Lululemon Athletica Q1 2026 Earnings Call - Interim CEOs Cut Guidance Amid Brand Noise and Product Missteps
Summary
Lululemon’s first quarter results underscore a brand in transition, not crisis. Revenue rose just 4% to $2.5 billion, but comparable sales fell 2% as North America declined 6% and global gross margins contracted 410 basis points. Management pointed to two headwinds: a spike in negative social and media commentary that depressed foot traffic, and product launches that failed to generate the expected halo effect. The company is responding with urgency. It is increasing chase volume by 20%, compressing product development timelines, and boosting marketing spend by 10% to 15% to rebuild brand heat. Interim co-CEOs Meghan Frank and André Maestrini are laying the groundwork for incoming CEO Heidi O’Neill, who takes the helm in September.
Guidance was slashed across the board. Full-year revenue is now expected to be flat to down 1%, with full-year EPS guidance cut to $10.95-$11.15 from prior expectations. Gross margins will fall roughly 90 basis points year-over-year, pressured by tariffs and seasonal clearance. China remains the bright spot, growing 30% in Q1 and guiding for 20% full-year growth, though it also felt the brunt of the recent brand noise. The market will watch closely to see if Lululemon’s operational pivots can translate into a sustained sales trend improvement before the new CEO arrives.
Key Takeaways
- Total net revenue rose 4% to $2.5 billion, but comparable sales declined 2%, signaling underlying demand weakness despite top-line growth.
- North America led the drag, with comparable sales falling 6% as traffic dropped and conversion softened in late Q1.
- Gross margin contracted 410 basis points to 54.2%, driven by a 280 basis point tariff impact, higher markdowns, and fixed-cost deleverage.
- Management cited two primary headwinds: a spike in negative social and media commentary that suppressed store traffic, and recent product launches that failed to generate expected halo effects.
- The company is increasing chase volume by 20% year-over-year to react faster to strong-performing styles, with inventory units down 4% despite dollar growth.
- Product development cycles are being compressed from 18-24 months to 15-16 months, with a long-term target of 12-14 months to accelerate speed to market.
- Marketing spend is being increased 10% to 15% above last year to fund brand activations, community events, and digital content to rebuild brand heat.
- China Mainland revenue surged 30% in Q1, boosted by an 8 percentage point tailwind from Chinese New Year shifting into the quarter, and full-year guidance remains at 20% growth.
- Full-year 2026 revenue guidance was cut to flat to down 1%, and diluted EPS guidance was lowered to $10.95-$11.15, reflecting expected margin pressure and SG&A deleverage.
- Incoming CEO Heidi O’Neill takes over in September; interim co-CEOs are executing an action plan focused on restoring full-price health, optimizing store fleets with 15% fewer SKUs, and investing in enterprise efficiency.
Full Transcript
Aneesha Sherman, Analyst, Bernstein3: I would now like to turn the conference over to Howard Tubin, Vice President, Investor Relations for Lululemon Athletica. Please go ahead.
Howard Tubin, Vice President, Investor Relations, Lululemon Athletica: Thank you, and good afternoon. Welcome to Lululemon’s first quarter earnings conference call. Joining me today are Meghan Frank, interim co-CEO and CFO, and André Maestrini, interim co-CEO, President, and Chief Commercial Officer. Before we get started, I’d like to take this opportunity to remind you that our remarks today will include forward-looking statements reflecting management’s current forecast on certain aspects of Lululemon’s future. These statements are based on current information, which we have assessed, but by which its nature is dynamic and subject to rapid and even abrupt changes. Actual results may differ materially from those contained in or implied by these forward-looking statements due to risks and uncertainties associated with our business, including those we have disclosed in our most recent filings with the SEC, including our annual report on Form 10-K and our quarterly reports on Form 10-Q.
Any forward-looking statements that we make on this call are based on assumptions as of today, and we expressly disclaim any obligation or undertaking to update or revise any of these statements as a result of new information or future events. During this call, we will present both GAAP and non-GAAP financial measures. A reconciliation of GAAP to non-GAAP measures is included in our quarterly report on Form 10-Q and in today’s earnings press release. In addition, the comparable sales metrics given on today’s call are on a constant dollar basis. The press release and accompanying quarterly report on Form 10-Q are available under the Investors section of our website at www.lululemon.com. On today’s call, Meghan will begin with some remarks addressing current business trends and our updated guidance.
She and André will speak to the plans and strategies we’re implementing to drive improved performance and also share some Q1 highlights. Meghan will then discuss our detailed financials and guidance outlook, and then the team will be happy to take your questions. Before I turn the call over to Meghan, I’d like to remind investors to visit our investor site, where you’ll find a summary of our key financial and operating statistics for the first quarter, as well as our quarterly infographic. Meghan, over to you.
Aneesha Sherman, Analyst, Bernstein1: Thanks, Howard. Welcome everyone to our Q1 call. Before we dive into our results and current business trends, I want to say how excited we are to welcome incoming CEO Heidi O’Neill to the company in September. André and I both spent time with Heidi. It’s clear to me she has a true passion for the Lululemon brand, a deep understanding of product excellence, extensive experience driving growth and transformation at scale, and will be a strong leader for our organization. I’m looking forward to working with her to help Lululemon achieve the opportunities in front of us. I also want to give a warm welcome on behalf of the leadership team to our newest Director, Esi Eggleston Bracey, who joined the board in April, as well as to Laura Gentile and Marc Maurer, who will join the board following our annual meeting later this month.
