Today: 22 June 2026
lululemon’s stock slide is now a test of trust in the turnaround
12 May 2026
3 mins read

lululemon’s stock slide is now a test of trust in the turnaround

New York, May 12, 2026, 09:12 EDT

  • LULU finished Monday at $126.34, dropping 3.69%. Early Tuesday, shares ticked up just 0.08% to $126.44 as of 09:08 EDT.
  • Patience with the North America reset has run out. Margins are thinner, and the CEO handover won’t be complete until September.
  • Bulls lean on China’s growth story, fresh products on the shelf, and a valuation that’s been knocked down. Bears counter that promises aren’t enough—the stock needs to deliver actual results before the multiple gets any lift.

Lululemon’s recent drop isn’t tied to any single piece of bad news. The bigger issue: investors wondering how much patience they have before the premium label starts acting like one again. Shares ended Monday at $126.34, off 3.69% for the day—its second consecutive decline. Heading into Tuesday, the stock hovered just above its 52-week low.

That stands out because the market wasn’t dumping every consumer stock in sight. The S&P 500 and Dow managed gains of 0.19% apiece on Monday, yet Lululemon buckled; Nike slid 3.96%, VF Corp. dropped 5.48%, and Under Armour Class C tumbled 5.92%. Athletic-wear names bore the brunt, with traders unloading that risk even as indexes stayed positive.

North America remains the sticking point. Lululemon’s March report showed fourth-quarter revenue up 1% to $3.6 billion, but sales in the Americas slipped 4%. Gross margin narrowed by 5.5 percentage points, landing at 54.9%. For the year, Americas revenue was down 1%, while international revenue jumped 22%.

Management isn’t blind to investor focus. On the recent call, interim co-CEO and CFO Meghan Frank put it bluntly: the main goal is driving full-price sales growth in North America—sales without discounts—by ramping up new products, cutting back on markdowns, and keeping inventory tighter. That’s the right move. But it doesn’t happen overnight.

Lululemon’s fresh outlook left investors wanting. The company pegged fiscal 2026 revenue between $11.35 billion and $11.5 billion—a modest 2% to 4% bump. North America and the U.S. are both forecast to slip 1% to 3%. Diluted EPS? Management is calling for $12.10 to $12.30, a step down from the $13.26 posted in fiscal 2025.

The CEO handoff at Lululemon was meant to calm things down. No dice so far. The company tapped Heidi O’Neill—she’s ex-Nike—as its new chief on April 22, but she won’t step in until September 8. O’Neill laid out her priorities: “accelerate product breakthroughs” and push the brand’s cultural edge. The messaging is there, but investors are holding out for results. Lululemon

Doubts deepened after O’Neill’s appointment—she arrives from Nike, which hasn’t exactly had an easy ride lately. Reuters noted nearly $2 billion wiped off lululemon’s market value following the CEO shakeup. BNP Paribas analyst Laurent Vasilescu didn’t mince words: the company, he said, is in need of a “turnaround CEO and not a growth CEO.” Reuters

Still, there’s fuel for the bulls. Needham’s Tom Nikic and his team told Retail Dive that O’Neill’s hands-on background in athletics is a plus. Matt Powell at BCE Consulting put it bluntly, describing her as “the obvious choice.” He also flagged the risk—if Chip Wilson keeps stirring things up, anyone in that seat faces a tougher gig. That’s the straightforward optimistic angle: this pick could click, but only if the board drama dies down and the product side tightens up. Retail Dive

The gloom hasn’t lifted. Wilson is still agitating for board shakeups, insisting the next CEO must get heftier backing on brand and product from directors. As Reuters pointed out, Lululemon shares were already down 47% over the previous year by late April, and the selloff only deepened after that.

Peer headlines aren’t making things easier. Under Armour on Tuesday flagged another sluggish revenue year, warning of a low-single-digit drop for North America. Shares dropped roughly 14% before the bell. According to Reuters, shoppers have turned choosier, with Nike, Lululemon, Adidas, and Puma all stepping up the fight.

Rates don’t offer much of a backstop here. Polymarket traders see a 61% chance the Federal Reserve holds steady with no rate cuts in 2026. Odds for just a single quarter-point move? That’s at 19%. Lower rates tend to help consumer stocks—cheaper borrowing, a bit more risk-on—but current pricing shows little conviction.

The stock sits in a strange spot—cheap, yes, but untested. For a real recovery, three things have to line up: full-price sales in North America have to flip into positive territory, markdown pressure needs to let up without scaring off shoppers, and O’Neill has to spark fresh product buzz while the proxy fight simmers down. Anything before that probably just draws out the shorts, not genuine rerating.

Khadija Saeed is a financial markets reporter at TS2.tech, specializing in stocks, technology and emerging industries. She studied economics and finance at the London School of Economics and previously worked in market research before moving into financial journalism. Her coverage focuses on the companies, innovations and economic trends influencing global investors.

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