Ferguson Enterprises (FERG) Stock Slides After Q1 2026 Earnings – What Today’s Sell-Off Means for Investors

Ferguson Enterprises (FERG) Stock Slides After Q1 2026 Earnings – What Today’s Sell-Off Means for Investors

Newport News, VA – December 9, 2025

Ferguson Enterprises Inc. (NYSE: FERG; LSE: FERG) shares are under pressure today after the company reported results for the quarter ended October 31, 2025 (its fiscal Q1 2026). The numbers show solid operational momentum and raised full-year guidance, but the stock is trading sharply lower as investors digest valuations and future growth expectations.

Below is a deep dive into today’s earnings, market reaction, analyst forecasts, and what it could mean for Ferguson stock going into 2026.


1. What Ferguson Reported Today

Ferguson’s latest quarter was, in pure fundamental terms, strong:

  • Net sales: $8.17–8.2 billion, up about 5.1% year-on-year. [1]
  • Adjusted diluted EPS:$2.84, up roughly 15.9% year-on-year. [2]
  • Adjusted operating margin: around 9.9%, about 80 basis points higher than the prior year. [3]
  • Gross margin:30.7%, up 60 bps from 30.1% a year earlier. [4]

The company attributed the performance to disciplined pricing, cost control, and continued share gains, especially in non-residential markets. Net sales growth was driven primarily by organic revenue growth of 4.2%, with roughly 1 percentage point contributed by acquisitions. [5]

Residential vs non-residential: two very different stories

Ferguson’s business remains split roughly half-and-half between residential and non-residential customers in the U.S.:

  • Residential revenue: down about 1% in the quarter. The company cited weak new housing starts, softer repair, maintenance and improvement (RMI) demand, and a still-choppy macro environment for housing. [6]
  • Non-residential revenue: up a robust 12%, supported by large capital projects, strong demand in waterworks and commercial/mechanical, and solid bidding activity. [7]

In other words, the “plumbing and HVAC” macro story is split: housing is sluggish, but big commercial and infrastructure work is still rolling.

Updated 2025 guidance: slightly more optimistic

Alongside the results, Ferguson updated its calendar-year 2025 guidance:

  • Net sales growth: now targeting ~5% for 2025, versus prior “mid-single-digit” language. [8]
  • Adjusted operating margin: guided to 9.4%–9.6%, compared with the previous range of 9.2%–9.6%. [9]
  • Interest expense: around $190 million.
  • Capital expenditures: about $350 million.
  • Effective tax rate: roughly 26%. [10]

That is, management is leaning slightly more bullish on margins and still expects mid-single-digit sales growth even after a long run in the U.S. construction cycle.

Some outlets framed today’s report as a “mixed” result, noting that while revenue grew 5.1% and margins expanded, profit came in around or a touch below some more optimistic estimates, prompting cautious headlines about “missing profit estimates” despite the company’s own adjusted EPS figure beating the headline consensus of $2.77 per share. [11]


2. How the Market Reacted: Gap Down Despite Solid Fundamentals

Despite the strong year-on-year growth, Ferguson stock gapped down at the open:

  • Previous close: $245.80
  • Today’s open: $232.60
  • Recent trade: around $232.65, on heavy volume of roughly 770,000 shares. [12]

That’s a roughly 5%–6% drop intraday, even though fundamentals remain healthy. MarketBeat data points out:

  • Market cap: about $45–49 billion (depending on real-time price). [13]
  • Trailing P/E: around 24–26x earnings. [14]
  • PEG ratio: around 2.1, reflecting a quality business but one that’s not obviously “cheap” on traditional growth metrics. [15]
  • Dividend: annualized $3.32 per share, implying a yield of roughly 1.3%–1.4% at current prices, with a payout ratio in the mid-30s. [16]
  • Balance sheet: net-debt-to-adjusted-EBITDA around 1.1x, giving Ferguson room for continued buybacks and bolt-on deals. [17]

So today’s move looks less like a fundamental collapse and more like a valuation reset after a big run. Prior to earnings, the stock had recently traded near a 52-week high of about $256.93, off a low around $146. [18]

When a quality industrial distributor runs hard into earnings season, even “good” numbers sometimes aren’t good enough to justify further multiple expansion. Markets can be dramatic like that.


