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Bath & Body Works, Inc. (BBWI)·Q2 2026 Earnings Summary
Executive Summary
- Q2 delivered at the high end of guidance on revenue and adjusted EPS: net sales $1.549B (+1.5% YoY), GAAP EPS $0.30, adjusted EPS $0.37; full-year adjusted EPS guidance low end raised to $3.35–$3.60 while narrowing sales growth to 1.5%–2.7% .
- Wall Street consensus was essentially met on EPS and gross margin, with a modest revenue shortfall; EPS came in ~$0.37 vs ~$0.377, revenue $1.549B vs ~$1.555B, gross margin 41.3% vs ~41.17% [Values retrieved from S&P Global].
- Management flagged tariff headwinds concentrated in Q3 ($40M) and increased FY25 share repurchases to $400M (from $300M), maintaining free cash flow guidance of $750M–$850M .
- Strategic “no-regret” moves accelerated (digital platform upgrades, product efficacy messaging, and expanded distribution like campus bookstores), with Disney Villains and “Summerween” driving engagement into Q3; these are key catalysts for near-term stock narrative .
What Went Well and What Went Wrong
What Went Well
- High-end delivery vs guidance: “net sales up 1.5% to $1.5 billion” and “adjusted EPS $0.37 at the high end of the guidance range”; raised low end of full-year adjusted EPS guidance .
- Consumer engagement and newness: Semi-Annual Sale execution improved; “Summerween” collection early drop sold out on TikTok Shop in one day; sanitizer category outperformed, men’s and True Blue Spa relaunch positive .
- Strategy with clear growth levers: CEO emphasized three no-regret moves—elevate digital, amplify product efficacy, expand distribution (“in more than 600 campus stores” reaching ~7M young consumers) .
What Went Wrong
- SG&A deleverage and health-care costs: adjusted SG&A rate rose to 30.2% (+110 bps YoY) on selling expense, new stores, and higher health-care costs; SG&A expected ~31.5% in Q3 .
- Body care softness outside sale windows: category down low single digits; Mother’s Day underperformed due to insufficient newness (a priority to fix) .
- Tariffs are a meaningful drag: FY25 gross profit headwind ~$85M (with ~$40M concentrated in Q3), disproportionately impacting Q3 margins; mix effects and timing add pressure .
Financial Results
Quarterly Trend (GAAP and Adjusted)
Channel/Segment Net Sales
Notes: Direct demand pressure in Q2 (-10% YoY), but adjusting for BOPIS reclassification to stores, Direct was down ~3%; underlying international system-wide retail sales grew ~9% despite reported net sales timing effects .
KPIs and Operational Metrics
Actual vs Wall Street Consensus (S&P Global)
Values retrieved from S&P Global.
Guidance Changes
Earnings Call Themes & Trends
Management Commentary
- CEO: “We will accelerate growth by putting the consumer at the center… elevating our digital platform, amplifying product efficacy, and expanding distribution to meet consumers where they are” .
- CEO on distribution: “As back to school season kicks off, we're in more than 600 campus stores with access to 7,000,000 young consumers” .
- CFO: “Adjusted SG&A rate… 30.2%, representing 110 bps deleverage… driven by selling expense… new stores and higher health care costs” .
- CFO: “We expect tariffs… to negatively impact gross profit by approximately $85M with $40M of that impact in Q3” .
Q&A Highlights
- Digital acceleration: New app in September and mobile web relaunch in October; multi-horizon plan (3/6/9/12 months) to drive brand relevance and sales across channels .
- Tariffs detail: Q3 gross margin impacted ~240 bps by ~$40M tariffs; Q4 impact ~100 bps; FY25 gross margin ≈44% despite headwinds .
- Body care and pricing: Body care down low-single digits; plan to increase newness and efficacy messaging; mix-adjusted AUR up low single digits; less promotional reliance over time .
- Off-mall productivity: Off-mall stores outperform mall stores on conversion; both formats have strong four-wall economics .
- Wholesale/alternative distribution: Campus bookstores included in guidance; strategic exploration of new channels to reach younger consumers .
Estimates Context
- Q2 2026 results were broadly in line with consensus: EPS ~$0.37 vs ~$0.377, gross margin ~41.3% vs ~41.17%; revenue modestly missed ($1.549B vs ~$1.555B); EBITDA missed (actual ~$221M vs ~$246M), reflecting SG&A deleverage and tariff impacts concentrated in inventory receipts earlier in the quarter [Values retrieved from S&P Global].
- Q1 2026 showed EPS beat ($0.49 vs ~$0.47), gross margin beat (45.4% vs ~44.2%), revenue in line, EBITDA slightly below consensus [Values retrieved from S&P Global].
- Near-term estimate risk: Q3 gross margin/EBITDA likely pressured by ~$40M tariffs; FY25 SG&A rate guidance lifted to ~27.7% may temper operating margin expectations; however, digital upgrades, collabs, and elevated ceramic candle launch could support revenue trajectory .
Key Takeaways for Investors
- Solid execution with high-end delivery vs internal guidance and raised low end of adjusted EPS; sales growth narrowed but balanced with increased buybacks—supportive of EPS durability in FY25 .
- Expect a transitory step-down in Q3 profitability vs Q2 given concentrated tariff impacts; Q4 should improve as tariff headwinds moderate per management .
- The narrative is shifting to growth investments: rapid digital platform improvements, efficacy-centric packaging and messaging, and new distribution—keys to attracting younger/new customers and reducing promotional dependency .
- Engagement engines remain strong: Disney Villains, Summerween, and men’s portfolio fueling traffic; sanitizer momentum continues; watch body care newness cadence around events (e.g., Mother’s Day) .
- Capital allocation is shareholder-friendly: buybacks increased to $400M; free cash flow $750–$850M intact—supports medium-term return profile despite tariff headwinds .
- Stock narrative near term hinges on Q3 margin delivery vs tariff drag and evidence of digital conversion uplift; medium-term thesis depends on sustained new customer growth and margin protection via reduced promotion and operational efficiencies .
Notes: All document-based figures and quotes cited from BBWI filings and transcripts. Estimates are values retrieved from S&P Global.