Lululemon reported Q1 fiscal 2026 results after the close on Wednesday that superficially looked like a beat but carried guidance that moved the stock in the opposite direction from what a revenue beat usually does – and the specific combination of a modest revenue surprise and a significant full-year revision is what NewsTrackerToday picked up as the analytical frame for understanding what the report actually says about where the business stands. Total net revenue rose 4% year-on-year to $2.5 billion, ahead of analyst forecasts of approximately $2.43 to $2.44 billion. Diluted earnings per share came in at $1.69, meeting expectations. But gross margin fell to 54.2% from 58.3% a year earlier, an 410-basis-point compression. Income from operations fell 37% compared to Q1 FY2025. And the company cut its full-year revenue guidance to a range of $11 billion to $11.15 billion, against a prior estimate of $11.35 to $11.5 billion, implying flat to down 1% revenue for the full year.
The regional split is where the story becomes clearest. North America revenue fell 3%, or 4% on a constant currency basis, with comparable sales down 6%. International revenue grew 22%, driven primarily by China, where comparable sales rose approximately 25 to 30%. That divergence – a business declining in its home market while growing robustly internationally – is not unusual among premium apparel brands navigating U.S. consumer caution, but it represents a structural question for Lululemon that the Q1 results do not resolve. The company’s stock has fallen roughly 41% year to date, trading around $125 versus a 52-week high of $338. The 2.2% aftermarket rise on the Q1 report reflects relief that the numbers were not worse, not confidence that the trajectory has changed.
Isabella Moretti examines the margin pressure precisely: “A 410-basis-point gross margin decline in a single quarter is meaningful. The company cites tariff exposure, markdowns, and higher costs as drivers. Tariff refunds could improve the picture if litigation outcomes go in Lululemon’s favor, but the guidance explicitly excludes any such benefit. The full-year EPS guidance range of $12.10 to $12.30 implies a year-on-year EPS decline from $13.26 in FY2025. That is not a turnaround story yet. It is a stabilization story, and the distinction matters for valuation.” At a price-to-earnings ratio of roughly 9 times forward earnings, the company trades at a historically low multiple, but the quality of those earnings – compressed margins, declining North America comps, a proxy fight that generated measurable cost items – is what NewsTrackerToday ran through as the context that makes the multiple look less like a value signal and more like a risk discount.
Meghan Frank, serving as Interim Co-CEO alongside CFO duties, said on the earnings call that the company experienced a solid start to the year and cited sequential improvements in full-price sales in North America as an early positive signal. The leadership transition adds a specific dimension to reading these results: Heidi O’Neill, the incoming CEO hired from Nike in April, is not scheduled to take over until September. The Q1 report is therefore the last full quarter under interim leadership, and the guidance it sets establishes the baseline against which O’Neill’s first moves will be measured. An implied full-year revenue decline and a material EPS cut are not the platform most CEOs prefer to inherit.
Ethan Cole reads the macro signal without sentiment: “Consumer spending in North America is uneven. Lululemon’s customer skews premium and tends to hold up better in downturns. A 6% comps decline in that segment says something about discretionary spending confidence that is worth watching across the retail sector. China at plus-25% comps is real strength. But China is not the margin driver yet.” The tariff exposure context matters: Lululemon said the guidance reflects ongoing tariff costs but does not assume any refunds. The Supreme Court ruling earlier this year invalidated some tariffs on foreign imports, and if Lululemon receives refunds, the guidance has upside. That scenario is what NewsTrackerToday put on record as the variable that separates a continued decline from a genuine floor in the second half.
The most credible near-term view is that O’Neill’s September arrival will reset the narrative around strategy, with market patience running through approximately Q2 or Q3 before investors demand concrete evidence of North America improvement. China’s 25-plus percent comps provide a growth story that keeps the international segment compelling. The gross margin trajectory – guided to decline approximately 120 basis points for the full year – is the operational number that determines whether the business re-rates toward its historical multiple or continues to trade at distress valuations. And it is the Q2 gross margin print, due in September, that News Tracker Today flags as the first real evidence of whether the tariff and markdown pressures that defined Q1 are structural or cyclical.