La-Z-Boy stock moved decisively higher in after-hours trading after the furniture maker posted fiscal Q4 2026 adjusted earnings per share of $1.26, surpassing the Wall Street consensus of $0.82 by $0.44. That magnitude of outperformance stands out among the company’s recent quarterly results and was the principal driver of the after-hours rally.
Top-line figures were essentially flat year-over-year, with revenue of $570.34 million slightly above the $569.23 million estimate. While the revenue number offered only modest upside relative to expectations, the quality of the quarter captured investor attention in other metrics.
An important element of the report was operating leverage. Adjusted operating margin expanded to 9.9% in the quarter from 9.4% in the year-ago period. Management attributed part of that improvement to favorable inventory adjustments and pricing actions that were connected to the recently completed divestiture of the American Drew and Kincaid wholesale casegoods businesses. Those items contributed to the margin expansion reported for the quarter.
Retail demand also showed strength in La-Z-Boy’s core channel. Written sales at company-owned La-Z-Boy retail stores rose 11% year-over-year, signaling persistent consumer engagement with the brand’s owned-store footprint. The combination of robust retail written sales and margin improvement underpinned the positive reception of the print.
The share price had experienced intraday weakness during regular trading, falling to a session low of $35.06 as investors appeared to be bracing for a disappointing outcome. The stronger-than-expected earnings and margin details reversed that intraday decline, with the stock trading at $39.53 in after-hours action, bringing it closer to its 52-week high of $41.06.
La-Z-Boy’s positive company-specific news stood out against a mixed broader market. The S&P 500 slipped 0.6% and the Nasdaq fell 1.2% during the regular session, while the Dow Jones inched up 0.6%. That risk-off tone across major indices underscored that the impetus for La-Z-Boy’s move was internal to the company rather than driven by a sector-wide lift.
Analyst sentiment into the print had been cautiously moderated by recent revisions. The company saw three downward EPS revisions over the prior 90 days, which set a relatively low expectation that the reported results exceeded. Investors appeared to re-rate the shares on the back of a sizeable EPS beat, meaningful margin expansion and visible progress on strategic portfolio simplification.
Looking ahead into fiscal 2027, the quarter’s outcomes appear to have reframed the near-term narrative about La-Z-Boy’s profitability trajectory. The results highlighted how inventory adjustments, pricing actions and the effects of the recent divestiture affected earnings and margins in the quarter, and those factors were central to investor reassessment of the stock after hours.
Key points
- La-Z-Boy reported adjusted EPS of $1.26 for fiscal Q4 2026, beating the consensus of $0.82 by $0.44, prompting an after-hours rally.
- Adjusted operating margin rose to 9.9% from 9.4%, aided in part by inventory adjustments and pricing tied to the divestiture of American Drew and Kincaid.
- Written sales at company-owned La-Z-Boy retail stores increased 11% year-over-year, reflecting resilience in the brand’s core retail channel.
Risks and uncertainties
- Portion of margin improvement was linked to inventory adjustments and pricing actions related to the divestiture, indicating that part of the gain was driven by discrete operational items.
- Shares demonstrated intraday volatility, having fallen to $35.06 during regular trading before recovering in after-hours trade, showing the stock can react sharply to earnings expectations.
- The company reported three downward EPS revisions in the prior 90 days, which had set tempered analyst expectations heading into the quarter.