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CONSTELLATION BRANDS, INC. (STZ)·Q2 2026 Earnings Summary
Executive Summary
- Q2 FY2026 delivered a mixed print: consolidated net sales fell 15% year over year to $2.48B, but comparable EPS came in at $3.63, ahead of S&P Global consensus, driven by pricing, cost savings, and tax mix; Beer remained best-in-class margins despite volume deleverage, while Wine & Spirits reflected divestiture impacts and distributor terms .
- Versus Q1, revenue dipped sequentially while margins expanded, with operating margin at 35.2% (vs. 28.4% in Q1); Beer margin rose to 40.6% despite lower shipments, offsetting aluminum tariffs and higher marketing spend .
- Guidance: reported EPS was lowered to $9.86–$10.16, while comparable EPS was affirmed at $11.30–$11.60; Beer FY26 outlook was reiterated for net sales decline of 2–4% and operating income decline of 7–9%; cash flow, capex, and FCF targets were maintained .
- Stock-relevant narrative: management emphasized cyclical macro headwinds (Hispanic consumer softness, lower beer occasions) over structural issues, continued marketing investment, tariff headwinds (~$70M Beer; ~$20M Wine), and inventory rebalancing being a Q2-timed, distributor-only action; cost savings YTD >$100M support margin resilience .
What Went Well and What Went Wrong
What Went Well
- Comparable EPS of $3.63 beat S&P Global consensus by ~$0.22, with operating margin expansion and continued beer category dollar share gains in Circana channels; management highlighted “disciplined innovation” and brand investment .
- Beer portfolio leadership persisted: Modelo Especial retained #1 brand by dollar sales; Pacifico and Victoria delivered double-digit growth; Corona Sunbrew was cited as the #1 new brand in dollars and a top share gainer .
- Cost savings execution remained robust: >$500M delivered since investor day and >$100M YTD, with Q2 Beer savings ~$65M (supplier/sourcing, rail logistics), supporting margin durability .
What Went Wrong
- Beer shipments declined 8.7% YoY with depletions down 2.7%, reflecting socioeconomic demand headwinds and an earlier-than-usual distributor inventory rebalancing; Beer net sales fell 7% and Beer operating margin decreased 200 bps YoY .
- Wine & Spirits net sales dropped 65% and operating margin swung to -14.6%, driven by SVEDKA and 2025 Wine Divestitures and changes in distributor contractual obligations .
- Tariffs and fixed overhead weighed on margins (~100 bps headwind), with marketing investment adding ~60 bps of incremental margin pressure; Beer FY26 guide reset earlier (Sep 2) to declines in net sales and operating income .
Financial Results
Segment breakdown:
KPIs:
Consensus vs. actual (S&P Global):
Values with asterisk (*) retrieved from S&P Global.
Guidance Changes
Note: FY2026 outlook was reset on Sept 2; Oct 6 affirmed comparable EPS and cash flow guidance while lowering reported EPS.
Earnings Call Themes & Trends
Management Commentary
- “While we continue to navigate a challenging socioeconomic environment that has dampened consumer demand… we are pleased to continue to lead the U.S. Beer industry in dollar share gains… and deliver cash returns to shareholders.” — Bill Newlands, CEO .
- “We are confident in the longer-term growth trajectory… much of FY2026 capex is committed long-lead items; beyond FY2026 we are reviewing opportunities to slow or avoid capex.” — Garth Hankinson, CFO .
- “Corona Sunbrew is the number one new brand in dollars and the number four share gainer… we’ve returned Corona’s advertising focus to the beer and its iconic beach essence.” — Bill Newlands .
- “Tariff impact this year is about $70M on Beer and $20M on Wine… largely tracking volumes.” — Garth Hankinson .
- “We have twice the share of Gen Z as part of our overall mix versus the industry average.” — Bill Newlands .
Q&A Highlights
- Macro vs. structural: Management views volume softness as primarily cyclical; structural factors (cannabis, RTDs) currently minor; continued investment in marketing to protect brand equity .
- Beer margins sustainability: Acknowledged best-in-class 39–40% benchmark; unwilling to guide beyond FY26 given macro; margin drivers include depreciation timing, savings agenda, and eventual return to growth .
- Tariffs/margins: Headwinds ~100 bps from fixed overhead/tariffs and ~60 bps from higher marketing; offset by lower comp/benefits in H2 .
- Distributor inventory: Q2 ship-dip driven by summer overship and earlier rebalancing; inventories now normalized; no retailer destocking; PODs and shelf share gaining .
- Affordability: Repositioning within light beer (Oro, Premier) and price-pack architecture to meet constrained consumers; smaller sizes and price points in focus .
Estimates Context
- Q2 FY2026: Comparable EPS $3.63 beat S&P Global consensus $3.41*; revenue $2.48B beat $2.46B*; EBITDA $1.01B beat $0.97B*.
- Q1 FY2026: Comparable EPS $3.22 missed $3.29*; revenue $2.52B missed $2.56B*; EBITDA $0.90B vs. $0.95B*.
Values with asterisk (*) retrieved from S&P Global. Sources for actuals: .
Implications: Consensus likely revises Beer FY26 operating income and margin trajectory lower (already reflected in Sept guide), but Q2 beat on EPS/revenue may temper near-term negative revisions; watch for tariff flow-through and H2 margin cadence.
Key Takeaways for Investors
- Beer remains the profit engine with resilient margins (40.6% in Q2) despite volume deleverage; cost savings and pricing continue to offset fixed overhead and tariff headwinds .
- Near-term macro pressure (Hispanic consumer softness, fewer beer occasions) persists; management is leaning into marketing, distribution, and affordability via price-pack architecture—supporting share but limiting margin upside short-term .
- Inventory rebalancing was distributor-only and pulled into Q2; normalization expected in H2 with shipments tracking depletions—reduces risk of further destocking headlines .
- FY2026 guidance now frames a lower reported EPS range but affirms comparable EPS and cash flow targets; focus remains on Mexico brewery investments (~$1.0B of ~$1.2B FY capex) and balanced capital returns (dividend $1.02, $604M buybacks YTD) .
- Trading lens: Q2 beat vs. consensus and reiterated comparable EPS may support the stock near term, but sustained macro/tariff headwinds and Beer operating income decline guide constrain multiple expansion; monitor holiday sell-through and California labor trends .
Sources: Q2 FY2026 8-K release and financials ; Q2 FY2026 call transcript ; Sep 2 outlook update ; Q1 FY2026 8-K and financials ; Dividend PR .