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KOHLS Corp (KSS)·Q2 2026 Earnings Summary

Executive Summary

  • Q2 results were ahead of plan: comparable sales -4.2% with July comps flat, gross margin expanded to 39.9% (+28 bps YoY), and adjusted EPS of $0.56; GAAP EPS was $1.35 due to a $129M interchange-fee settlement gain .
  • Results beat Wall Street consensus: Revenue $3.546B vs $3.369B estimate; EPS $0.56 vs $0.30; EBITDA $0.336B vs $0.307B; Q1 also beat on revenue and EPS, indicating early execution benefits from proprietary brand rebalancing and coupon eligibility expansion * [functions.GetEstimates]*.
  • FY25 outlook improved: raised adjusted EPS to $0.50–$0.80 (from $0.10–$0.60), raised adjusted operating margin to 2.5%–2.7% (from 2.2%–2.6%), narrowed sales declines, lowered interest and depreciation; gross margin targeted to low end of prior range amid tariff uncertainty .
  • Operating discipline continued: inventory down 5%, SG&A down 4.1%, operating cash flow YTD $506M; revolver reduced to $75M with 2025 debt refinanced via $360M 10% secured notes due 2030; quarterly dividend declared at $0.125 .

What Went Well and What Went Wrong

What Went Well

  • Proprietary brands and value strategy gained traction; women’s proprietary brands and petites drove improvement, with petites up ~40% and July women’s comp positive; jewelry grew +12% and accessories outperformed .
  • Impulse queue lines and Sephora contributed: impulse sales +30% with rollout in 300+ stores; Sephora grew +3% YoY and continues to draw younger customers, supporting cross-shopping in juniors and women’s .
  • Cost control and margin: gross margin +28 bps YoY on mix and proprietary penetration; SG&A -4.1%; adjusted operating profit and EPS guidance raised, reflecting confidence despite macro headwinds .

Quotes:

  • “We were able to expand our gross margin by approximately 30 basis points, lower our inventory by 5% and reduce our SG&A expenses by 4% in the quarter.” — Interim CEO Michael Bender .
  • “For every 100 bps of penetration we gain in proprietary brands, it’s 10–15 bps of improvement to gross margin.” — CFO Jill Timm .

What Went Wrong

  • Traffic and core credit customer pressure: store transactions lagged; Kohl’s card sales down low teens; lower/middle-income customers remain challenged, trading down to opening price points .
  • Category softness: men’s and kids underperformed; footwear lagged on sandals/active; small electrics soft; digital underperformed earlier in the year (though improving with more coupon-eligible brands) .
  • Tariff uncertainty: gross margin outlook guided to low end given pricing competitiveness in holiday and tariff impacts; other revenue outlook reduced on co-brand lap and AR balances .

Financial Results

Quarterly profile (oldest → newest)

MetricQ4 2025Q1 2026Q2 2026
Total Revenue ($USD Billions)$5.397 $3.233 $3.546
Net Sales ($USD Billions)$5.175 $3.049 $3.347
Gross Margin (%)32.9% 39.9% 39.9%
SG&A ($USD Billions)$1.539 $1.164 $1.199
Operating Income (GAAP, $USD Billions)$0.126 $0.060 $0.279
Adjusted Operating Income ($USD Billions)$0.126→$0.106 (adj) n/a$0.161
Diluted EPS (GAAP)$0.43 ($0.13) $1.35
Adjusted Diluted EPS$0.95 n/a$0.56
Comparable Sales (%)-6.7% -3.9% -4.2%
Inventory ($USD Billions)$2.945 $3.137 $2.994

Notes: Adjusted figures reflect non-GAAP reconciliations disclosed by the company .

Year-over-Year (Q2 2026 vs Q2 2025)

MetricQ2 2025Q2 2026
Net Sales ($USD Billions)$3.525 $3.347
Total Revenue ($USD Billions)$3.732 $3.546
Gross Margin (%)39.6% 39.9%
SG&A ($USD Billions)$1.250 $1.199
Operating Income (GAAP, $USD Billions)$0.166 $0.279
Diluted EPS (GAAP)$0.59 $1.35
Adjusted Diluted EPS$0.59 $0.56

Drivers: Interchange settlement gain of $129M boosted GAAP EPS; underlying adjusted EPS declined slightly YoY on sales pressure, offset by mix and SG&A improvements .

