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Jim Cramer used his Monday CNBC Stop Trading segment to flag a familiar play he’s seeing coming back into focus. Cramer noted that when the cost of living squeezes household budgets, capital rotates into discount retailers, and the hedge fund crowd tends to get there first. That’s why he says he’s keeping an eye on Dollar General (NYSE:DG | DG Price Prediction).
Why Rising Gas Prices Send Hedge Funds Into Dollar General
Jim Cramer bluntly connected the dots he sees between rising oil prices and soaring discount retailer performance. “When things go up for the consumer, we go back to these stocks,” he said, before laying out his trade idea: “Dollar General just is a favorite of the hedge fund crowd. It’s kind of an algorithm that says, oh, oil goes up, gasoline therefore goes up, go buy Dollar General.”
He also pointed to Dollar Tree’s upgrade last week, which he said drove the stock from $85 to $130 in a couple of months, and flagged Walmart as the validation to watch: “I’m waiting for it to impact Walmart, which is a big winner.”
The Consumer Squeeze Is Reviving the Trade-Down Economy
WTI crude sits at above $78 per barrel, well off the 12-month high of $114.58 on April 7, 2026, and the U.S. regular gasoline average has eased to $3.78 per gallon. But retail pump prices spent much of the spring above $4.50, and University of Michigan consumer sentiment collapsed to 44.8 in May 2026, approaching recessionary levels. Trade-down behavior into value shopping is exactly what that combination could produce.
Dollar General’s Q1 FY2027 report filed on June 2, mapped directly onto Cramer’s thesis. Diluted EPS came in at $2.00 versus $1.88 consensus, revenue was $10.79 billion, same-store sales rose 2.0%, and gross margin expanded 65 basis points to 31.6%.
CEO Todd Vasos said results “exceeded our expectations as strong operating margin expansion more than offset the impact of severe winter weather and higher fuel costs.” Management then raised FY2026 EPS guidance to $7.20-$7.45.
Dollar General has climbed 8.7% over the past month and was up 4.73% on the day of Cramer’s segment, trading at $124.55. Shares still carry a modest trailing P/E ratio of 17.
Dollar Tree, Walmart, and Five Below As Other Potential Beneficiaries
Dollar Tree (NASDAQ:DLTR) is up 13.23% over the past month. Q1 delivered adjusted EPS of $1.74 versus $1.55 consensus on revenue of $4.98 billion, and management raised the FY26 range to $6.70 to $7.10.
Walmart (NYSE:WMT) reported Q1 FY2027 results showing Walmart U.S. comps up 4.1% ex-fuel and global e-commerce up 26%, with share gains skewing towards upper-income demographics. Walmart trades at a P/E near 41, and shares are down 5.55% over the past month.
Five Below (NASDAQ:FIVE) reported Q1 net sales growth of 32.5% and comparable-store sales growth of 22.7%, with FY26 EPS guidance of $8.65 to $9.05. Shares are up 45.48% over the past year.
What to Watch Next
Cramer’s broader argument is that rising household costs could push more consumers toward discount retailers, benefiting Dollar General, Dollar Tree, Walmart, and Five Below. Dollar General’s improving margins and raised earnings guidance suggest that shift may already be underway.
If Walmart’s upcoming results show stronger trade-down activity, the trend could be developing into a broader defensive investment theme rather than a short-term hedge fund trade.
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