Sign in

You're signed outSign in or to get full access.

CP

Childrens Place, Inc. (PLCE)·Q2 2026 Earnings Summary

Executive Summary

  • Q2 FY2026 (thirteen weeks ended August 2, 2025): Net sales $298.0M and GAAP diluted EPS $(0.24); gross margin 34.0%, up sequentially vs Q1 but down 100 bps YoY .
  • Against S&P Global consensus, revenue beat ($298.0M vs $289.6M*) while normalized/primary EPS missed (actual $(0.15) vs $(0.10)) — only one estimate was recorded for each metric (low visibility).
  • Management announced a transformation plan targeting >$40M gross benefits over 3 years, a corporate payroll run-rate below $80M in FY2026, and a new loyalty program launching in Q3; tariffs expected to add $20–$25M in FY2025 with ~80% mitigation planned .
  • July delivered the first positive DTC comp month in 18 months and back-to-school momentum continued in August; inventory reduced ~$78M YoY and total liquidity stood at $91.6M (cash + ABL + Mithaq commitment) .

What Went Well and What Went Wrong

What Went Well

  • Back-to-school demand improved with July marking “the first month in the last 18 months” of positive DTC comp, and momentum carried into August; management cited fashion-forward assortments, licensing expansion, and new partnerships as drivers .
  • Sequential margin recovery: gross margin reached 34.0% in Q2 vs 29.2% in Q1, aided by product mix, pricing and promotion discipline .
  • Strategic plan: “an in-depth long-range plan” targeting >$40M benefits over 3 years, payroll run-rate below $80M in FY2026, and a new loyalty program in Q3 to drive retention/LTV .
    • Quote (CEO): “We ended the quarter with strong momentum… expansion of licensing, a greater emphasis on fashion-forward assortments, and new partnerships are resonating strongly” .
    • Quote (CFO): “We will be implementing an in-depth long-range plan… yield over $40 million of gross benefits over the next three years” .

What Went Wrong

  • Top-line pressure persisted: net sales down 6.8% YoY; comparable sales decreased 4.7% for the quarter, with traffic and e-comm conversion still challenged .
  • YoY gross margin compressed 100 bps due to inventory adjustments and channel mix shifts (including wholesale) despite sequential improvement .
  • Profitability remains fragile: GAAP net loss $(5.4)M; interest expense and related-party interest-equivalent charges continue to burden P&L .
    • Analyst concern: tariff/duty headwinds of $20–$25M projected for FY2025, with mitigation plans required to protect margin .

Financial Results

Quarterly Performance vs Prior Periods

MetricQ4 FY2025 (ended Feb 1, 2025)Q1 FY2026 (ended May 3, 2025)Q2 FY2026 (ended Aug 2, 2025)YoY Q2 FY2024 (ended Aug 3, 2024)
Revenue ($USD Millions)$408.6 $242.1 $298.0 $319.7
GAAP Diluted EPS ($)$(0.62) $(1.57) $(0.24) $(2.51)
Gross Margin %28.5% 29.2% 34.0% 35.0%
Operating Income (Loss) ($USD Millions)$6.8 $(24.1) $4.1 $(21.8)
Net Income Margin %(2.0)% (14.1)% (1.8)% (10.0)%

Actual vs Consensus (Q2 FY2026)

MetricConsensusActual
Revenue ($USD)$289,580,170*$298,006,000*
Primary EPS ($)$(0.10)*$(0.15)*

Values retrieved from S&P Global.
Note: Only one estimate for each metric was recorded (low coverage)*.

Non-GAAP (Adjusted) – Q2 FY2026

MetricQ2 FY2026
Adjusted Operating Income ($USD Millions)$6.067
Adjusted Net Loss ($USD Millions)$(3.404)
Adjusted Diluted EPS ($)$(0.15)

Segment Breakdown – Q2 FY2026 vs Q2 FY2024

SegmentQ2 FY2026 Net Sales ($USD Millions)Q2 FY2026 Segment Op Inc (Loss) ($USD Millions)Q2 FY2024 Net Sales ($USD Millions)Q2 FY2024 Segment Op Inc (Loss) ($USD Millions)
U.S.$273.2 $6.3 $292.4 $(19.7)
International$24.8 $(2.2) $27.3 $(2.1)
Total$298.0 $4.1 $319.7 $(21.8)

KPIs and Balance Sheet/Liquidity

KPIQ4 FY2025Q1 FY2026Q2 FY2026
Comparable Sales %(15.3)% (13.6)% (4.7)%
Store Count (Period End)495 495 (437 U.S., 58 Intl.) 494
Inventories ($USD Millions)$399.6 $422.2 $442.7
Cash ($USD Millions)$5.3 $5.7 $7.8
Total Liquidity ($USD Millions)$85.5 (Cash $5.3 + ABL $40.2 + Mithaq $40.0) $84.4 (Cash $5.7 + ABL $38.7 + Mithaq $40.0) $91.6 (Cash $7.8 + ABL $43.8 + Mithaq $40.0)

