Levi Strauss & Co. (NYSE:LEVI) stock fell in premarket trading Thursday despite the apparel maker reporting second-quarter results that topped Wall Street estimates and raising its full-year guidance.
Before the earnings release, Levi Strauss shares were trading near their 52-week high. With high expectations already reflected in the stock, investors appeared to be looking for a larger increase in the company’s outlook despite the earnings beat and raised guidance.
The company posted adjusted earnings of 28 cents per share, ahead of analysts’ estimates of 24 cents. Revenue rose to $1.562 billion, topping the consensus estimate of $1.520 billion.
Organic revenue increased 6% year over year, driven by strong international demand, particularly in Asia. Adjusted EBIT margin expanded 70 basis points to 9%, while adjusted EBITDA climbed 18%. Inventories declined 7%, and the company ended the quarter with $849 million in cash and cash equivalents as of May 31.
The Americas remained the strongest region, with reported revenue rising 9% and organic sales increasing 7%. U.S. revenue grew 5%. Europe posted 4% reported growth, although organic revenue slipped 1% due to the timing impact of last year’s distribution center transition.
Asia continued to outperform, with reported revenue increasing 10% and organic sales rising 12%. Beyond Yoga revenue grew 16%.
Direct-to-consumer revenue rose 11%, led by growth across the U.S., Europe and Asia. E-commerce sales climbed 19%, supported by higher traffic, better conversion rates, increased units per transaction, higher average unit retail and lower promotional activity. Wholesale revenue increased 5%.
Levi Strauss also highlighted its shareholder returns. The company launched a $200 million accelerated share repurchase program in the first quarter, which is expected to finish in the third quarter. It had $240 million remaining under its broader repurchase authorization as of May 31. The board also raised the quarterly dividend 14% year over year to 16 cents per share.
Looking ahead, Levi Strauss lifted its fiscal 2026 adjusted EPS forecast to $1.46-$1.52 from $1.42-$1.48. The updated range brackets the analyst consensus estimate of $1.50.
The company also raised its fiscal 2026 revenue outlook to $6.722 billion-$6.753 billion from $6.628 billion-$6.690 billion, above the consensus estimate of $6.696 billion. It now expects organic revenue growth of 5.5%-6.0%, up from its previous forecast of 4.5%-5.5%.
For the third quarter, Levi Strauss expects revenue growth of 4%-5% and adjusted earnings of 34-36 cents per share. The company also plans to open 50-60 new stores this year, with most openings scheduled for the second half.
Levi Strauss reiterated its long-term targets of reaching $10 billion in annual revenue and a 15% operating margin.
LEVI Price Action: Levi Strauss shares were down 6.03% at $22.90 during premarket trading on Thursday, according to Benzinga Pro data.
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