Updated: Friday, December 12, 2025 — Shares of lululemon athletica inc. (NASDAQ: LULU) are in focus after the company delivered a better-than-expected fiscal Q3 2025 report, expanded its share repurchase authorization by $1.0 billion, and unveiled a CEO succession plan that investors immediately treated as a potential catalyst for strategic change. [1]
In after-hours trading Thursday and into Friday’s premarket, LULU jumped roughly 9%–10% in reaction to the combined earnings-and-leadership headline. [2]
What’s driving Lululemon stock today
Three things are moving Lululemon stock on 12/12/2025:
- CEO transition: CEO Calvin McDonald will step down effective January 31, 2026, with board chair Marti Morfitt becoming executive chair immediately. The company said CFO Meghan Frank and Chief Commercial Officer André Maestrini will serve as interim co-CEOs following McDonald’s transition while the board runs a comprehensive CEO search. [3]
- Earnings beat vs. expectations: Fiscal Q3 2025 results came in ahead of many forecasts on revenue and EPS, helping stabilize sentiment after a tough year for the stock. [4]
- Capital return: The board approved a $1.0 billion increase to the stock repurchase program, taking remaining authorization to about $1.6 billion as of December 11, 2025 (per the company). [5]
CEO succession plan: why the market cares
Leadership changes don’t always move shares—unless investors think a reset is needed. In Lululemon’s case, the company is navigating:
- Softness in the Americas (especially the U.S.)
- Intensifying athleisure competition
- Questions around product and merchandising execution
Reuters reported that executives cited disappointing product execution, and it also noted founder Chip Wilson had been critical of the company’s marketing (and reportedly considered a proxy fight). [6]
From the company’s perspective, the transition is positioned as orderly: McDonald remains involved through March 31, 2026 as a senior advisor, while the board partners with an executive search firm for a successor. [7]
Lululemon Q3 FY2025 earnings recap: strong international growth offsets Americas weakness
Lululemon’s fiscal third quarter of 2025 ended November 2, 2025. Here are the key numbers investors are reacting to (all from the company’s results release):
- Net revenue:+7% to $2.6 billion
- Americas net revenue:-2%
- International net revenue:+33% [8]
- Comparable sales:+1% (or +2% constant-dollar)
- Americas comps:-5%
- International comps:+18% [9]
- Profitability pressure:
- Gross margin:55.6%, down 290 bps
- Operating margin:17.0%, down 350 bps
- Income from operations:$435.9 million, down 11% [10]
- Bottom line:
- Diluted EPS:$2.59 (vs. $2.87 a year ago)
- Net income:$306.8 million (vs. $351.9 million a year ago) [11]
- Store footprint: ended the quarter with 796 stores after 12 net new company-operated stores in Q3 [12]
The key debate: “International is working, Americas needs fixing”
MarketWatch summed up what many investors are watching: overall sales rose, but the Americas region continues to weigh on the story, with international growth doing more of the heavy lifting right now. [13]
Balance sheet and inventory: buyback expansion plus higher inventory
Lululemon reported:
- Cash and cash equivalents: about $1.0 billion at quarter-end [14]
- Inventory:$2.0 billion, up 11% year over year (up 4% on a unit basis) [15]
The inventory line is important because it intersects with the company’s discounting outlook: Reuters reported Lululemon expects higher discounts, even after noting a strong Thanksgiving period, and it plans to reduce inventory units in 2026. [16]
Guidance and forecast: a “soft” headline Q4, but the calendar matters
Q4 FY2025 guidance
For the fourth quarter of 2025, Lululemon expects:
- Revenue:$3.500B to $3.585B, which is a decline of 3% to 1% reported year-over-year
- However, excluding the prior-year 53rd week, the company frames this as growth of 2% to 4%
- Diluted EPS:$4.66 to $4.76 [17]
Full-year FY2025 guidance (raised)
For fiscal 2025, Lululemon now expects:
- Revenue:$10.962B to $11.047B (about 4% growth; 5%–6% excluding the 53rd week)
- Diluted EPS:$12.92 to $13.02 [18]
Tariffs: a clearly stated headwind
The company said its FY2025 guidance includes an estimated ~$210 million reduction in income from operations tied to higher tariffs on U.S. imports and the removal of the de minimis exemption, net of mitigation efforts such as vendor savings and pricing actions. [19]
Reuters also highlighted a projected 390-basis-point operating margin decline (year-over-year) and reiterated the tariff impact figure, framing it as a meaningful constraint on near-term profitability. [20]
What analysts are saying on Dec. 12, 2025: upgrades, raised targets, and “Hold” stances
A notable feature of today’s coverage is that multiple firms adjusted price targets upward while often keeping neutral/hold-style ratings—a sign that the stock’s 2025 decline may have reset valuation expectations, but conviction on a fast turnaround remains mixed.
