
 
page to
 
help defray
 
the costs
 
of
handling,
 
copying
 
and
 
postage.
 
In
 
most
 
cases,
 
documents
 
incorporated
 
by
 
reference
 
to
 
exhibits
 
to
 
our
registration
 
statements,
 
reports
 
or
 
proxy
 
statements
 
filed
 
by
 
the
 
Company
 
with
 
the
 
Securities
 
and
Exchange
 
Commission
 
are
 
available
 
to
 
the
 
public
 
over
 
the
 
Internet
 
from
 
the
 
SEC’s
 
web
 
site
 
at
http://www.sec.gov.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
77
Exhibit
 
 
Number
 
Description of Exhibit
 
 
3.1
 
 
3.2
 
4.1
10.1*
10.2*
10.3*
 
 
10.4*
 
 
10.5*
 
 
10.6*
 
 
10.7*
 
10.8*
10.9*
10.10
 
10.11
10.12
10.13
10.14
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
78
10.15
10.16
19.1**
 
21.1**
 
 
23.1**
 
 
31.1**
 
 
31.2**
 
 
32.1**
 
 
32.2**
 
97.1
101.INS
Inline XBRL Instance Document
101.SCH
Inline XBRL Taxonomy Extension Schema Document
101.CAL
Inline XBRL Taxonomy Extension Calculation Linkbase Document
101.DEF
Inline XBRL Taxonomy Extension Definitions Linkbase Document
101.LAB
Inline XBRL Taxonomy Extension Label Linkbase Document
101.PRE
Inline XBRL Taxonomy Extension Presentation Linkbase Document
104.1
Cover Page Interactive Data File (Formatted in Inline XBRL and
 
contained in the Interactive
Data Files submitted as Exhibit 101.1**).
___________
* Management contract or compensatory plan required to be filed under Item 15 of this report and Item
 
601
of Regulation S-K.
** Filed or submitted electronically herewith.
Item 16.
Form 10-K Summary:
 
None.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
79
SIGNATURES
 
Pursuant
 
to
 
the
 
requirements
 
of
 
Section 13
 
or
 
15(d)
 
of
 
the
 
Securities
 
Exchange
 
Act
 
of
 
1934,
 
Cato
 
has
 
duly
caused this report to be signed on its behalf by the undersigned, thereunto duly authorized.
The Cato Corporation
By
/s/ JOHN P.
 
D. CATO
By
/s/ CHARLES D. KNIGHT
 
John P.
 
D. Cato
Chairman, President and
Chief Executive Officer
Charles D. Knight
Executive Vice President
Chief Financial Officer
By
/s/ JEFFREY R. SHOCK
Jeffrey R. Shock
Senior Vice President
Controller
Date: March 31, 2025
 
Pursuant to the
 
requirements of the
 
Securities Exchange
 
Act of 1934,
 
this report has
 
been signed below
 
on March 31,
 
2025
by the following persons on behalf of the Registrant and in the capacities indicated:
 
 
 
 
/s/ JOHN P.
 
D. CATO
John P.
 
D. Cato
(President and Chief Executive Officer
(Principal Executive Officer) and Director)
/s/ BAILEY W.
 
PATRICK
Bailey W.
 
Patrick
(Director)
 
 
/s/ CHARLES D. KNIGHT
Charles D. Knight
(Executive Vice President
Chief Financial Officer (Principal Financial Officer))
/s/ THOMAS B. HENSON
Thomas B. Henson
 
(Director)
/s/ JEFFREY R. SHOCK
Jeffrey R. Shock
(Senior Vice President
Controller (Principal Accounting Officer))
/s/ BRYAN
 
F. KENNEDY
 
III
Bryan F. Kennedy III
(Director)
/s/ D. HARDING STOWE
D. Harding Stowe
 
(Director)
/s/ THERESA J. DREW
Theresa J. Drew
(Director)
/s/ PAMELA
 
L. DAVIES
Pamela L. Davies
(Director)
80
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Schedule II
VALUATION
 
AND QUALIFYING ACCOUNTS
(in thousands)
Allowance
for
Customer
Self Insurance
Credit Losses(a)
Reserves(b)
Balance at January 29, 2022
$
803
$
8,271
Additions charged to costs and expenses
 
349
13,287
Additions (reductions) charged to other accounts
 
84
(c)
638
Deductions
 
(475)
(d)
(14,523)
Balance at January 28, 2023
$
761
$
7,673
Additions charged to costs and expenses
 
578
16,063
Additions (reductions) charged to other accounts
 
72
(c)
467
Deductions
 
(706)
(d)
(15,075)
Balance at February 3, 2024
$
705
$
9,128
Additions charged to costs and expenses
 
654
14,304
Additions (reductions) charged to other accounts
 
65
(c)
(522)
Deductions
 
(843)
(d)
(14,791)
Balance at February 1, 2025
$
581
$
8,119
(a)
 
Deducted from trade accounts receivable.
(b)
 
Reserve for Workers' Compensation,
 
General Liability and Healthcare.
(c)
 
Recoveries of amounts previously written off.
(d)
 
Uncollectible accounts written off.