Steelcase's Q2 2026: Contradictions Emerge on Pricing Strategies, International Profitability, and Americas Demand Outlook
The above is the analysis of the conflicting points in this earnings call
Date of Call: None provided
Financials Results
- Revenue: $897M, up 5% YOY (4% organic growth); above June outlook
- EPS: $0.45 adjusted EPS, up YOY and above estimated range
- Operating Margin: 8.4% adjusted, up 40 bps YOY; Americas at 11% (~flat YOY)
Business Commentary:
- Strong Revenue and Earnings Growth:
- Steelcase reported a
5%increase in revenue in the second quarter, marking the highest quarterly results in the past five years. This growth was driven by strong demand from large corporate customers, particularly in the Americas, and international revenue growth of
13%, including8%on an organic basis.Order Growth and Large Corporate Demand:
- Orders grew by
6%in the second quarter, with a notable8%increase in the Americas. The growth was supported by continued demand from large corporate customers, especially in the financial services and technology sectors.
International Revenue and Profitability:
- The international segment posted a
13%revenue growth, with8%growth on an organic basis, supported by strong results from India. Profitability improved by
$5 millioncompared to the prior year, driven by cost reduction actions and revenue growth.Impact of Macroeconomic Challenges:
- Some international markets, such as Germany and France, experienced declines in orders due to macroeconomic challenges.
Steelcase is focusing on winning available business and aligning resources to target the best opportunities in these markets.
Proposed Merger with HNI Corporation:
- Steelcase is pursuing a proposed transaction with HNI Corporation, aiming to expand its reach within markets.
- The combination is expected to bring together the industry's best brands, benefiting shareholders, customers, dealers, and employees.
Sentiment Analysis:
- “Highest quarterly results over the past five years.” Revenue $897M above outlook; adjusted EPS $0.45 above range. Revenue up 5% YOY (4% organic); orders up 6% (Americas +8%). Adjusted operating margin 8.4%, +40 bps YOY; Americas AOM 11% (~flat). International adjusted results improved $5M; APAC profitable, though Germany/France and education softer.
Q&A:
- Question from Joseph Gomes (Noble Capital Markets): Can you break out the outperformance between volume versus price?
Response: Americas 8% order growth was mostly volume; price benefit was only a couple of percentage points.
- Question from Joseph Gomes (Noble Capital Markets): Any additional price increases coming, and are tariffs fully offset?
Response: No comment on future pricing; Q2 YOY pricing benefits offset inflation and tariffs.
- Question from Joseph Gomes (Noble Capital Markets): Are end markets more or less favorable than expected earlier in the year?
Response: More favorable; large corporate demand is stronger than anticipated, partially offset by education declines.
- Question from Steven Ramsey (Thompson Research Group): What’s driving the strong Americas orders—return-to-office, moves, or upgrades?
Response: All of the above; clients are redesigning spaces for collaboration/connection, with project-based orders outpacing continuing business.
- Question from Steven Ramsey (Thompson Research Group): How did international profitability improve—APAC vs. Europe?
Response: Both improved; APAC was profitable with ongoing cost reductions and better China demand; EMEA improved on revenue and costs, but France/Germany remain weak.
- Question from Reuben Garner (The Benchmark Company): Have pricing actions fully offset inflation/tariffs, and what’s the timing of flow-through?
Response: In Q2 YOY, pricing offset tariffs/inflation and began aiding margins; cumulatively still catching up—likely a few more quarters amid volatility.
- Question from Reuben Garner (The Benchmark Company): What was the order cadence in the Americas during the quarter and early Q3?
Response: Orders were evenly spread across Q2; first three weeks of Q3 are roughly flat YOY.
- Question from Reuben Garner (The Benchmark Company): Any notable mix changes in how offices are being configured versus last year or pre-2020?
Response: More redesigns to attract employees, with greater emphasis on privacy, collaboration, and integrated technology.
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