We appreciate the support of the full board, including these new directors, as we continue to advance our plans and strategies. Turning to the business, André and I remain deeply engaged with our teams with a clear focus on discipline, execution, and brand vision. Our priorities are straightforward. Strengthen performance in North America while continuing to expand our global growth engine. We saw encouraging signs in Q1 that reinforce we’re moving in the right direction. As we closed Q1 and entered Q2, we faced a few headwinds and a moderating sales trend. Based on our early analysis, there are two key factors impacting our trend. First, we experienced spikes of negative commentary in the media and on social channels with regard to our brand, which had an impact on traffic and overall top-line performance. Second, not all of our product launches have met our expectations.
While we’ve had several successful launches so far this year, we’ve seen others as we start Q2 not generate the anticipated guest response. Taken together, these factors impacted performance and are reflected in our updated guidance. I want to emphasize that we are not sitting still, and we are moving with urgency to make the necessary adjustments to re-accelerate momentum, particularly in North America. With that, let’s turn to the work already in motion to strengthen our top-line trajectory and position ourselves for long-term sustainable growth. Let’s begin with our product creation pillar. As a reminder, our intent with this workstream is to raise the bar on product design, including bringing a new creative energy into our key franchises, deliver a consistent flow of innovation, increase our speed to market, and ensure a relentless focus on product quality.
Across the assortment in Q1, we saw good guest response to the updates we brought into some of our key run franchises, including Fast and Free, Swiftly, and Metal Vent. Other standouts I’d mention include Daydrift and Define, where we offered expanded silhouettes and new and elevated colors. However, more recently, our new look of yoga campaign didn’t drive top-line results in line with our expectations. As part of that campaign, we featured away-from-body styles across our Align and Groove franchises. These styles were met with good guest response, but so far, the campaign hasn’t had the expected halo effect on other areas of our assortment. We’re pleased with our overall product pipeline, and in Q2, you will see more warm weather styles across some of our key activities, including run, tennis, golf, and our lifestyle offerings.
Over the course of the year, we’ll continue to bring newness, excitement, and new fabrics into the assortment with focus areas including outerwear and lounge. To help improve the sales trend, we are leaning into our chase capabilities now and over the balance of the year. As we discussed on prior calls, our faster chase times improve our ability to read and react to guest demand trends and get back into certain strong-performing styles more quickly. We are chasing 20% more volume this year relative to last year, and we see this as an important capability going forward.
With inventory units down approximately 4%, when we see strong guest reaction to new styles, we can get back into them more quickly, which we expect can help accelerate our momentum. We have also reduced our mainline product development process from 18 to 24 months to 15 to 16 months, and we are working to further reduce it down to 12 to 14 months. Our product teams are focused on bringing new innovations to our guests, updating our iconic franchises, and leveraging our increased speed to market capabilities to better anticipate, meet, and fuel demand. I also want to reiterate that product quality is foundational to our brand, and we will continue to lean into this principle and enduring strength of Lululemon. Turning now to our product activation pillar.
André will share the details of our regional activations in a moment. I want to speak at a high level to some of our brand and marketing initiatives. To shift the narrative in this competitive market, we are moving with speed to invest more in marketing, community experiences, and product stories to connect with and deepen engagement with our guests. You will see us be bolder in the second half of the year with more brand activations, similar to last week’s yoga experience on the Great Wall of China. In August, we are excited to see the return of SeaWheeze, our iconic half-marathon event in Vancouver, which was a near instant sellout. You will see additional product expressions like new collaborations to drive energy and excitement for guests in key cities around the world.
You will also see grassroots community activations, a particular strength of our brand, as well as new and exclusive experiences for press and partners. All of this will be underpinned by an innovative media and advertising strategy, store and brand experience elevation, additional partnerships, and a creative direction for Lululemon that will inspire our guests around the world to sweat, grow, and connect. I wanted to share an update on our enterprise enablement pillar. This is a broad initiative across the enterprise to ensure we are operating as efficiently and effectively as possible as we look at process, technology, and our operating model. To drill down a bit, projects we are continuing to advance include analyzing our current global supply chain network to ensure the structure is fully optimized.
Reducing indirect spend through our procurement process, including price and terms optimization, volume consolidation and rationalization, and implementing new technology, including AI-powered systems and automation to drive efficiencies across the enterprise. We’re pleased with how our teams are implementing the initiatives in these areas, and we expect to see benefits over time. In summary, we expect our actions to help rebuild momentum, expand share, and reassert our leadership position. I’ll now hand it over to André, who will share some more details with you regarding our guest engagement strategies and our regional highlights. André?
André Maestrini, Interim co-CEO, President, and Chief Commercial Officer, Lululemon Athletica: Thank you, Meghan. Good afternoon, everyone. It’s good to be here with you again. I’ll start by noting that I’m also excited to welcome Heidi as our new CEO, and I’m looking forward to working with her as our entire team continues our effort to realize Lululemon’s full potential. Let’s get to a regional review of Q1 performance and start with North America. In Q1, I’m encouraged that we’ve experienced a sequential improvement in our full price sales relative to Q4. In Q2, based on recent sales trends, our guidance assumes higher levels of seasonal clearance, but looking forward, driving full price sales remain a primary focus. Let me now share some of the highlights and progress we’re making across our product activation pillar in North America and speak to some of the unique experiences we have lined up to engage our guests and help drive improved brand momentum.
In addition to the successful Studio Yet and our Indian Wells tennis activations, we further engaged with guests during the quarter through our run activations during the Los Angeles and Boston marathons. We designed and launched limited edition race kits for several of these events and featured additional innovation across our Swiftly, Mile Maker, and Go Further product collections. We are pleased with the high level of guest engagement and demand for these events and special products, reinforcing the power of our community efforts. Looking ahead, we have several exciting events planned across North America, including our yoga summer series. We’ll kick it off with an exclusive New York City event and follow up with free yoga classes throughout the summer, which will serve tens of thousands of guests around the region. In August, I’m excited that we are bringing back our popular SeaWheeze Half Marathon and Festival.
