Key Takeaways
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- Lululemon cut full‑year guidance after U.S. demand weakened; fiscal‑year EPS lowered to $12.77–$12.97 (from $14.58–$14.78) and revenue guidance trimmed to $10.85B–$11.0B.
- Q2 results: revenue +7% to $2.53B, operating profit $370.9M ($3.10/sh), same‑store sales +1% (vs. Street +3.7%).
- International remains a bright spot (+22% sales), while the U.S. business shows product fatigue and increased competition.
- Trade policy is an incremental headwind: expiration of the de‑minimis rule and higher tariffs expected to reduce FY profit by roughly $240M (net of mitigation).
- Management plans faster product refresh (targeting 35% new styles in spring vs. 23% now); execution is the key near‑term variable.
What Happened?
Lululemon reported Q2 revenue of $2.53B and adjusted profit slightly below last year but above some expectations. Weakness in the U.S.—attributed to a stale assortment and softer demand—led the company to cut its FY sales and EPS outlook. Management flagged about $240M of annual profit pressure from rising tariffs (including loss of the de‑minimis exemption for low‑value imports), even after mitigation like price increases.
Why It Matters?
- The guidance cut materially reduces near‑term earnings expectations and raises downside risk to margins as tariff costs hit and pricing power is tested.
- U.S. softness signals potential brand‑momentum erosion in Lululemon’s largest market; failure to re‑energize assortments quickly would pressure comps and growth assumptions embedded in the stock.
- International growth shows the company can still scale abroad, but it may not fully offset U.S. weakness or tariff‑related margin loss.
- The tariff impact is a partially idiosyncratic but quantifiable headwind that makes FY profitability more contingent on pricing, cost control, and product execution.
What’s Next?
- Watch execution on the product refresh: cadence of new SKUs, early sell‑through, and impact on gross margin.
- Track quarterly comps in the Americas and margin trends (gross margin and operating margin) to see whether tariff pass‑through or cost actions are effective.
- Monitor price increases and promotional behavior—overpromotion would risk margin erosion; underpricing could deepen volume declines.
- Keep an eye on any policy developments around de‑minimis or tariffs that could alter the $240M hit, and on management commentary at the next earnings call for concrete mitigation plans.