LULU Reports Tonight. Here Is What the Numbers Already Say.

June 4, 2026

LULU Reports Tonight. Here Is What the Numbers Already Say.

Four analyst cuts. Margins under pressure. What to watch when the numbers drop.


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LULU Earnings Today: The Tariff Hit Wall Street Is Watching

Analyst Price Targets

  • JPMorgan Chase – Cut target from $196 to $173 | Neutral
  • Piper Sandler – Cut target from $190 to $130 | Neutral
  • Telsey Advisory Group – Cut target from $215 to $175
  • Robert W. Baird – Cut target from $190 to $170

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The stock has been sliding all year. Down more than 35% in 2026 and off more than 70% from its all-time high above $500, Lululemon (NASDAQ: LULU) heads into its Q1 fiscal 2026 earnings report today – after the closing bell – carrying more weight than just a tough quarter.

What the market is pricing right now is a company dealing with three simultaneous problems: tariff-driven cost pressure, a North American consumer pulling back on discretionary spending, and a leadership transition that won’t fully resolve until September when incoming CEO Heidi O’Neill takes over. Any one of those would be manageable. Together, they create a harder read than usual.

The Tariff Problem

This is the core issue heading into tonight. Management has already guided for a 110 basis point negative impact on margins from tariff policy in the near term – and that number comes directly from the company itself, not Street estimates. Lululemon is actively seeking refunds from the U.S. government for tariffs paid over the past year, but the reimbursement process is slow, and the cost burden is not going away anytime soon.

Zoom out and the picture gets worse. In Q4 fiscal 2025, tariffs produced a gross negative impact of 520 basis points, partially offset by 110 bps from internal efficiency efforts. Gross margin for that quarter contracted 550 bps year over year, and gross profit fell 8%. That is not a rounding error – that is structural compression.

The removal of the de minimis exemption – which previously allowed duty-free shipments under $800 – has added a separate layer of cost pressure to Lululemon’s e-commerce channel specifically. Combined with elevated reciprocal tariff rates, management projects a net $320 million margin impact in fiscal 2026 even after mitigation efforts are applied.

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What the Numbers Look Like Going In

  • Full-year EPS guidance: $12.10 to $12.30, down from $13.26 in fiscal 2025
  • Revenue growth guidance: 2% to 4% overall for the year
  • North America sales: Management expects a decline of 1% to 3%
  • Q4 fiscal 2025 revenue: $3.64 billion, up less than 1% year over year
  • Q4 net income: Dropped from $748.4 million to $586.8 million
  • U.S. Q4 sales: Down 6% year over year; international up 17%

The international business remains the clearest bright spot. China and other global markets are holding up in a way that domestic results simply are not. That split matters for how investors frame the long-term story – but it does not solve the margin problem in the near term.

Why Multiple Analysts Cut Targets

Piper Sandler’s most recent target reduction – from $190 to $130 – was driven by a first-quarter fiscal 2026 sales estimate revised down to just 1% growth, with U.S. sales projected at negative 7%. The firm also lowered its price-to-earnings multiple to 11x from 16x, reflecting what it sees as ongoing structural weakness in the domestic market. The stock was trading around $126 at the time of that cut.

JPMorgan’s cut from $196 to $173 followed a similar logic – weaker full-year guidance, tariff-driven cost pressure, and limited visibility on when the U.S. consumer normalizes at this price point. Baird and Telsey followed with reductions of their own.

What’s worth watching here is the multiple compression across the board. Analysts are not just lowering earnings estimates – they are paying less for each dollar of those estimates. That combination of lower earnings and lower multiples is what drives significant price target reductions, and it reflects a genuine shift in how the Street is valuing the business right now.

The Leadership Overhang

Slight tangent, but it matters. Tonight’s report will be the first since Lululemon settled its proxy fight with founder Chip Wilson – and the first since it announced that former Nike executive Heidi O’Neill will take over as CEO in September. Wilson had publicly accused the company of squandering brand value, and his criticism gained traction with investors already frustrated by the stock’s decline.

O’Neill is regarded as a capable operator. A 20-year Nike veteran who led the company’s women’s division, she is described by people who have worked with her as decisive once priorities are set. But she is not here yet. Until she is, the company is being run by interim co-CEOs, and strategic clarity is limited. That uncertainty does not help when the numbers are already under pressure.

What Investors Should Watch Tonight

  • Gross margin vs. the 110 bps tariff guidance – did actual Q1 results come in better or worse?
  • North America comparable sales – the Street is bracing for negative U.S. comps
  • Updated full-year margin guidance – any revision here moves the stock significantly
  • International growth trajectory – China and global markets are the offset to watch
  • Any commentary on tariff mitigation progress or refund status from management
  • FY2026 EPS outlook relative to buy-side estimates of $9 to $10

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Bottom Line

The debate on LULU right now is not about whether this is a great brand. It is. The debate is about how long margin compression persists, and whether the Street has gotten conservative enough in its estimates to allow for a positive reaction on any beat. With the stock down over 70% from its highs and trading at roughly 11x forward earnings, valuation alone is not the catalyst. What changes the trajectory is evidence – either that tariff costs are peaking, that U.S. trends are stabilizing, or that incoming leadership has a credible plan. Tonight may offer early signals on all three.

For informational purposes only.

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