We saw unprecedented demand to participate as we gather in our hometown for a weekend of sweat and connection. These events are a few examples of the powerful yet unique way we inspire and engage with new and existing guests. Let me also update you on the progress we’ve made to enhance the guest experience across our selling channels, starting with the in-store strategies aimed at elevating the shopping experience for our guests. When looking at our store fleet in North America, you can already see several enhancements. These include, first, a less dense presentation of products featuring 15% fewer SKU, which allows us to better highlight new styles and innovation. Second, a sharper focus on merchandising by performance and lifestyle products, which allow for improved storytelling, better visual merchandising, and make the store easier to navigate and shop.
Third, a significant reduction in markdowns, which allows the guest to focus more on our new and full price offerings and contribute to our premium shopping experience. In addition to these strategic shifts across all stores in the market, we have a smaller subset of doors where we are testing additional enhancements. These include further SKU reductions, more curated assortment based on local taste and preferences, new fixture packages, and updated imagery and mannequins. With regard to e-commerce, we are continuing our work to elevate the guest experience on our digital channels. The teams are working to increase conversion with sharper visual merchandising, better storytelling, and by offering a more premium shopping experience. This shows how our North America teams have been working to ensure our guests have the shopping experience they expect from Lululemon.
While we are pleased with the initial response, we expect that these initiatives to gain more traction over time. Let me now shift to our international business, beginning with China Mainland. In China, we had a strong start of the year, supported by successful product and brand activations during Chinese New Year run and tennis campaigns. Experienced a slowing of momentum towards the end of Q1 as we saw spikes of negative commentary, which has now subsided. The team is focused on building brand awareness and distinction through our mindful performance position and community activation. In yoga, one of the most powerful examples of this took place just a few days ago in Beijing on the Great Wall of China, where more than 2,000 guests and 70 ambassadors practiced yoga at the flagship event that launched a series of global activations.
Beginning in late June through August, we will host our sixth annual Summer Sweat Games. This is another pinnacle run and train activation our China team has designed to engage our community across the country, culminating in a national championship in Hangzhou. Clearly, there continues to be a lot of energy in this market, and the teams are bringing unique experiences to our guests that only Lululemon can offer. For Q2, we expect sales to increase in the mid to high teens, and we continue to expect approximately 20% growth for the year, demonstrating the ongoing momentum in the business in China Mainland. Let me finish my recap with our rest of the world segment. We remain pleased with our business in APAC and EMEA. In Q1, revenue increased 13% or 9% in constant currency.
We have seen some disruption in our Middle East franchise business due to the conflict in Iran, and we’ve also seen some softer tourism in Europe and Japan. We view these as temporary, and we remain excited for our brand’s potential in both APAC and EMEA. With the help of our franchise partner, we recently opened the first location in Greece and plans are well underway to open in India later this year. Before I hand it back to Meghan, I’d like to reiterate that we are focused across the regions on building brand relevance and momentum, delivering product excellence, and actively engaging with our community. We are grateful to our employees who stayed focused on these top priorities and on delivering for our guests.
Recently, we gather our leaders from around the world in Vancouver, and the passion, clarity, and determination from this group of people is what gives us confidence in the near, mid, and long term for Lululemon. Meghan, now back to you.
Aneesha Sherman, Analyst, Bernstein1: Thanks, André. Let me now get into the Q1 financial review and our updated guidance outlook. For Q1, total net revenue rose 4% or 2% in constant currency to $2.5 billion, and comparable sales decreased 2%. Within our regions and channels, results were as follows: North America revenue decreased 3% or 4% in constant currency. Comparable sales were down 6%. By country, revenue decreased 3% or 6% in constant currency in Canada, and decreased 4% in the U.S. China Mainland revenue increased 30% or 23% in constant currency, with comparable sales increasing 13%. The shift of Chinese New Year into Q1 added eight percentage points to the growth rate in the quarter. In our rest of world segment, revenue increased by 13% or 9% in constant currency, with comparable sales increasing 1%. In our store channel, total sales increased 3%, and we ended the quarter with 816 stores globally.
Square footage increased 11% versus last year, driven by the addition of 46 net new Lululemon stores since Q1 of 2025. During the quarter, we opened five net new stores and completed six optimizations. In our digital channel, revenues increased 4% and contributed $1 billion of top line or 40% of total revenue. By category, men’s revenue increased 7% versus last year and women’s increased 4%, while accessories and other declined by 1%. Gross profit for the first quarter was $1.34 billion or 54.2% of net revenue, compared to 58.3% in Q1 2025. Our gross margin decreased 410 basis points compared to last year and was driven primarily by the following. A 330 basis point decline in overall product margin, driven predominantly by tariff impact and markdowns.
Tariffs had a gross negative impact of 280 basis points in the quarter, offset by 100 basis points related to our enterprise efficiency initiatives. Markdowns increased 40 basis points. Deleveraged on fixed costs was 140 basis points, driven by ongoing investments in our store fleet and regional mix, and foreign exchange had 60 basis points of favorable impact. Moving to SG&A. Our approach continues to be grounded in prudently managing our expenses while also strategically investing in our plans and strategies to improve sales trend in North America, while also strengthening our foundation and positioning Lululemon for long-term growth. SG&A expenses were approximately $1.06 billion or 42.9% of net revenue, compared to 39.8% of net revenue for the same period last year.
