Sunday, June 7, 2026
20.8 C
New York

Macy’s (M) earnings Q1 2026


Macy’s posted its strongest fiscal first-quarter comparable sales performance in four years on Wednesday, as the legacy department store’s turnaround continues to show progress. 

Led by the 200 so-called reimagined stores Macy’s has upgraded, comparable sales grew 3% overall during the quarter and 1.6% at its namesake banner.  

At Bloomingdale’s, comparable sales grew 10.2%, helped by an array of buzzy brands, a “fun factor” unique in the luxury landscape and the recent bankruptcy of rival Saks Fifth Avenue, CEO Tony Spring told CNBC in an interview. 

“Is the disruption in the marketplace helpful to us? Sure,” he said. “Is it the primary reason we’re growing? No.” 

Spring said better-than-expected sales and profitability led the company to raise its full fiscal-year guidance after previously taking a cautious outlook. 

It’s now expecting 2026 net sales to be between $21.5 billion and $21.75 billion, largely ahead of expectations of $21.59 billion, according to LSEG. It anticipates adjusted earnings per share will be between $2 and $2.20, up from a previous range of between $1.90 and $2.10 and well ahead of expectations of $2.07 at the middle and high end, according to LSEG.

It now expects comparable sales to climb between 0.5% and 1.2% for the year, versus a previous outlook of a 0.5% drop to a 0.5% increase.

Macy’s shares were up more than 2% in premarket trading Wednesday.

Many retailers have reported strong growth during their fiscal first quarters in recent weeks due in part to higher-than-usual tax refunds. Some companies issued more cautious guidance for the current quarter over concerns less stimulus in the economy could lead to slower demand, especially as shoppers pay more for gas due to the war in the Middle East.

Spring said tax refunds “definitely” helped during the first quarter, but weren’t the only reason why Macy’s grew. Crucially, the same trends the company saw during the first quarter have so far continued into the second, he said. 

“We did raise our guidance in both sales and profit for the remainder of the year to reflect the business trends that we’re seeing as we start the second quarter, so pleased with the second quarter to date and the breadth of the categories that are performing,” said Spring. “Don’t see any significant change in the consumer approach to our categories and our business across all three of our name plates.” 

He said the steady consumer behavior led Macy’s to hike its outlook “despite the macroeconomic and geopolitical uncertainty.”

Here’s how the department store did in its fiscal first quarter compared with what Wall Street was anticipating, based on a survey of analysts by LSEG:

  • Earnings per share: 13 cents adjusted vs. 3 cents expected
  • Revenue: $4.68 billion vs. $4.61 billion expected

The company’s reported net income for the three-month period that ended May 2 was $63 million, or 23 cents per share, compared with $38 million, or 13 cents per share, a year earlier. Adjusting for restructuring costs and other one-time charges, Macy’s posted earnings per share of 13 cents.

Sales rose to $4.68 billion, up about 2% from $4.60 billion a year earlier. 

Macy’s is about two years into a three-year turnaround that Spring has spearheaded since taking over as the retailer’s chief executive. It’s included closing underperforming stores at dead malls across the country and reinvesting in the ones it decided to keep open.

Those investments have included a focus on retail fundamentals, like ensuring stores have enough staff, are enjoyable to spend time in and are stocked with items people actually want to buy.

“We’re not doing the fancy stuff, we’re doing the stuff that makes the biggest difference in the business,” said Spring. “We are really focused on product, we are really focused on taking care of the customer, and I think the results show that when we do those two things consistently, and we don’t get bored, we stay relentless in our commitment, we get the results we’re looking for.”



Source link

Hot this week

'Library of Things' aims to help people save money

Volunteers in Leamington have launched a new type...

How $15B Fed injection could trigger crypto’s next macro rally

Quantitative easing drives strong capital inflows into crypto. However,...

Kite Realty: Robust Leasing Momentum Supports Continued Upside

Kite Realty: Robust Leasing Momentum Supports Continued Upside Source...

Latest Post

Core inflation rate rose to 2.9% in July, as expected, key Fed measure shows

CNBC's Rick Santelli joins 'Squawk Box' to break down...

Look to State Street, Invesco for Top-Performing ETFs in 2026

The top-performing non-leveraged ETFs of 2026 span a...

What It Costs to Live in Taylor Swift’s Neighborhood

From chart-topping albums to record-breaking tours, Taylor Swift...

How VanEck Changed the ETF Industry

Welcome to Trends with Benefits, the podcast that...

FinCEN issues advisory on suspicious activity linked to employment of undocumented immigrants

The Financial Crimes Enforcement Network today issued an...

Trump's Fed chair pick Kevin Warsh confirmed by US Senate

Kevin Warsh was confirmed by the narrowest margin...

World economies react to Trump’s tariffs punch • FRANCE 24 English

Trump signed an order imposing steep tariffs on 66...

Illinois joins Ohio in ordering pause on data center tax credits

Governor JB Pritzker issued an order pausing state tax incentives...
Demo

Related Articles

Popular Categories

Demo