Today: 15 July 2026
Pentair (NYSE:PNR) drops as pool channel destocking hits profits by 62%
15 July 2026
3 mins read

Pentair (NYSE:PNR) drops as pool channel destocking hits profits by 62%

NEW YORK, July 15, 2026, 15:10 EDT

  • Pentair last traded at $64.59, off 14.7% on the day, wiping out about $1.8 billion in market cap Wednesday.
  • About 88% of Pentair’s expected Q2 sales drop is tied to pool inventory cuts, the company said. Pentair also booked a $35 million tariff refund, which helped reported profit.

Pentair plc dropped Wednesday after the company reported pool-channel destocking had reduced its second-quarter sales by about $170 million and Pool segment income by $105 million. The company said that’s a decremental margin of 61.8%, so about 62 cents of profit vanished for every lost dollar of sales.

Pentair now says the inventory reset makes up around 88% of the roughly $193.1 million drop in year-on-year sales, using second-quarter 2025 revenue guidance of $1.1231 billion and the updated early estimate of $930 million. The reset also covers about 83% of the difference between the new estimate and the $1.134 billion sales figure from its earlier guidance, which called for about 1% growth.

Tariff refunds make it harder to get a clean read on the numbers. Pentair sees around $35 million in tariff recoveries under the International Emergency Economic Powers Act—almost 15% of its $235 million in preliminary adjusted operating income and $0.18 per share. Take that out, and adjusted operating income drops to about $200 million, with margin at 21.5% instead of 25.3%. Adjusted earnings would be roughly $0.94 per share. The ex-refund numbers in this paragraph are calculations, not Pentair’s own guidance.

MeasurePrevious guidanceJuly 14 preliminary viewInvestor calculation
Q2 salesGuided up about 1% from last year, implied at $1.134 billionNow seen at around $930 million, off 17%That’s about $204 million less than the earlier implied figure
Q2 adjusted operating incomeExpected up 5% to 6%Estimated $235 million, down 21%Comes out to $200 million without the refund; margin is 21.5%
Q2 adjusted EPS$1.47 to $1.50Roughly $1.12Around $0.94 not counting the refund
Full-year sales growthCalled for 2% to 4% growthNow guides down 4% to 7%Midpoint drops 8.5 percentage points
Full-year adjusted EPS$5.30 to $5.40$4.60 to $4.80Midpoint about $4.48 before refund, 8.9% off the 2025 figure

Company numbers are rough. Ex-refund totals come from simple math using Pentair’s releases, not from company outlooks.

Pentair’s full-year bridge still shows 62% pressure. The company said it expects Pool destocking to cut 2026 sales by $250 million and segment income by $155 million. Pentair now sees total sales falling 4% to 7% and adjusted operating income down 5% to 9%. Flow and Water Solutions are tracking close to earlier projections.

Pool sales only climbed 1% in the first quarter, but the margin there was 33.1%. By the second quarter of 2025, margin in that segment was 35.7%. Pool revenue in the latest quarter dropped by 40% to 42% year over year, according to an estimate from Stifel Financial Corp. analyst Nathan Jones, Reuters said.

CompanyMain comparisonLatest quoted move
Pentair plc Focuses on pool gear and wider water operations-14.7%
Pool Corporation Distributes pool supplies to wholesalers-4.5%
Hayward Holdings Inc. (NYSE:HAYW)Makes pool equipment-6.6%
Xylem Inc. (NYSE:XYL)Works across water technology-0.1%

Quotes shown are latest around dateline and may be delayed. Business descriptions are taken from company filings.

The gap points to Wall Street reading Pentair’s results as both a miss for the company and a sign of trouble for the whole pool sector. Shares of two other pool names dropped, but the broad water sector barely moved. That’s key, since Pentair’s non-pool businesses didn’t drive the guidance cut.

RBC Capital Markets, part of Royal Bank of Canada , cut Pentair to Sector Perform from Outperform and slashed its price target to $74 from $101. Analyst Deane Dray flagged pool destocking as “clearly proving far worse than management signaled on the 1Q26 call.” RBC estimates the company’s adjusted EPS in Q2 missed by about 24%. Investing.com

Pentair cut its forecast and swapped out its CFO. Nicholas Brazis left July 10 after only about four months, and former CFO Bob Fishman stepped in as interim. The company also bought back roughly 2 million shares for $150 million during the quarter, paying an average close to $75 a share—about 16% above Wednesday’s closing price. Questions about channel visibility and capital allocation are set for the July 28 call.

CEO John Stauch said, “We believe these headwinds are temporary,” adding that Pentair is sizing the Pool business for what it sees as normal levels in 2027. Fishman said Pentair could set itself up for “significant growth in 2027.” The company kept its Flow and Water Solutions outlook steady, which may help management, but the earnings story now revolves around the inventory reset. Pentair plc

The recovery depends on whether distributors are just clearing inventory or if demand is actually weaker. If inventory resets cleanly, Pool could get its margins back up soon. But if high rates and inflation stick around, that 2027 recovery might be pushed out, with more production cuts and a 62% decremental margin hanging around longer than management thinks.

Pentair is set to post its finalized Q2 numbers before the NYSE opens on July 28. So far, the results are still preliminary and unaudited and could change as Pentair finishes its financial close. Investors are watching for updates on channel inventory and more detail on profit excluding tariff refunds, with the company’s adjusted margin running roughly 3.8 points higher than the margin minus refunds.

Shan Ahmed Khan is a senior markets reporter at TS2.tech, specializing in stocks, technology and macroeconomic trends. A graduate of the Lahore University of Management Sciences (LUMS), he previously worked in investment research and market analysis. His coverage helps readers understand the key developments influencing global financial markets and emerging industries.

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