The increase of 310 basis points relates to expenses that we reduced last year, but layered back this year, including store labor hours and incentive comp, timing of certain brand activations, and costs related to the proxy contest. These were partially offset by our ongoing initiatives to prudently manage costs across the enterprise. Operating income for the quarter was $277 million, or 11.2% of net revenue, compared to 18.5% of net revenue in Q1 2025. Tax expense for the quarter was $91 million, or 31.8% of pre-tax earnings, compared to an effective tax rate of 30.2% a year ago. The increase relates to lower stock-based compensation deductions compared to last year. Net income for the quarter was $195 million, or $1.69 per diluted share, compared to $2.60 for the first quarter of 2025.
Capital expenditures were approximately $127 million for the quarter, compared to approximately $152 million in the first quarter last year. Q1 spend relates primarily to investments to support business growth, including our multi-year distribution center project, store capital for new locations, relocations and renovations, and technology investments. Turning to our balance sheet highlights. We entered the quarter with $1.5 billion in cash and cash equivalents and nearly $600 million of available capacity under our revolving credit facility. Inventory at the end of Q1 is $1.7 billion, an increase of 2% on a dollar basis. On a unit basis, inventory decreased approximately 4%. The difference between dollar inventory growth and unit inventory growth relates predominantly to higher tariff rates relative to last year and foreign exchange. We repurchased approximately 2.2 million shares at an average price of $165.
Let me shift now to our guidance for Q2, which takes into account the business trends I spoke to earlier. We expect revenue in the range of $2.45 billion-$2.475 billion, representing a decline of 2%-3%. We expect to open approximately 13 net new company operated stores and complete 13 optimizations. By region, we expect North America to decline in the low double digits with the U.S. also in that range. We expect China mainland to increase in the mid to high teens and rest of world to increase in the high single to low double digits. We expect gross margin in Q2 to decrease approximately 410 basis points compared to Q2 of 2025. This decrease will be driven predominantly by higher tariff costs, ongoing investments in store openings and optimizations in our distribution network.
We expect increased tariffs to have a gross negative impact of approximately 150 basis points, with offsets of approximately 100 basis points. We expect markdowns to be up approximately 50 basis points versus last year. While we continue to expect markdowns to improve modestly year-over-year in the second half, the slower than expected top-line trends in Q2 will necessitate additional seasonal clearance. In Q2, we expect our SG&A rate to deleverage by 500 basis points relative to Q2 2025. This increase will be driven in part by deleverage associated with lower sales than initially expected, discrete costs related to our proxy contest, increased marketing, and expenses that we had reduced last year but are layering back this year, including store labor hours. We will continue to invest strategically in our growth initiatives and IT infrastructure.
When looking at operating margin for Q2, we expect it to be approximately 11.6% versus 20.7% in Q2 2025 for the reasons I just mentioned. Turning to EPS, we expect earnings per share in the second quarter to be in the range of $1.76-$1.81 versus EPS of $3.10 a year ago. We expect our effective tax rate in Q2 to be approximately 30%. Turning to our full year 2026 guidance outlook. We now expect revenue to be in the range of $11 billion-$11.15 billion, flat to down 1% relative to 2025. By region, we now expect revenue in North America to be down in the high single digits, with the U.S. slightly lower and Canada better. We continue to expect revenue in China mainland to be up approximately 20%. In rest of world, we continue to expect revenue to increase in the mid-teens.
Globally, we now expect to be closer to the low end of the 40-45 range for net new company operated stores in 2026 and continue to expect to complete approximately 35 optimizations. This will contribute to overall square footage growth in the low double digits. Our new store openings in 2026 will include approximately 10-15 stores in North America, including eight in Mexico and 25-30 in our international markets, with the majority of these planned for China.
While we are taking a disciplined approach to capital spending and looking at all real estate deals on a case-by-case basis, we continue to see good returns from new store openings and store expansions as these strategies contribute to an improved shopping experience for existing guests, new guest acquisition, building brand awareness, and community engagement. For the full year, we now expect gross margin to decrease approximately 90 basis points relative to last year, driven predominantly by deleverage on fixed costs and ongoing investment in new store openings, optimizations, and our distribution center network. We expect markdowns for the full year to be flat to slightly improved and tariffs to have a gross impact of 30 basis points, of which we expect to be able to offset almost all of it. When looking at tariffs for the full year, our guidance now assumes an incremental rate of 10% for Q2.
This is down from our prior assumption of approximately 20%. For the back half of 2026, we continue to assume a 20% incremental rate. While we are participating in the refund process, our guidance assumes no recovery of tariffs paid under IEPA. Turning now to SG&A for the full year. While we intend to realize significant savings related to the enterprise enablement pillar of our action plan, we now expect deleverage of approximately 290 basis points versus 2025, including incentive comp, store labor hours, and continued strategic investments in our business to support future growth. These investments include market expansion, improving the guest experience by enhancing our omni capabilities, and growing brand awareness. As mentioned, we are absorbing additional costs relative to last year as we layered back on certain expenses and have one-time costs associated with the proxy contest.
In addition, based on recent trends, we are increasing our marketing spend to drive brand heat. When looking at operating margin for the full year 2026, we now expect it to decrease by approximately 380 basis points versus last year. For the full year 2026, we expect our effective tax rate to be approximately 30% versus our 2025 effective tax rate of 29.5%. For the fiscal year 2026, we now expect diluted earnings per share in the range of $10.95-$11.15 versus EPS of $13.26 in 2025. Our EPS guidance excludes the impact of any future share repurchases. When looking at inventory, we now expect dollar growth to be in the low to mid-single digit range through 2026, with units slightly down. We have approximately $1 billion remaining on our share repurchase program, which we will continue to utilize.
