Fastenal Company (NASDAQ: FAST) is gearing up to publish its fourth-quarter 2025 financial results, after effectively navigating an evolving market environment. The report is expected to shed light on the company’s long-term strategies and how the business is adapting to challenges and opportunities. While the fastener distributor continues to benefit from contract wins from large customers and selective price increases in certain categories, demand trends remain fluid amid trade-related uncertainties and cautious customer spending.
Estimates
Fastenal’s fourth-quarter 2025 report is expected to be published on Tuesday, January 20, at 6:50 am ET. Analysts’ consensus sales and earnings estimates for the quarter are $2.04 billion and $0.26 per share, respectively. In the year-ago quarter, the company earned $0.23 per share on revenues of $1.82 billion.
In 2025, the stock delivered consistent gains and reached an all-time high in August. After this peak, the trend reversed, with shares declining steadily through the rest of the year. The average price of FAST for the past 12 months is $42.05. Despite the recent pullback, the valuation appears to be on the higher side due to the company’s moderating growth prospects and continuing margin pressure. Fastenal split its stock 2:1 in early 2025, marking the ninth split since going public nearly four decades ago.
Q3 Outcome
For the third quarter, Fastenal reported net income of $335.5 million, or $0.29 per share, compared to $298.1 million, or $0.26 per share, in the prior-year quarter. Third-quarter net sales increased 11.7% year-over-year to $2.13 billion, mainly reflecting improved customer contract signings. During the quarter, it signed 7,050 FASTB and FASTVend devices, resulting in 19,925 new FASTB and FASTVend signings in the first nine months of FY25. The top line was in line with estimates, while earnings missed expectations after beating in the prior quarter.
Commenting on Fastenal’s pricing strategy, CEO Daniel Florness said in the Q3 earnings call, “The marketplace is pushing through price. We actually prefer not to push through price. We prefer to push through growth. We prefer to have conversations about technology we can deploy to your point of use. That lowers your consumption. Expanding the universe of what we’re selling, the price conversation is only about costs are going up in your supply chain. And price is how a customer realizes that. And so we’ve always been reticent. On the flip side, we have great line of sight to our needs, and we have open candid discussions with our customers about what’s happening in their supply chain.“
Road Ahead
While Fastenal maintains stable sales and cash flow growth, macroeconomic uncertainties and industrial sector weakness remain challenges. The company’s reliance on a relatively small number of large customers for revenue poses a potential risk, particularly as enterprises face cost pressure from tariffs and evolving government trade policies. The management expects that the margin squeeze experienced last quarter might extend into the fourth quarter.
Fastenal’s shares have declined more than 2% in the past six months. On Friday, the stock opened at $41.79 and made modest gains in early trading.



