Here are prominent moves published on 12/12/2025:
- Jefferies: upgraded to Hold from Underperform, raised price target to $170 from $120 [21]
- Truist Securities: raised price target to $200 from $170, maintained Hold [22]
- Stifel: raised price target to $210 from $205, maintained Hold (calling results “better than feared,” but flagging ongoing Americas pressure) [23]
- Evercore ISI: raised price target to $215 from $180 and lifted its 2025 EPS estimate (while keeping a more cautious view on 2026 EPS vs. Street) [24]
- BofA Securities: raised price target to $220 from $185, maintained Neutral [25]
- BTIG: reiterated Buy (coverage reiteration highlighted in today’s analyst-note reporting) [26]
Why the targets are moving now: The combination of a Q3 beat, slightly raised full-year guidance, a clearer “tariff math,” and a CEO transition creates a fresh set of inputs for models—and a new narrative for 2026. [27]
Strategy watch: merchandising and store experience are getting attention
Beyond the headline numbers, some of the most “stock-relevant” commentary is about execution—what shoppers see, and what sells at full price.
Business Insider reported Lululemon is testing changes to reduce perceived in-store clutter by lowering product density and curating assortments more deliberately in select markets, after analysts criticized store layout and stale inventory presentation. [28]
If those initiatives improve conversion and reduce markdown reliance, they could matter just as much as macro tailwinds.
Bull case vs. bear case for LULU stock heading into 2026
The bull case
- International momentum remains strong (particularly outside the Americas), which can keep top-line growth intact while the U.S. is rebuilt. [29]
- Buyback capacity: with ~$1.6B authorized remaining (per the company), repurchases could support EPS and signal confidence. [30]
- Leadership transition as catalyst: investors sometimes reward a “clean break” narrative, especially after long drawdowns. [31]
The bear case
- Americas comps down 5% suggests Lululemon is still losing momentum in its core market. [32]
- Margins are compressing (gross and operating), while tariffs remain a large, quantified headwind. [33]
- Promotions/discounts may rise, and inventory levels remain elevated year-over-year—often a recipe for more markdown pressure if demand doesn’t firm up. [34]
What to watch next for lululemon athletica inc stock
For investors following LULU stock after today’s surge, the next catalysts likely include:
- Holiday-season cadence and whether the company can protect margins amid discounts (management flagged heavier discounting). [35]
- Q4 results and FY2026 outlook: especially anything suggesting stabilization in U.S. comps and product “hit rate.” [36]
- CEO search milestones and how quickly the leadership transition translates into visible merchandising/product shifts. [37]
- Tariff and de minimis policy developments (and the effectiveness of mitigation actions) given the $210M operating income impact embedded in guidance. [38]
Bottom line
On December 12, 2025, Lululemon stock is moving because the company delivered an earnings beat, increased buyback firepower, and—most importantly for sentiment—signaled a major leadership change with a CEO transition and interim co-CEO structure. The near-term question isn’t whether Lululemon can grow internationally—it’s whether it can fix the Americas business without sacrificing brand heat or margins. [39]
References
1. www.reuters.com, 2. www.reuters.com, 3. corporate.lululemon.com, 4. www.barrons.com, 5. corporate.lululemon.com, 6. www.reuters.com, 7. corporate.lululemon.com, 8. corporate.lululemon.com, 9. corporate.lululemon.com, 10. corporate.lululemon.com, 11. corporate.lululemon.com, 12. corporate.lululemon.com, 13. www.marketwatch.com, 14. corporate.lululemon.com, 15. corporate.lululemon.com, 16. www.reuters.com, 17. corporate.lululemon.com, 18. corporate.lululemon.com, 19. corporate.lululemon.com, 20. www.reuters.com, 21. www.investing.com, 22. uk.investing.com, 23. uk.investing.com, 24. www.investing.com, 25. www.investing.com, 26. www.investing.com, 27. corporate.lululemon.com, 28. www.businessinsider.com, 29. corporate.lululemon.com, 30. corporate.lululemon.com, 31. corporate.lululemon.com, 32. corporate.lululemon.com, 33. corporate.lululemon.com, 34. corporate.lululemon.com, 35. www.reuters.com, 36. corporate.lululemon.com, 37. corporate.lululemon.com, 38. corporate.lululemon.com, 39. corporate.lululemon.com