Share repurchases remain our preferred method of returning cash to shareholders, and we continue to expect our repurchase levels in 2026 to be in line with 2025. Finally, for the full year, we now expect capital expenditures to be approximately $700 million-$720 million. The spend reflects investments to support business growth, including capital for new locations, relocations and renovations, DC and technology investments. Before we open it up for Q&A, as we look at the second quarter and the back half, we will continue to be agile as we take actions that will drive our performance and engage with our guests.
We are pleased that some of the recent distractions have been removed, and we remain sharply focused on returning the business to a position of strength in North America by chasing into strong performing styles, investing more in brand moments to engage with and excite our guests, and continuing to execute on our action plan. There is significant potential ahead for Lululemon, and we are taking the steps necessary to realize it. Operator.
Aneesha Sherman, Analyst, Bernstein3: We will now begin the question and answer session. Analysts who wish to join the question queue may press star then one on the telephone keypad. You will hear a tone acknowledging your request. If you’re using a speakerphone, please pick up your handset before pressing any keys. To withdraw your question, please press star then two. The first question comes from Dana Telsey with Telsey Group. Please go ahead.
Dana Telsey, Analyst, Telsey Group: Hi. Good afternoon, everyone, and thank you for the update. As you think about the product assortment, the brand, how much of the weakness in the top line is coming from maybe the shift to more fashion versus what Lululemon’s doing? How do you think of the new items that you’ve introduced? What percentage of the assortment of there is it? How do you see adjustments given the learnings you have from the initial entries that you’ve had? Just lastly on the margins, the go forward look of what margins should stabilize at, is clearance accelerating in the back half, or are you looking for it to decelerate? Thank you.
Aneesha Sherman, Analyst, Bernstein1: Hey, Dana. Thank you. I would say overall, in terms of our performance relative to market, which I think was your first question, we’re seeing relative stability in the trend of the athletic space. What we really experienced was a drop-off primarily in traffic and to a lesser degree, conversion over the last six to seven weeks. As I mentioned, our analysis indicated it came from two key areas. The first being spikes in negative commentary around the brand, from a number of factors, really at the end of Q1 and entering Q2. I mentioned that’s now subsided. We do believe it impacted our traffic and top line to a degree. In addition, while we’ve seen some of our product launches perform to expectations, we did see some recent product launches which performed under expectations.
We’re really focused on what we can do to action that. In terms of go forward margins, and how much is driven by clearance, we are expecting gross margin 90 basis points under last year. Our prior expectation was 130. Within that, we’re expecting a modest flat to modest improvement in markdowns for the full year. We’re having a bigger impact in spring summer clearance in Q2 with an expectation of markdowns up 50 basis points, and then some recovery as we move into the second half. Can you remind me, you had a question on percent of assortment?
Dana Telsey, Analyst, Telsey Group: How much of the % of assortment is new versus how much is core styles? Is the weakness in performance more related to core or the new? Is there a way to assess it? Thank you.
Aneesha Sherman, Analyst, Bernstein1: Yep. As we set out this year, our aim was to increase our penetration of newness from 23 last year to 35% over the course of this year. Right now, we sit at about 30%. It will fluctuate as we move throughout 2026. I would say, I mentioned we’ve seen some of that newness perform to expectation and some be a little short. I would say our recent performance is impacting all areas of our business, from a product perspective.
Dana Telsey, Analyst, Telsey Group: Thank you.
Aneesha Sherman, Analyst, Bernstein3: The next question comes from Rick Patel with Raymond James. Please go ahead.
Aneesha Sherman, Analyst, Bernstein4: Thank you. Good afternoon. Question on new products not meeting expectations. Can you share if you see this as a risk for international markets? Curious if overseas customers are more drawn to core franchises and they are less sensitive to newness, or if this is something that you would expect headwinds from a little further down the road. Just some color on how new products are resonating with international consumers would be great.
André Maestrini, Interim co-CEO, President, and Chief Commercial Officer, Lululemon Athletica: Yeah. Thank you, Rick, for the question. André here. We see that the portfolio that we have in international markets with more recent is more diversified in the composition of the sales. Yes, you’re right, by bringing the core franchise to life with different colors, different iterations, is still a growth driver in international that plays stronger in those markets than our original North American market. Both, we play on the strength of our well-known global franchises, and we have this diversified newness portfolio in those markets operating to a bigger extent.
Aneesha Sherman, Analyst, Bernstein4: Great. Just to follow up on the question on markdowns. Can you help us understand the assumptions for the back half, which imply an improvement in markdown? Is that just a function of easier comparisons or are you assuming demand improves in the back half?
Aneesha Sherman, Analyst, Bernstein1: Yep. In terms of the second half, I would say Q3 will be a sequential improvement to Q2, and then we expect markdowns in Q4 to be under last year, given that was our high water level from a markdown perspective. I’d say sequentially better as we improve throughout the year, and again, for the full year, flat to modest improvement. Q2 will be our high water mark this year.
Aneesha Sherman, Analyst, Bernstein4: Thanks very much.
Aneesha Sherman, Analyst, Bernstein1: Thank you.
Aneesha Sherman, Analyst, Bernstein3: The next question comes from Lorraine Hutchinson with Bank of America. Please go ahead.
Lorraine Hutchinson, Analyst, Bank of America: Thank you. Good afternoon. I was hoping to dig into the China business a little bit more. Can you talk about what happened there, if it was different than the experience in the U.S., and also the factors that give you confidence that it will improve as the year goes on?
Aneesha Sherman, Analyst, Bernstein1: Hi, Lorraine. Thanks. I would say, when we look back at the last six to seven-week period, which is really where we’ve seen the shift in the trend, we did experience an impact in China from some of the negative commentary that was out in the market, most pronounced at the end of April and early May. We have seen that business improve to a degree. We are still holding our guide for the year at 20%. I would say that’s fairly reflective of what we see as the underlying trend of the business and in line with the expectation we have for the second half. I’ll have André add some color on what we’re experiencing in terms of performance.