Guidance Changes

MetricPeriodPrevious GuidanceCurrent GuidanceChange
Corporate payroll run-rateFY2026Not disclosedBelow $80MRaised specificity
Transformation savings (gross)Next 3 yearsNot disclosed>$40MNew target
Loyalty program launchQ3 FY2026Not disclosedLaunch plannedNew initiative
Tariff/duty impactFY2025Not disclosed$20–$25M expected; ~80% mitigationNew disclosure

No quantitative revenue/EPS guidance ranges were provided in Q2 materials .

Earnings Call Themes & Trends

Note: A Q2 FY2026 earnings call transcript was not available in the document repository; themes inferred from Q2 press release, Q1 10‑Q MD&A, and Q4 press release.

TopicPrevious Mentions (Q4 FY2025, Q1 FY2026)Current Period (Q2 FY2026)Trend
Tariffs/macroExpect margin pressure; diversified sourcing; potential new tariffs and macro headwinds $20–$25M FY2025 tariff/duty impact with ~80% mitigation via sourcing, vendor partnerships, inbound ocean rates Heightened risk with mitigation plan in place
Product/assortmentRationalized promotions; rebalance mix; fashion/basic balance Fashion-forward assortments, licensing expansion; back-to-school momentum Improving mix; resonating with customers
Marketing/loyaltyOptimize spend; plan for revitalized loyalty New loyalty program launching in Q3 to drive retention/LTV Execution phase starting
Wholesale partnershipsStrengthening, exploring expansion Investment in new wholesale partnerships as part of distribution optimization Expanding channel mix
Store strategyFleet optimization, closures in prior 12 months Shift from closing to opening stores; revitalizing store experience Strategic pivot to selective openings
Supply chain/costsInput cost/freight improvements aided margin Continued improvements in inbound ocean rates; tariff mitigation Tailwinds vs prior year costs

Management Commentary

  • “We ended the quarter with strong momentum for our back-to-school season… licensing, fashion-forward assortments, and new partnerships are resonating strongly with our core customer” — Muhammad Umair, President & Interim CEO .
  • “We will be implementing an in-depth long-range plan… yield over $40 million of gross benefits over the next three years… corporate payroll… planned to be below an $80 million run rate in fiscal year 2026… loyalty program in the third quarter to drive retention and enhance lifetime value” — John Szczepanski, CFO .
  • “Tariff environment remains unpredictable… projecting approximately $20 million to $25 million in additional tariff and duty expenses for fiscal year 2025… plans to mitigate approximately 80%” — Muhammad Umair .

Q&A Highlights

The Q2 FY2026 earnings call transcript was not available in the repository; therefore, Q&A highlights and any intra-quarter guidance clarifications could not be verified from a transcript. We relied on the press release and 10‑Q.

Estimates Context

  • Revenue beat versus consensus ($298.0M vs $289.6M*), suggesting stronger-than-expected back-to-school momentum and channel mix effects*.
  • Normalized/Primary EPS missed ($(0.15) vs $(0.10)), reflecting ongoing SG&A deleverage and interest burden despite sequential margin improvement.
  • Estimate depth was very limited (only one estimate for each metric), implying fragile external coverage and higher revision volatility*.

Values retrieved from S&P Global.

Key Takeaways for Investors

  • Sequential improvement: gross margin rose to 34.0% and operating income returned to positive, supported by product/pricing discipline; but YoY pressures from inventory adjustments and mix persist .
  • Revenue outperformed a thin consensus set, aided by back-to-school momentum and stores channel strength; comps still negative but improving (Q2: (4.7)%) .
  • Transformation plan with targeted >$40M savings over 3 years and payroll run-rate < $80M in FY2026 is the medium-term margin and cash flow lever; loyalty program launch in Q3 is a near-term engagement catalyst .
  • Tariff/duty headwinds ($20–$25M in FY2025) are material; mitigation (~80%) relies on diversified sourcing, vendor partnerships, and ocean rate improvements — execution risk should be monitored .
  • Balance sheet: liquidity improved to $91.6M (cash + ABL + Mithaq commitment); inventories down ~$78M YoY, but ABL borrowings remain elevated — interest costs and leverage continue to constrain EPS .
  • Near-term trading: watch for Q3 loyalty program launch metrics, back-to-school sell-through, and tariff developments; medium-term thesis hinges on margin recovery, cost takeout delivery, and disciplined channel/mix reprioritization .