RH's Q2 2025: Contradictions Emerge on Real Estate Monetization, Inventory Strategy, Member Discounts, Tariffs, and European Expansion

Generated by AI AgentEarnings Decrypt
Thursday, Sep 11, 2025 11:28 pm ET3min read
Aime RobotAime Summary

- RH reported 8.4% Q2 FY2025 revenue growth with 15.1% adjusted operating margin, driven by strong demand despite housing market challenges and tariff uncertainties.

- European expansion (RH Paris, London) faces ~200-270 bps margin drag, while $30M tariff costs and $40M revenue shifts from delayed Fall Sourcebook impact 2025 guidance.

- Management emphasized cautious optimism: prioritizing inflation control over rate cuts, maintaining opportunistic real estate monetization, and balancing pricing strategies with membership-driven demand resilience.

- Inventory reduction potential ($200-300M) and phased U.S. gallery openings (Greenwich, San Francisco) highlight growth plans amid macro risks like prolonged furniture inflation and European startup costs.

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

Date of Call: September 11, 2025

Financials Results

  • Revenue: Q2 FY2025 revenue increased 8.4% YOY; demand up 13.7% YOY (2-year revenue +12%, demand +21%)
  • Operating Margin: Adjusted operating margin 15.1%, up 340 bps YOY (adjusted EBITDA margin 20.6%, up 340 bps YOY)

Guidance:

  • FY2025: Revenue growth 9%-11%; adjusted operating margin 13%-14%; adjusted EBITDA margin 19%-20%; FCF $250M-$300M.
  • Includes ~-200 bps operating margin drag from international start-up and ~90 bps tariff impact; ~$30M H2 tariff cost net of mitigation.
  • Fall Interiors Sourcebook delayed ~8 weeks; ~$40M revenue shifts from Q3 to Q4 and Q1’26.
  • Q3 FY2025: Revenue growth 8%-10%; adjusted operating margin 12%-13%; adjusted EBITDA margin 18%-19%.
  • Q3 includes ~-270 bps operating margin drag (international/RH Paris) and ~120 bps tariff impact.
  • Outlook excludes any new tariffs from the furniture investigation.

Business Commentary:

  • Revenue and Demand Growth:
  • RH reported a revenue increase of 8.4% in the second quarter of fiscal 2025, with demand increasing by 13.7%.
  • This growth was driven by strong demand despite the polarizing impact of tariff uncertainty and the worst housing market in almost 50 years.

  • Operating and EBITDA Margin Improvement:

  • The adjusted operating margin increased to 15.1% and adjusted EBITDA margin to 20.6%, both up 340 basis points compared to last year.
  • This improvement was due to effective management of long-term European expansion investments and cost mitigation.

  • European Market Expansion:

  • RH's European expansion in England showed demand trends with gallery demand up 76% and online demand up 34% in the second quarter.
  • The opening of

    Paris, a significant brand-building initiative, is expected to create a higher scale to support advertising investments and accelerate growth in Europe.

  • Tariff Impact and Mitigation:

  • The company expects a $30 million cost of incremental tariffs net of mitigation in the second half of the year.
  • Mitigation efforts include negotiating with manufacturing partners, shifting sourcing out of China, and resourcing production to the United States and other countries to alleviate tariff impacts.

Sentiment Analysis:

  • Management cited strong Q2 performance: “revenue increased 8.4%… demand increased 13.7%… adjusted operating margin of 15.1%… net income increased 79%.” But they revised FY2025 outlook due to tariffs and delays: “updated outlook reflects a $30 million cost of incremental tariffs… delayed the Fall Interiors Sourcebook… ~$40 million in revenues to shift out of Q3.” They warned of “big furniture inflation in the second half” and ongoing start-up cost drag from Europe.

Q&A:

  • Question from Simeon Gutman (Morgan Stanley): With improving free cash flow, do you still need to monetize real estate?
    Response: No; monetization would be opportunistic. RH is not a long-term real estate owner and will sell when conditions are favorable; ample assets (~$500M equity value) provide flexibility.

  • Question from Simeon Gutman (Morgan Stanley): Is RH on the cusp of a growth period as investments peak?
    Response: Core business is ready with post-peak investments, but macro risks (inflation, tariffs, rates) warrant caution; priority is taming inflation over rate cuts.

  • Question from Steven Forbes (Guggenheim): How much room remains to reduce inventory and any risk to the spring brand extension launch?
    Response: Brand extension for spring 2026 is on track barring extreme new tariffs; inventory turns can improve toward historical ~3x with $200–$300M reduction potential.

  • Question from Steven Forbes (Guggenheim): Will three galleries open with the new brand extension in spring?
    Response: Yes—Greenwich and San Francisco confirmed; West Hollywood depends on permits, with a phased plan including a future restaurant.

  • Question from Maksim Rakhlenko (TD Cowen): How to size European gallery revenue and four-wall economics vs. U.S.?
    Response: Paris is off to a strong start; London and Milan expected to be larger. Over time, four-wall margins should resemble U.S., though near-term start-up costs weigh.

  • Question from Maksim Rakhlenko (TD Cowen): What drove gross margin improvement and how to think about promotions vs. tariffs?
    Response: Gross margin improved YOY by lapping prior markdowns; H2 gross margin faces tariff headwinds—pricing/mitigation helps but cannot fully offset.

  • Question from Michael Lasser (UBS): Is discounting driving incremental sales and will you pull back as housing improves?
    Response: At luxury furniture levels, the industry structurally discounts (e.g., designer pricing); RH’s membership model competes effectively, and promotions are necessary in this housing downturn.

  • Question from Michael Lasser (UBS): What underpins back-half operating margin guidance?
    Response: Seasonality (catalog/advertising expense timing) and embedded pricing/mitigation drive phasing; specifics by quarter not disclosed.

  • Question from Steven Zaccone (Citi): How will tariffs affect industry pricing timing and magnitude?
    Response: Expect broad furniture inflation in H2 2025; most players must raise prices, including U.S. assemblers impacted by imported parts/fabrics; pressures may persist into 2026.

  • Question from Steven Zaccone (Citi): Will the ~200 bps international drag ease next year?
    Response: Not immediately; London and Milan will carry heavy start-up costs, with improvement dependent on Paris ramp.

  • Question from Brian Nagel (Oppenheimer): Can tighter inventory become a sales headwind?
    Response: There are trade-offs, but new concepts, major gallery openings (e.g., London/Milan), and potential partnerships/licensing should support growth.

  • Question from Brian Nagel (Oppenheimer): Are pricing actions synchronized with tariff impacts?
    Response: A mix—RH adjusts prices judiciously and uses its established tariff playbook and membership levers, balancing margin protection with demand.

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