André Maestrini, Interim co-CEO, President, and Chief Commercial Officer, Lululemon Athletica: As you were saying, Meghan, as the brand noise has begun to dissipate, we continue to engage with guests in new and unique ways, including our yoga festival on the Great Wall just last week. Looking forward, we’ll be hosting our sixth annual Summer Sweat Games this summer, highlighting our latest run and train products. We are confident that we are strong premium positioning in the market. The guests are going to really engage with the brand, we’ll be back to our underlying trend of business in line with this annual guidance that remains a growth of approximately the 20%.
Lorraine Hutchinson, Analyst, Bank of America: Thank you.
Aneesha Sherman, Analyst, Bernstein1: All right.
Aneesha Sherman, Analyst, Bernstein3: The next question comes from Matthew Boss with JPMorgan. Please go ahead.
Aneesha Sherman, Analyst, Bernstein0: Great. Thanks. Meghan, could you speak to the progression of revenues in the Americas through the first quarter and elaborate on demand trends that you’ve seen in May, maybe relative to the outlook for low double-digit decline in the second quarter, and just opportunities you see for sequential improvement in the back half?
Aneesha Sherman, Analyst, Bernstein1: Yep. Thanks, Matt. In the Americas, we did see a negative 4% trend in Q1 overall, which was ahead of our expectations for low mid-single digit. I would say February and March were our strongest months, and as I mentioned, the shift we’ve seen in trend has really been over the last six to seven-week period. We saw trends softened at the end of April and then into May. I would say our expectation for North America in Q2, a decline of low double digits, and then generally in line in the second half of the year at this point. We obviously described the number of actions we’re taking in the business in terms of investment into brand to shift the narrative there and drive brand heat, as well as some of the product activations we’re pursuing, including chasing an incremental 20% relative to last year.
Still managing inventory well in line with our trend. I would say we’re not assuming any meaningful impact from those initiatives at this point. To the extent that they perform the way we would expect them to, we could potentially see upside to our range.
Aneesha Sherman, Analyst, Bernstein0: Great. Maybe just a follow-up, Meghan. With newness, I think you said restored to 30%, and obviously relative to your comments on some of the below-plan reception to recent product launches. Maybe just to circle back on the magnitude of decline that you’re seeing in the Americas. Is it product design, category demand, macro, a little bit of all? Maybe if there was a way to bridge or try to bifurcate the buckets as to the magnitude of the decline that you’re seeing in the Americas, that would be helpful.
Aneesha Sherman, Analyst, Bernstein1: Yeah. I would say, this is based on our early analysis of this trend that’s been about six to seven weeks. We have been evaluating and looking at the macro. Obviously, there’s some macro noise. We are, as I mentioned earlier, seeing some stability in our category right now. We’re seeing ourselves drop below where we were performing, in early Q1. Really seeing that predominantly through traffic, and then to a lesser degree, conversion, and really pointing to those two aspects that I noted in terms of negative commentary around the brand and really a spike there towards the end of April. Also from a product perspective, saw really favorable, I would say, results and tracking well relative to our expectations in February and March.
Then saw that spike in, I would say, late April, and then weren’t as thrilled with our product performance with our recent launch. Good response, I would say, to the away-from-body yoga styles, didn’t have the halo to the balance of the assortment that we expected.
Aneesha Sherman, Analyst, Bernstein0: Great color. Best of luck.
Aneesha Sherman, Analyst, Bernstein1: Thank you.
Aneesha Sherman, Analyst, Bernstein3: The next question comes from Michael Binetti with Evercore. Please go ahead.
Aneesha Sherman, Analyst, Bernstein2: Thanks for taking our questions here. Thanks for all the detail, Meghan. Can I just ask a little bit different way on the second half? Could you maybe just help us understand what’s contemplated in there relative to 90 days ago so we understand? I know you’re really clear on how you’re adjusting 2Q. I’m just curious the update a little bit in the second half. Then maybe just on the SKU reductions in North America that you were talking about doing some testing, if you’re seeing anything in terms of better conversion or sales productivity in the areas where you have started to look at that work, and where do you feel like you’re most over-SKUed?
Aneesha Sherman, Analyst, Bernstein1: Thanks, Michael. I would say in terms of second half trends, they’re fairly consistent, I would say, with the underlying trend of our business right now. It’s a slight improvement relative to Q2 guide. That’s really reflective in some aspects of the impacts we saw in late Q1, early Q2 subsiding to a small degree, and that trend carrying forward. We have not included, as I mentioned, any meaningful impact from any of the initiatives that we have underway. Again, just to the extent that they perform to what we would expect, we could see some upside to the range. Is that helpful?
Aneesha Sherman, Analyst, Bernstein2: Yeah, that’s helpful. Thank you.
Aneesha Sherman, Analyst, Bernstein1: Great. André was going to comment on the SKU reduction.
André Maestrini, Interim co-CEO, President, and Chief Commercial Officer, Lululemon Athletica: Yeah, on the stores, you’re pointing it right. We decided to have a less dense presentation of our products featuring these 15% fewer SKUs. That, as a matter of fact, allows us to better highlight the new styles and innovation. Also, it brings a sharper focus on merchandising by performance on one side and lifestyle on the other for, again, a better, easier-to-navigate store layout. We drastically reduce any markdown activity in the stores to contribute to a more and definitely premium shopping experience for the guests. We are really encouraged, and we think that over time it’s going to build up and gain more traction.
