New York, May 27, 2026, 10:02 (EDT)
Lululemon athletica gained in early U.S. trading Wednesday as the company resolved its board dispute with founder Chip Wilson. The deal gives investors a governance reset ahead of the CEO transition and next week’s earnings report.
Lululemon shares gained 4.5% to $133.03 at last check, pushing its market cap near $15.8 billion. SPY eased 0.1%, QQQ slipped 0.4%. Nike added 2.9%, and On Holding was up 1.6%.
Lululemon’s boardroom fight fades from view as the company lines up a new CEO and fresh sales numbers. First-quarter fiscal 2026 results are set for June 4, with a call scheduled for 4:30 p.m. Eastern.
Lululemon said Wilson, who holds about 8.7% of the business, has reached a cooperation deal. Under the agreement, Laura Gentile, who was ESPN’s chief marketing officer, and Marc Maurer, former co-CEO of On, are set to join the board after the annual meeting on June 25. Lululemon will also add one more apparel product and brand director by Oct. 1.
Lululemon’s agreement bars Wilson from pushing new changes for a while and includes an 18-month non-disparagement clause, so he can’t publicly criticize the company. Executive Chair Marti Morfitt said the agreement sets out a “clear path forward.” Gentile called it a “pivotal moment.” Maurer said it’s about “what the consumer wants and needs.” Wilson described the outcome as “meaningful progress.” Lululemon
Lululemon’s proxy fight put the spotlight on whether its problems came down to governance, product, or a mix of both. Reuters said shares have dropped more than 60% in the last year as North American sales slumped and rivals like Vuori pushed in.
The deal hands incoming CEO Heidi O’Neill a calmer entry. O’Neill, who used to work at Nike, is set to take over in September when her Nike non-compete wraps up, Reuters said.
Still, a rising stock isn’t the same as a turnaround in operations. The risks are in plain sight: if next week’s numbers show the U.S. business is softer, margins are under more pressure, or new launches fail to catch on with shoppers, investors could see Wednesday’s rally as just a relief bounce, not a shift in fundamentals.
Lululemon is settling as it deals with weaker U.S. sales, tougher rivals and some product-quality troubles, according to The Wall Street Journal. The incoming board and O’Neill do not have time for a slow turnaround.
Lululemon’s deal has given markets some optimism for now. The real question is if Lululemon can prove with its next numbers that its brand, still strong though not what it was, can actually deliver growth in its main market.