American Eagle Outfitters' Q2 2026: Contradictions Emerge on Tariff Mitigation, Inventory Strategies, and Marketing Impact

Generated by AI AgentEarnings Decrypt
Wednesday, Sep 3, 2025 6:51 pm ET3min read
Aime RobotAime Summary

- American Eagle Outfitters (AEO) reported $1.28B Q2 revenue, with 3% Aerie comp growth driven by intimates, activewear, and denim campaigns.

- Gross margin expanded to 38.9% YoY, while SG&A expenses fell 1% to $342M, supporting $103M operating income (up 2%) despite $20M Q3 tariff impacts.

- Management highlighted successful Sydney Sweeney/Travis Kelce campaigns boosting new customer acquisition, with plans for second Travis drop and continued digital/fashion drops to sustain momentum.

- Q4 faces $40-50M tariff headwinds, mitigated via country rebalancing and cost optimization, though margin pressure persists from tariffs, digital mix shifts, and embedded promotions.

The above is the analysis of the conflicting points in this earnings call

Date of Call: None provided

Financials Results

  • Revenue: $1.28B, down 1% YOY; comparable sales down 1%
  • EPS: Not disclosed; diluted EPS up 15% YOY
  • Gross Margin: 38.9%, compared to 38.6% last year (+30 bps YOY)
  • Operating Margin: 8.0%, up from 7.8% last year (+20 bps YOY)

Guidance:

  • Q3 comps expected to increase low single digits; QTD comps mid-single digits; strong Labor Day.
  • Q3 operating income expected at $95–$100M; includes ~$20M incremental tariffs.
  • Q3 BOW to slightly deleverage (Aerie/Offline growth, higher digital mix); SG&A up high single digits (advertising); tax rate ~25%; weighted avg shares ~172M.
  • Q4 comps expected to increase low single digits; operating profit $125–$130M; includes ~$40–$50M tariffs; SG&A down slightly.
  • FY25 CapEx ~ $275M; plan ~30 Aerie/Offline openings, 40–50 AE remodels, and 35–40 AE closures.

Business Commentary:

  • Revenue and Sales Performance:
  • American Eagle Outfitters (AEO) reported second highest ever revenue of $1,280,000,000 for the second quarter.
  • This marked meaningful improvement from the first quarter, validating the actions taken to reignite performance.

  • Brand and Product Initiatives:

  • Aerie delivered comp growth of 3% in the second quarter, achieving record second quarter revenue.
  • Key drivers included positive demand across categories like intimates, soft dressing, and activewear, with new collections and marketing efforts gaining traction.

  • Operational Efficiency and Cost Management:

  • Gross profit dollars were $500,000,000, reflecting a gross margin of 38.9%.
  • SG&A expenses were down 1% to $342,000,000, flat as a rate of sales.
  • Operating income improved by 2% to $103,000,000, exceeding expectations and driven by disciplined cost management.

  • Tariff Impact and Mitigation Strategies:

  • AEO anticipates $20,000,000 of tariff impacts in Q3 and $40,000,000 to $50,000,000 in Q4.
  • Mitigation efforts include rebalancing country of origin, cost negotiations, and optimizing freight, with pricing as a lesser leveraged strategy.

Sentiment Analysis:

  • Results exceeded expectations with operating income up 2% to $103M and diluted EPS up 15% YOY. Gross margin expanded to 38.9% vs 38.6% last year. Traffic improved throughout Q2 and comps turned positive into August; Q3-to-date comps are mid-single digits. Management cited record-breaking campaign engagement and strong denim sell-through, and guided to positive comps and profitability in both Q3 and Q4 despite tariff headwinds.

Q&A:

  • Question from Jay Sole (UBS): How will you sustain momentum from the Sydney Sweeney and Travis Kelce campaigns, and are new customers buying beyond the collaboration items?
    Response: Campaigns drove unprecedented nationwide new customer acquisition and denim sellouts; focus now is converting buzz into repeat purchases across categories.

  • Question from Jay Sole (UBS): How much of the improvement is better assortments versus marketing, and what changed from 1H to back-to-school/holiday?
    Response: Assortment fixes (fleece, intimates, long bottoms) drove improvement beyond marketing; shorts were weak, but Q3 strength is in jeans, tops, sweaters, and fleece.

  • Question from Paul Lejuez (Citi): Can you break down comps (transactions, ticket/AUR/UPT) and clarify tariff impacts and pricing mitigation?
    Response: AUR down mid-single digits in Q2 (digital flat); traffic up; markdowns managed. Tariffs ~$20M in Q3 and $40–$50M in Q4 vs ~$180M unmitigated; mitigated via country mix, vendor costs, freight; pricing is a smaller lever.

  • Question from Paul Lejuez (Citi): What is your AUR expectation for the back half?
    Response: AUR is up low single digits Q3-to-date, with similar dynamics expected for the back half.

  • Question from Jonah Kim (TD Cowen): What percent of Aerie is intimates, how will you recapture share, and how did existing customers perform?
    Response: Intimates ~one-third of Aerie; relaunch with lace capsules and more frequent fashion drops; campaigns driving broad acquisition with focus on converting to repeat.

  • Question from Janet Kloppenburg (JJK Research): Which categories underperformed at Aerie, can intimates strength sustain, and are denim ticket prices higher?
    Response: Shorts were soft across banners; intimates gaining share in undies/bras and expected to sustain; denim AURs are up with good-better-best pricing, mindful of tariffs.

  • Question from Alex Stratton (Morgan Stanley): What’s driving back-half gross margin pressure, and how long can campaign-led sales momentum last? Any more drops?
    Response: Margin pressure mainly from tariffs (larger in Q4), some BOW deleverage from digital mix, and embedded promos; more drops planned (second Travis release) and Sydney campaign continues.

  • Question from Chris Nardone (Bank of America): Is 4Q tariff impact ~250–300 bps and how should we think about mitigated impact into next year? What are offsets?
    Response: Yes, ~250–300 bps in 4Q; FY26 tariff headwind currently modeled at ~$125–$150M after mitigation. Offsets include country remix, cost negotiations, delivery optimization, supply chain/store fleet rebalancing.

  • Question from Chris Nardone (Bank of America): Any progress in men’s and denim versus broader AE?
    Response: Men’s is improving in tops and denim, with more runway; denim trends on par due to high penetration.

  • Question from Rakesh Patel (Raymond James): Duration of the campaigns and how should we view back-half marketing spend?
    Response: Campaigns run through year with a second Travis drop; advertising up high single digits in Q3, low single digits in Q4, with total Q4 SG&A slightly down.

  • Question from Cory Tarlow (Jefferies): How did SG&A leverage on a negative comp and what’s sustainable? What about incentive comp?
    Response: Multi-year expense discipline; plan to keep SG&A flat or leverage on 3–5% revenue growth; incentive comp is down this year and will be managed within total SG&A.

  • Question from Marni Shapiro (The Retail Tracker): Any inventory pull-forward, plans for additional Sydney collections, and learnings on swim?
    Response: Minor inventory pull-forward; second Travis drop coming and more Sydney ideas in development; swim was tightly managed, beat plan with low clearance, guiding future buys.

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