Aneesha Sherman, Analyst, Bernstein1: Yeah, I would just add to that in the first Oh, sorry. In the first quarter, we saw a high single-digit increase in reg price globally. We did see a meaningful sequential improvement in the U.S., I think, which points to some of the success of our strategy, particularly from SKU reduction also, and removing some of the markdowns from store. Sorry, Michael, did you have something else?
Aneesha Sherman, Analyst, Bernstein2: No, you got it. Thank you very much, Megan, appreciate it. André, thank you.
Aneesha Sherman, Analyst, Bernstein1: Thank you.
Aneesha Sherman, Analyst, Bernstein3: The next question comes from Brooke Roach with Goldman Sachs. Please go ahead.
Brooke Roach, Analyst, Goldman Sachs: Good afternoon. Thank you for taking our question. Meghan, André, I’d love your thoughts on the product design language and the learnings that you’ve realized from some of the new style launches that haven’t resonated to your expectations. What changes should we be expecting in the way that you inform the way that you design and the new products that are coming to market on a go-forward basis? Just an additional question on traffic. Does the shift in traffic that you’ve seen in recent weeks over-index to any specific consumer demographic cohort or guest type? Thank you.
Aneesha Sherman, Analyst, Bernstein1: Thanks, Brooke. I would say, certainly some learnings, in terms of both design and then also importantly, how we activate product, and what resonates in terms of guest messaging. I would say, as I mentioned, we saw good guest response from some of the products that we launched around the new look of yoga away from body, but didn’t see the halo that we had hoped for and had in our plans. I do think color is an aspect of that. I do think some of these things also will take a little bit more time in terms of continuing to get them in front of guests, making sure they’re seeing the newness, and building into them over time. I’d say in terms of how we activate just front and center in stores and online, that continues to be a focus for us as well.
Can you remind me of the second part of your question?
Brooke Roach, Analyst, Goldman Sachs: If the change in traffic over-indexed to any specific consumer demographic cohort or guest type?
Aneesha Sherman, Analyst, Bernstein1: No. We really did see a broad-based traffic reduction, which was really all demographics.
Brooke Roach, Analyst, Goldman Sachs: Thanks so much. I’ll pass it on.
Aneesha Sherman, Analyst, Bernstein1: Thanks.
Aneesha Sherman, Analyst, Bernstein3: The next question comes from Jay Sole with UBS. Please go ahead.
Jay Sole, Analyst, UBS: Great. Thank you so much. I’m just wondering if you can elaborate on the social media issues that you talked about. What did they stem from? How long did they last? Why did they end? Is there any lingering impact? If you could help us with that’d be great. Thank you.
Aneesha Sherman, Analyst, Bernstein1: Yep. Thanks, Jay. I would say there were a number of factors impacting the negative commentary around the brand, both I would say media and social. A couple to mention would be, obviously, we had the proxy contest during that period, as well as we had some questions around the composition of some of our products in mid-April. As I mentioned, these stories have died down and subsided, but we have not yet seen a return to our pre-disruption, I’d say, trends. We’re closely monitoring and feel it’s prudent, I think, to update our range in terms of what we’re seeing today in the trend of the business.
Jay Sole, Analyst, UBS: Was it mostly in the U.S., in China, both, or other regions?
Aneesha Sherman, Analyst, Bernstein1: I would say it was across regions. Predominantly, I would say China was impacted as well as the U.S.
Jay Sole, Analyst, UBS: Okay. Thank you so much.
Aneesha Sherman, Analyst, Bernstein3: The next question comes from Brian Nagel with Oppenheimer. Please go ahead.
Brian Nagel, Analyst, Oppenheimer: Hi, good afternoon. My first question. You talked a lot about the recent products that may have not performed as well as you expected them to. As you look at these products, do you have abilities, are there levers to pull to maybe course correct on these products? Then, given the performance of some of these products lately, has that encouraged you or caused you to change any type of launches you expected for the balance of the year?
Aneesha Sherman, Analyst, Bernstein1: Thanks, Brian. Yeah, certainly taking our learnings forward. I would say in terms of what works, and mentioned a few of these, but our run assortment was strong in Q1. Daydrift has been a great style for us to find, including new silhouettes. I mentioned in terms of new look of yoga didn’t respond in halo as we had expected. In terms of what’s coming, we’re still really excited about our product pipeline. We do have new lounge fabrics in the second half of the year. We’ll have a hot weather assortment launching across run, tennis, and golf. We are reordering, as I mentioned, 20% more on an annual basis relative to last year. That’s pretty significant, I would say, in terms of the penetration of our business that we’re chasing into. Certainly prioritizing the styles that are working well.
A couple examples there. The Groove pant has been a style that’s been a great seller and reordering there. Define continues to have a lot of energy around it, including the new silhouettes. I would say again, as I mentioned, we aren’t embedding anything meaningful from these strategies into our guide for the second half. To the extent that they perform to how we would typically expect them to, we could see some upside.
Brian Nagel, Analyst, Oppenheimer: That’s helpful. My second question. Meghan, you mentioned, I think in your prepared comments, that you met with Heidi. Heidi clearly has not yet joined the company, but she will join here in the not too distant future. I guess the question I ask you, from an organizational standpoint, now having the leader named, although not at the company, does that change what you’re doing at the company now, at least knowing who the CEO is going to be?
Aneesha Sherman, Analyst, Bernstein1: I would say we remain focused on our action plan. We’re looking to have the same goals around restoring the full price health of the business. Obviously we’re pivoting based on current trends. Really trying to set the business up so that Heidi steps in, hits the ground running, and builds on top of the actions that are already underway.
Brian Nagel, Analyst, Oppenheimer: That’s helpful. Thank you.