3. Analyst Ratings and Price Targets: Still Skewed Bullish

The sell-off hasn’t changed the basic stance of Wall Street toward Ferguson, which remains broadly positive.

Consensus rating: “Moderate Buy”

According to recent MarketBeat data:

  • The stock carries a “Moderate Buy” consensus.
  • Coverage includes a mix of Strong Buy, Buy, and Hold ratings, with no major bearish calls highlighted in the latest round-up. [19]

Price target snapshots

Different sources quote slightly different averages depending on what’s included, but the direction is clear: analysts see upside from current levels, even after a strong year-to-date move:

  • As of mid-November, one dataset shows an average 12-month price target around $258–259, implying low-single-digit percentage upside from a recent close near $251.54, before today’s drop. [20]
  • A breakdown of individual targets includes:
    • Jefferies: Buy rating; price target lifted to $289. [21]
    • Wells Fargo: Overweight; price target raised from $275 to $280 on December 4, 2025. [22]
    • Bernstein: price target around $288. [23]
    • Barclays: target around $273, Overweight. [24]
    • Baird / RBC and others: targets generally in the mid-$240s to low-$260s range, mostly with Outperform or similar positive ratings. [25]

Given today’s post-earnings pullback, the implied upside vs. the average target is now higher than what some of these mid-November snapshots show, simply because the share price has moved down faster than the targets.


4. Institutional Flows: CalPERS and Corporate Ventures

Behind the scenes, big money has been active in FERG.

CalPERS ups its stake

A new filing today shows that the California Public Employees’ Retirement System (CalPERS) increased its holdings in Ferguson by 25.1% in the second quarter:

  • New position: 363,017 shares, after adding 72,790 shares.
  • This represents about 0.18% of the company, valued at roughly $79 million at the time of the filing. [26]

MarketBeat also notes that about 82% of Ferguson shares are held by institutions and hedge funds, underscoring the stock’s status as a large-cap institutional favorite. [27]

Ferguson Ventures: investing in the future of the trades

Earlier this month, Ferguson’s corporate venture arm, Ferguson Ventures, led an $8.5 million strategic funding round for Ply, an inventory and purchasing platform for contractors. [28]

The investment is aimed at:

  • Automating inventory replenishment for contractors.
  • Reducing “dead stock” and boosting billable work.
  • Deepening Ferguson’s digital integration into the contractor workflow, which over time can support higher-margin, stickier relationships. [29]

This kind of corporate venture activity doesn’t move quarterly EPS in a big way today, but it’s part of the long-term moat-building strategy: make Ferguson not just a wholesaler, but an embedded operating partner in the trades.


5. Ferguson Stock Forecast: Key Drivers into 2026

Rather than pretending anyone has a crystal ball, it’s more useful to frame a scenario-based view based on what the company and analysts are saying today.

What the company itself is signaling

Management raised margin guidance and affirmed mid-single-digit net sales growth for 2025, even while acknowledging uncertainty in the macro environment. [30]

Key positives they’re implicitly betting on:

  • Non-residential strength continues: double-digit growth in non-residential revenue is supported by ongoing large capital projects, especially in water infrastructure and commercial mechanical systems. [31]
  • Residential not collapsing, just sluggish: residential revenue decline of about 1% is painful but far from a crash, and Ferguson continues to outperform the underlying market. [32]
  • Pricing power and cost discipline: improved gross margins and higher operating margins suggest Ferguson can defend profitability even in a slow-growth environment. [33]

From a pure guidance standpoint, the company is projecting something like:

  • Mid-single-digit revenue growth.
  • High-single-digit to low-double-digit EPS growth, helped by buybacks and operating leverage. [34]

The bull case for Ferguson stock

Recent “bull case” commentary and positive analyst notes generally emphasize: [35]

  • Structural tailwinds in water and HVAC: aging infrastructure, stricter building codes, and energy-efficiency upgrades underpin long-term demand.
  • Scale advantage: as a leading North American distributor with ~35,000 associates and ~1,700 locations, Ferguson can out-execute smaller rivals on logistics, inventory, and value-added services. [36]
  • Capital allocation: steady dividends, an ongoing multi-billion-dollar share repurchase program, and bolt-on acquisitions all enhance per-share value over time. [37]
  • Balance sheet flexibility: net debt at about 1.1x adjusted EBITDA leaves room to keep doing all of the above. [38]

In this scenario, today’s post-earnings pullback looks like a classic “good company, temporary wobble” situation: fundamentals intact, rating still “Moderate Buy,” and price targets above the current share price.

