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HELEN OF TROY LTD (HELE)·Q1 2026 Earnings Summary
Executive Summary
- Q1 FY26 was weak: revenue fell 10.8% YoY to $371.7M and adjusted EPS dropped to $0.41, with a large GAAP loss from $414M of non-cash impairments; softness was concentrated in Beauty & Wellness and Home & Outdoor, with tariffs estimated to account for ~8 pts of the 10.8% decline .
- Results missed S&P Global consensus: revenue $371.7M vs $394.9M estimate* and adjusted EPS $0.41 vs $0.84 estimate*; management cited direct‑import order cancellations, tariff pull‑forwards, China headwinds, and consumer trade-down as drivers of the shortfall .
- Guidance: no FY outlook; Q2 FY26 net sales $408–$432M and adjusted EPS $0.45–$0.60 as tariff disruption persists and mix/promotions weigh on margins; interest expense $13–$14M, adjusted tax 28.9–30.9%, shares 22.9M .
- Near-term stock catalysts: price-increase execution (avg 7–10% across portfolio), tariff mitigation trajectory (net tariff impact now expected to be < $15M OI hit at current tariffs), and progress on supply-chain diversification (COGS exposure to China now guided to <25% by FY26 end, higher than prior target) .
What Went Well and What Went Wrong
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What Went Well
- Early green shoots in sell-through: U.S. POS units up in 8 of 11 key brands; DTC +9% YoY; Osprey revenue +3.7%; Curlsmith +17%; Olive & June ahead of plan .
- Free cash flow improvement: Q1 operating cash flow $58.3M; FCF $45.0M vs $16.2M last year, enabling $46M net debt paydown QoQ .
- Clear mitigation roadmap: price increases queued (avg 7–10% across items, targeted by brand/SKU) and supplier diversification with dual sourcing; company now expects net tariff OI impact < $15M at current tariffs .
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What Went Wrong
- Tariffs and channel disruption: ~8 pts of the 10.8% sales decline tied to direct‑import cancellations, tariff-related pull-forwards and China cross‑border shifts; China localization and subsidized domestic competition weighed on thermometry .
- Mix, promotions, and trade-down: gross margin -160 bps YoY to 47.1% on trade-down, retail trade spend, and unfavorable brand mix; adjusted operating margin compressed to 4.3% (–600 bps) .
- Large impairment: $414.4M pre-tax impairment (goodwill $317.0M; intangibles $97.4M) drove GAAP operating margin to (109.5)% and GAAP diluted loss per share to $(19.65) .
Financial Results
Q1 FY26 Actual vs S&P Global Consensus
- Revenue: $371.7M vs $394.9M estimate* .
- Adjusted/Primary EPS: $0.41 vs $0.84 estimate* .
Note: *Values retrieved from S&P Global.
Segment performance (Q1 YoY)
KPIs and Balance Sheet
Guidance Changes
Earnings Call Themes & Trends
Management Commentary
- “We must get back to fundamentals and move with greater speed… improve our go-to-market effectiveness, simplify how we operate, refocus on innovation for more product-driven growth, sharpen our spend, and reinvigorate our culture with resilience and an owner’s mindset.” — Interim CEO Brian Grass .
- “Tariff-related impacts [were] approximately 8 percentage points of the 10.8% consolidated revenue decline… We believe we can reduce our fiscal 2026 net tariff impact on operating income to less than $15 million based on tariffs currently in place.” — Brian Grass .
- “We are implementing… average price increase across our portfolio in the range of 7% to 10%… very selective by brand… conservative elasticity assumptions.” — Management Q&A .
- “We now expect to reduce our cost of goods sold exposed to China tariffs to less than 25% by the end of fiscal 2026… accelerating supplier diversification and dual sourcing.” — Management .
Q&A Highlights
- Pricing elasticity/plans: Company has retailer-aligned, item-level increases averaging 7–10% and is using conservative elasticity assumptions given the macro; price moves are targeted by brand and country of origin .
- Margin cadence: Gross margin expected to improve YoY in Q2 vs last year; SG&A ratio to step down from ~45% in Q1 toward ~40–41% near term, normalizing to ~37–38% in the back half as cost actions take hold .
- Full-year framing: Existing FY consensus deemed “not unreasonable,” but cadence heavily 2H-weighted due to timing of price increases and tariff mitigation; caution against extrapolating Q1+Q2 to full year .
- Distribution and sell-through: Net distribution gains cited (e.g., Walmart blood pressure monitors; Hydro Flask/Osprey in EMEA/APAC); POS unit metrics improving but retailers still cautious on orders into Q2 .
- Cash/Inventory: Positive free cash flow expected for FY; Q2-end inventory guided to $510–$520M with ~$35M of tariff costs capitalized; net leverage just over 3.1x at Q1 end .
Estimates Context
- Q1 FY26 misses vs S&P Global consensus: revenue $371.7M vs $394.9M estimate*; adjusted/Primary EPS $0.41 vs $0.84 estimate* .
- Q2 FY26 setup: Company’s adjusted EPS guidance ($0.45–$0.60) brackets the S&P Global Primary EPS consensus of ~$0.53*, and revenue guidance ($408–$432M) brackets the ~$417.7M revenue consensus* .
Note: *Values retrieved from S&P Global.
Key Takeaways for Investors
- Expect near-term estimate pressure: Q1 shortfall, Q2 guidance implying continued YoY declines, and tariff/mix headwinds argue for cautious near-term revisions despite 2H mitigation plans .
- Watch pricing execution and elasticity: 7–10% price increases are critical to restoring margins; management is conservative on elasticity, but trade-down and promotions could temper recovery .
- Supply-chain pivot is a 2H/FY27 story: Dual sourcing and diversification should meaningfully reduce tariff exposure by late FY26/FY27, but FY26 carries transition costs and operational friction .
- Free cash flow discipline is a support: Stronger FCF and inventory management (despite higher tariff-capitalized inventory) help de-risk leverage and fund mitigation .
- Brand health shows resilience in value tiers: POS unit gains, Osprey strength, and Olive & June momentum indicate pockets of growth even as consumers trade down .
- Risk skew: Macro/tariffs/China exposure and retailer caution remain key overhangs; upside hinges on price realization, POS translating to replenishment, and moderation in tariff/currency pressures .
Appendix: Additional Detail and Explanations
Why the quarter missed
- Revenue shortfall vs consensus stemmed from direct-import order pauses amid higher tariffs, Q4 pull-forward, and China’s shift to localized fulfillment and subsidized domestic competition; consumer trade-down increased promotions and hurt mix .
- Margin compression reflected elevated retail trade spending, unfavorable brand mix, and higher outbound freight, partly offset by Olive & June and lower commodities (Pegasus savings) .
Forward look and “why” behind guidance
- Q2 outlook embeds ongoing tariff disruption, persistent trade-down, promotional intensity, and unfavorable operating leverage; partial offsets include supplier cost actions and Pegasus savings .
- Management highlighted price increases taking effect in 2H, normalization of retailer inventories/direct-import patterns, and distribution gains as the bridge to a stronger back half .