Today: 30 June 2026
e.l.f. Beauty (ELF) plunges as tariff hit and soft FY‑2026 outlook overshadow Rhode boost: what to know today (Nov. 6, 2025)
6 November 2025
2 mins read

e.l.f. Beauty (ELF) plunges as tariff hit and soft FY‑2026 outlook overshadow Rhode boost: what to know today (Nov. 6, 2025)

  • Shares slid more than 20% after e.l.f. set a FY‑2026 revenue outlook of $1.55–$1.57B and adjusted EPS of $2.80–$2.85, both below Street expectations; after‑hours losses reached ~26%.
  • Tariff costs >$50M expected this year and a heavy China sourcing mix (~75%) are pressuring gross margin (69%, –165 bps).
  • Q2 FY‑2026 (quarter ended Sept. 30): net sales up 14% to $343.9M; adjusted EPS $0.68; Rhode’s Sephora debut was “record‑breaking,” helping share gains of +140 bps for the e.l.f. brand. Elf Beauty Investor

What happened

e.l.f. Beauty’s stock is tumbling today after the company’s fiscal Q2 print and FY‑2026 guidance underwhelmed investors. In last night’s release, management guided to $1.55–$1.57 billion in sales and $2.80–$2.85 adjusted EPS for FY‑2026, short of consensus (~$1.65B and ~$3.58). The outlook reflects a step‑down in profitability as U.S. import tariffs lift costs and growth in the core e.l.f. brand moderates versus last year’s blockbuster product cycle. Shares fell as much as ~26% after hours Wednesday and were still sharply lower in early Thursday trading.

By the numbers (Q2 FY‑2026)

  • Net sales:$343.9M (+14% YoY).
  • Gross margin:69% (–165 bps YoY), with the decline primarily from higher tariff costs.
  • Adjusted EPS:$0.68; GAAP EPS:$0.05.
  • Adjusted EBITDA:$66.2M (19% margin).
  • Brand momentum: The quarter included +140 bps of market‑share gains for e.l.f. and a record‑breaking launch of Rhode at Sephora North America.
  • Six‑month (YTD) sales:$697.7M (+12% YoY).
  • Balance sheet (9/30/25):$194.4M cash; $831.6M long‑term debt.

Guidance snapshot vs. last year

  • FY‑2026 sales:$1.55–$1.57B (vs. $1.314B in FY‑2025 actuals).
  • Adjusted EPS:$2.80–$2.85 (vs. $3.39 FY‑2025).
  • Adjusted EBITDA:$302–$306M (vs. $297M FY‑2025).

Why the sell‑off is so steep

Two pressure points stand out:

  1. Tariffs and sourcing mix. e.l.f. expects more than $50 million of tariff costs in FY‑2026; about 75% of products are made in China, magnifying the impact on margins. Management also said it does not plan further price increases after August’s $1 list‑price action.
  2. Core brand deceleration. Commentary around softer innovation versus last year’s hit lip launches, and greater reliance on newly acquired Rhode, tempered near‑term growth expectations in the mature e.l.f. franchise.

Wall Street reaction today

  • Piper Sandler cut the stock to Neutral from Overweight and slashed its target to $100 citing slower implied core growth and a profitability reset.
  • UBSreduced its target to $105 (Neutral), highlighting valuation and the softer guide.
  • TD Cowentrimmed its target to $110 following the report.

Rhode’s role—helpful, but not a cure‑all (yet)

Rhode’s early performance is a bright spot—a “record‑breaking” Sephora North America launch with further U.K. rollout slated for Nov. 10—and is expected to be a meaningful contributor this year. Still, even with Rhode’s momentum, the Street is recalibrating given margin headwinds and a lower EPS baseline. Elf Beauty Investor+1

What to watch next

  • Tariff strategy & supply chain diversification. Any concrete shift away from China or tariff relief could be a key catalyst for margins.
  • Holiday sell‑through and newness cadence. Q4 merchandising (value gift sets, lip/eye franchises) will be scrutinized to gauge whether core demand re‑accelerates. (Context via company and trade coverage.)
  • Analyst revisions and rating drift. After today’s downgrades and target cuts, watch if other brokers follow.

Editor’s note & methodology

Figures for the quarter and full‑year outlook come directly from e.l.f. Beauty’s Nov. 5, 2025 press release. After‑hours move, tariff magnitude, and sourcing mix are corroborated by independent reporting. Analyst actions are sourced from broker‑note roundups and wire services published this morning. All data are as of Nov. 6, 2025.

This article is for informational purposes only and is not investment advice.

Mateusz Kaczmarek is a financial and technology journalist at TS2.tech, covering stocks, artificial intelligence, semiconductors and global market developments. A graduate of the Poznań University of Economics and Business, he previously worked in financial analysis before moving into business journalism. His reporting focuses on technology companies, market trends and the forces shaping global investment markets.

Stock Market Today

  • S&P 500 Near Record Concentration as Tech Giants Dominate Moves
    June 30, 2026, 6:21 AM EDT. The S&P 500 is up almost 77% in three years, driven mostly by big tech stocks riding the AI wave. The top 10 names now make up more than 40% of the index, the highest level ever. The so-called 'Magnificent Seven' tech firms, all worth more than $1 trillion, have steered recent swings. Since May 2026, the index is down nearly 3%, even as the rest of the market saw a 2.5% gain. While talk of a tech bubble continues, analysts looking back at the dot-com bust and the Great Recession note the market's long-term strength, with the S&P 500 up more than 700% since 2000. They say staying patient through volatility matters.
IonQ (INBX) Stock Soars on Quantum Breakthrough and $2B Deal – Bubble or Next Big Thing?
Previous Story

IonQ Q3 2025 Earnings (Nov. 5): Revenue Soars 222% to $39.9M, Full‑Year Outlook Raised; Here’s What It Means for IONQ Stock

Diageo Stock on the Rocks After 30% Slide – Is a Comeback Brewing for LSE: DGE?
Next Story

Diageo Share Price Today (10 November 2025): Stock Jumps ~7% After Dave Lewis Named CEO

Go toTop