The bear case and risks

The market’s reaction today is a reminder that even high-quality distributors are not immune to cyclical bumps. Key risks include:

  • Housing downturn: if residential markets weaken further, the 1% revenue decline in this segment could deepen, pressuring top-line growth. [39]
  • Non-residential slowdown: double-digit non-residential growth relies on continued large project activity. Any broad cutback in capex or infrastructure spending could push growth down quickly. [40]
  • Valuation risk: trading at mid-20s P/E with a PEG above 2, Ferguson is priced as a high-quality compounder. If growth slows or margins disappoint, multiples can compress—as today’s gap-down shows. [41]
  • Interest rate sensitivity: construction activity is sensitive to borrowing costs. A higher-for-longer rate environment could cap demand in both residential and non-residential markets.

Analyst forecasts reflect these cross-currents: upside is there, but not explosive, and price targets cluster in the mid-$240s to high-$280s, suggesting measured optimism rather than euphoria. [42]


6. Dividend, Buybacks and Long-Term Shareholder Returns

For investors looking at total return, the capital return profile matters:

  • Dividend: about $3.32 per share annually, yield around 1.3%–1.4%, with a payout ratio in the mid-30% range, leaving room for reinvestment and buybacks. [43]
  • Share repurchases: Ferguson has been running a multi-billion-dollar buyback program, gradually shrinking the share count and supporting EPS growth even in modest revenue environments. [44]

Combined with steady earnings growth, that mix has historically produced attractive total returns—but as always, the forward outcome depends on your view of the construction cycle and Ferguson’s ability to keep out-executing its peers.


7. Bottom Line: What Today’s Ferguson Sell-Off Signals

Summing up today’s action in Ferguson Enterprises stock:

  • The business: still delivering healthy growth, margin expansion, and raised guidance for 2025.
  • The quarter: fundamentally strong, with 5.1% revenue growth, double-digit EPS growth, and non-residential strength offsetting residential softness. [45]
  • The stock: correcting from near 52-week highs after a big year, with a gap-down that looks driven more by expectations and valuation than by any obvious deterioration in the story. [46]
  • The street: still broadly constructive, with “Moderate Buy” consensus and price targets above current levels, plus fresh institutional interest from major players like CalPERS. [47]

For traders, today’s volatility underscores how earnings days can act as “re-pricing events” even when the underlying numbers are solid. For long-term investors, the key questions now are whether Ferguson can continue to grow mid-single-digits through the cycle and maintain its high-return, capital-light distribution model.

References

1. www.corporate.ferguson.com, 2. www.corporate.ferguson.com, 3. www.corporate.ferguson.com, 4. www.corporate.ferguson.com, 5. www.corporate.ferguson.com, 6. www.corporate.ferguson.com, 7. www.corporate.ferguson.com, 8. www.corporate.ferguson.com, 9. www.corporate.ferguson.com, 10. www.corporate.ferguson.com, 11. au.investing.com, 12. www.marketbeat.com, 13. www.marketbeat.com, 14. www.marketbeat.com, 15. www.marketbeat.com, 16. www.marketbeat.com, 17. www.corporate.ferguson.com, 18. www.marketbeat.com, 19. www.marketbeat.com, 20. www.nasdaq.com, 21. www.nasdaq.com, 22. www.gurufocus.com, 23. www.quiverquant.com, 24. www.quiverquant.com, 25. www.marketbeat.com, 26. www.marketbeat.com, 27. www.marketbeat.com, 28. www.stocktitan.net, 29. www.stocktitan.net, 30. www.corporate.ferguson.com, 31. www.corporate.ferguson.com, 32. www.corporate.ferguson.com, 33. www.corporate.ferguson.com, 34. www.corporate.ferguson.com, 35. finviz.com, 36. www.stocktitan.net, 37. www.businesswire.com, 38. www.corporate.ferguson.com, 39. www.corporate.ferguson.com, 40. www.corporate.ferguson.com, 41. www.marketbeat.com, 42. www.nasdaq.com, 43. www.marketbeat.com, 44. www.businesswire.com, 45. www.corporate.ferguson.com, 46. www.marketbeat.com, 47. www.marketbeat.com

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