KPIs and operating details

KPIQ2 2026 Value / Commentary
Other Revenue$199M (credit revenue, -4% YoY due to servicing shift)
Digital vs StoresDigital outpaced stores with strong conversion; coupon eligibility change helped digital
Jewelry Sales Growth+12% YoY (fashion jewelry strength; fine jewelry tests in ~200 stores)
Petites~+40% YoY in Q2; strong response to Lauren Conrad & Simply Vera
Impulse Sales+30% YoY; queue lines implemented in 300+ stores, rollout finishing by Q3
Sephora at Kohl’s+3% YoY; comps flat; beauty business targeting $2B
Revolver Balance$75M at quarter-end (reduced by $470M from Q1)
Operating Cash Flow (YTD)$506M; Adjusted FCF ~$270M YTD

Guidance Changes

MetricPeriodPrevious Guidance (Q1)Current Guidance (Q2)Change
Net SalesFY 2025(5%) to (7%) (5%) to (6%) Narrowed improvement
Comparable SalesFY 2025(4%) to (6%) (4%) to (5%) Narrowed improvement
Other RevenueFY 2025Down ~12% Down 13%–14% Lowered
Gross Margin ExpansionFY 2025+30–50 bps ~+30 bps (low end) Lowered to low end
SG&AFY 2025Down 3.5%–5% Down 4%–4.5% Tightened
DepreciationFY 2025~$730M ~$705M Lowered
Interest ExpenseFY 2025~$315M ~$305M Lowered
Adjusted Operating MarginFY 20252.2%–2.6% 2.5%–2.7% Raised
Adjusted Diluted EPSFY 2025$0.10–$0.60 $0.50–$0.80 Raised
CapexFY 2025$400M–$425M ~$400M Maintained (lower end)
DividendFY 2025$0.125/qtr $0.125/qtr (declared Aug 12) Maintained

Rationale: Tariff and competitive pricing risks temper gross margin, while proprietary mix, inventory discipline, and cost controls support higher operating margin and EPS .

Earnings Call Themes & Trends

TopicQ4 2025 (Prev)Q1 2026 (Prev)Q2 2026 (Current)Trend
Proprietary brandsIdentified as core to value; plan to elevate private label like Sonoma, FLX Sequential improvement from investment; still underperform vs company 500 bps improvement vs Q1; women’s and kids opening price points emphasized Positive momentum
Coupon eligibilityToo many exclusions causing friction; intent to reverse certain exclusions Phase 1 in late April; more brand inclusions by mid-Aug for BTS/holiday Second wave added ~50 brands; 800+ bps increase in coupon-eligible penetration in Q2 Expanding reach
SephoraStrong Q4 comps +13%; rollout completing +6% net sales, +1% comps; final rollout with 105 small shops +3% YoY; beauty business target $2B; cross-shopping into juniors/women Sustained contributor
Store layout & trip assuranceAdjacency optimization; focus on basics/essentials Accessory pad near Sephora; juniors moved; improve in-stocks Dedicated accessories pad, active relocated; improved intimates in-stocks Execution underway
Tariffs & sourcingDiversified supply chain; vigilant on macro volatility Mitigation via country shifts, elasticity-based buys; margin guide balanced Margin at low end; monitor holiday pricing competitiveness Ongoing risk
Digital channelUnderperformed in Q4; conversion issues fixed -7.7% sales; improving with coupons and fixes; profitability lower than stores Digital outpaced stores; coupon transparency drove conversion Improving

Management Commentary

  • “Customers are continuing to be choiceful with their discretionary income… we are working relentlessly to meet their needs by providing quality products at a great value.” — Michael Bender .
  • “Our outlook… assumes the macroeconomic environment will remain challenged. However, our strong operating discipline and improved cash flow generation will continue to provide meaningful support to drive progress.” — Michael Bender .
  • “Digital sales outpaced store sales during the quarter, driven by strong conversion rates… inclusion of additional brands in our coupon offerings resonated well with customers.” — Jill Timm .
  • “Adjusted diluted EPS of $0.50 to $0.80… up from $0.10 to $0.60.” — Jill Timm on FY25 guidance raise .