Aneesha Sherman, Analyst, Bernstein1: Thank you.
Aneesha Sherman, Analyst, Bernstein3: The next question comes from Janine Stichter with BTIG. Please go ahead.
Janine Stichter, Analyst, BTIG: Hi, thanks for taking my questions. First on marketing, you said you’re planning for an increase over your previous plan this year. Quantify that and help us understand where that spend is going, how you’re thinking about marketing in general. On the unit growth, moving to the lower end of the guide. Any thoughts on how you think about the return on new stores and what might cause you to go below that number at any point in the future? Thank you.
Aneesha Sherman, Analyst, Bernstein1: Great. Thanks, Janine. Yes, we’ve increased our marketing investment. We are now taking it to approximately 10%-15% above last year. It’s in the range of 6%-6.5% of sales versus last year at 5.6%. I would say in terms of where the dollars are going, we’re certainly going after activations, building on some exciting recent events, including the Great Wall yoga experience. We’ve got SeaWheeze coming up, which is our Vancouver half marathon. We’ll have a pinnacle yoga event in New York City to kick off our summer series. Then also another example would be the US Open activation. We’ll have some collaborations coming up, continue to build on grassroots community activations, including run and yoga events locally. Then we’re going to have some new experiences for press and partners, notably a pop-up in New York City showcasing new product.
You can look for also a new content series on our social channels with some elite athletes, and those are just a few examples of what’s to come. The second question you had in terms of unit growth. We did have a few stores push into 2027. We continue to perform well, I would say, on our new store openings. Just a reminder, we’ve got 10-15 openings in North America. Eight of those are Mexico, so it’s just a small handful of stores in the North American market. We still see return on capital of one year for our new stores and then 2-3 years for our optimizations.
Continue to keep a really close eye on that, and we’ll continue to refine our plans for 2027, but still looking to make sure we’ve got the right experience for our guests in each market.
Janine Stichter, Analyst, BTIG: Thanks so much.
Aneesha Sherman, Analyst, Bernstein3: The next question comes from Mark Ostrower with Baird. Please go ahead.
Mark Ostrower, Analyst, Baird: Thank you for taking my question. Good afternoon. On China, you talked about Chinese New Year shift adding to the Q1 growth rate. You also noted momentum slowed late in the quarter on the negative commentary before it subsided. What’s the clean underlying comp trend in China today? As you hold the roughly 20% growth for the year with the majority of the international store openings going there, how much of that growth is comp versus new units? On the margin side, it looks like China’s nicely accretive to the margin now. Just any updates there on how you’re thinking about it?
Aneesha Sherman, Analyst, Bernstein1: Yep. In terms of China, we were tracking, I would say, above our guide for Q1, prior to the disruption. We did come in at 30%, 23% on a constant currency basis, and did have 8 points within that 30% related to the new year shift. We’re guiding Q2 in the mid to high teens. I would say what we’re viewing as the underlying trend of the business is generally in line with our full-year guide at 20%, which is where we really have the second half positioned as well. From a comp perspective, we haven’t broken out the full-year comp, we did have a 13% comp in Q2 relative to the 30% total top line.
Yes, I would say in terms of operating margin, still some healthy, I would say, expansion in the China market and continue to invest behind that business to drive the long-term trajectory.
Mark Ostrower, Analyst, Baird: Great. Then a follow-up on the product development timeline. What’s the gating factor to get to the to 12-14 months that you talked about? When does the faster speed to market translate to better comps? Then any gross margin trade-off to think about as you compress the calendar? Does that reduce sourcing flexibility? Just higher costs as you move the product? Anything to think about there? Thank you.
Aneesha Sherman, Analyst, Bernstein1: Thanks. I would say in terms of go-to-market, we’re making good progress. There are certainly some technology unlocks that we can have over time, obviously those take time to implement as well as roll out. I would say that’s what we’re focused on in terms of moving as quickly as we can to that faster timeframe, and we’re really excited about that. In terms of faster speed to market, those again will build over time. We continue to make progress, I would say, with every delivery or every new season, in terms of our speed to market. Then in terms of costs, I think there’s always trade-offs in terms of speed with air freight, but I wouldn’t equate any higher product costs with our overall go-to-market timeline.
Mark Ostrower, Analyst, Baird: Thank you.
Aneesha Sherman, Analyst, Bernstein1: Operator, we’ll take one more question.
Aneesha Sherman, Analyst, Bernstein3: The last question comes from Aneesha Sherman with Bernstein. Please go ahead.
Aneesha Sherman, Analyst, Bernstein: Thank you so much. You talked a lot about markdowns. I want to ask about full price sales. André, you said that was the primary focus. Can you update us on the timing of when you expect full price sales to turn positive given some of the challenges on new launches? A quick clarification, Meghan. I think you said in response to one of the other questions, high single-digit increase in reg price Q1. Is that average selling price for the non-markdown full price sales in Q1?
Aneesha Sherman, Analyst, Bernstein1: I was talking about, reg price, which is the same in my mind as full price, in Q1. That full price increase is high single digits for the full quarter globally. The U.S. was slightly negative but was a meaningful sequential improvement from what we saw in Q4. In Q2, we’re expecting full price sales overall to decrease in the mid single digits, given the top-line trend, and some of the seasonal clearance activities that we’ll pursue to make sure we stay on top of inventory. When we look at the full year, our expectation is flat to slightly better in terms of full price. I would expect that it will progress throughout the year.
Aneesha Sherman, Analyst, Bernstein: Okay. Thank you.
Aneesha Sherman, Analyst, Bernstein1: Thank you.
Aneesha Sherman, Analyst, Bernstein3: That’s all the time we have for questions today. Thank you for joining the call, and have a nice day.