Q&A Highlights

  • Top-line drivers: Proprietary brand investments and expanded coupon eligibility are primary levers; sequential improvement expected in back half as inventories flow into women’s and value price points .
  • Tariffs and margin: Margin guided to low end to preserve price competitiveness; proprietary mix and inventory turns offset tariff pressure; margin cadence balanced between Q3 and Q4 .
  • Customer and comps cadence: Traffic is the key driver; initiatives to regain trips in non-substitutable categories (jewelry, petites) and value messaging; comps expected similar cadence in H2 .
  • Credit revenue: Co-brand lap and lower revolving balances weigh on other revenue; guidance reflects step-down in H2 .
  • Back-to-school read: August off to a good start; strength in backpacks, kids’ footwear, fleece, women’s denim, Levi’s and Nike .

Estimates Context

  • Beat vs consensus (S&P Global): Q2 EPS $0.56 vs $0.30 est; revenue $3.546B vs $3.369B est; EBITDA $0.336B vs $0.307B est. Q1 EPS -$0.13 vs -$0.22 est; revenue $3.233B vs $3.062B est; EBITDA $0.235B vs $0.222B est [functions.GetEstimates]*.
  • FY26 consensus (illustrative for trajectory): EPS $0.745; revenue $14.83B; EBITDA $1.12B [functions.GetEstimates]*.

Table — Actual vs Estimates (oldest → newest)

PeriodEPS ($)Revenue ($USD Billions)EBITDA ($USD Billions)
Q1 2026Actual: -0.13 ; Est: -0.223*Actual: $3.233 ; Est: $3.062*Actual: $0.235*; Est: $0.222*
Q2 2026Actual: 0.56 ; Est: 0.297*Actual: $3.546 ; Est: $3.369*Actual: $0.336*; Est: $0.307*

Values with asterisk retrieved from S&P Global.

Key Takeaways for Investors

  • Execution momentum: Two consecutive beats vs consensus driven by proprietary brand rebalancing, coupon inclusion, and operating discipline; raised FY EPS and margin guidance is a positive catalyst * [functions.GetEstimates]* .
  • Mix tailwind vs tariff headwind: Proprietary penetration boosts margin (10–15 bps per 100 bps of mix), but guidance prudently sets margin at low end to price competitively through holiday amid tariff uncertainty .
  • Category strategy is working: Non-substitutable categories (jewelry, petites) and impulse are adding trips/units; watch for continued women’s recovery and broadening value assortment in H2 .
  • Balance sheet/liquidity improving: Revolver nearly cleared; 2025 maturities refinanced; inventory down 5%; YTD operating cash flow strong; supports investment and resilience .
  • Digital conversion lever: Coupon transparency and brand inclusions materially help digital; expect continued improvement as signage/training enhance in-store coupon awareness .
  • Risk monitoring: Middle/lower-income customer remains pressured; credit revenue expected to downtick in H2; tariffs and promotional intensity may cap margin upside .
  • Dividend continuity: $0.125 quarterly dividend maintained; capital allocation prioritizes debt reduction and flexibility while advancing Sephora and impulse rollouts .

Appendix — Additional Data

Notable items and adjustments

  • Legal settlement: One-time pre-tax gain $129M from interchange-fee lawsuit; excluded from adjusted EPS (GAAP diluted EPS +$1.14 contribution), adjusted EPS $0.56 .
  • Store actions: 27 store and 1 e-commerce fulfillment center closure announced in Q4’24, with $76M charges; part of SG&A optimization trajectory .

Dividend and capital markets updates

  • Dividend declared: $0.125 per share, payable Sep 24, 2025 .
  • Note issuance: $360M of 10% senior secured notes due 2030; nearest maturity 2029; long-term debt at 10-year low post actions .

Values with asterisk retrieved from S&P Global.