E.l.f. Beauty (ELF) Stock Surges Despite Disappointing Forward Guidance After Q4 Earnings Beat

Table of Contents E.l.f. Beauty delivered an impressive fiscal fourth-quarter performance on Wednesday, generating $449 million in revenue—surpassing Wall Street’s $423 million projection. The company’s adjusted earnings per share landed at 32 cents, exceeding the consensus estimate of 29 cents. 🚨 $ELF (e.l.f. Beauty) Q4 & FY2026 Earnings Another year of strong doubledigit growth… rhode and Naturium powering the brand portfolio expansion 👀 📊 KEY METRICS Q4 FY2026 🔹 Net Sales: $449.3M (+35% YoY) 🟢 🔹 Gross Margin: 73% (+140 bps) 🟢 🔹 Adjusted EBITDA:… — Emmanuel – Big Tech & AI Investor (@EmmanuelInvest) May 20, 2026 Shares of ELF advanced roughly 8% in extended trading following the earnings disclosure. e.l.f. Beauty, Inc., ELF However, the market’s response wasn’t entirely positive. The beauty company’s forward-looking projections for fiscal 2027 underperformed expectations across both revenue and profit metrics, which moderated investor enthusiasm. E.l.f. anticipates full-year revenue between $1.84 billion and $1.87 billion. The guidance midpoint trails the $1.87 billion Wall Street consensus. Meanwhile, adjusted EPS projections of $3.27 to $3.32 came in significantly below the analyst consensus of $3.61. The quarter included a significant complication: a $57.6 million expense related to acquiring Rhode, triggered by the brand’s performance exceeding initial projections. This charge resulted in a GAAP net loss of $49.4 million for the period. Excluding this item, net income totaled $19.4 million. Chief Executive Tarang Amin shared with CNBC that consumer spending patterns have weakened as elevated gasoline prices and increasing living costs continue to pressure household budgets. Volume sales have declined more sharply than anticipated in recent months. “We’ve seen units drop off a bit more in the last few months as consumers have particularly been suffering with higher costs,” Amin said. The cosmetics maker recently experimented with reducing the price of its $18 Halo Glow skin tint by $4 and observed a remarkable nearly 40% increase in sales volume. This trial clearly demonstrated the heightened price sensitivity among today’s shoppers. Consequently, E.l.f. intends to reverse portions of the price increases implemented last August, when it added $1 to prices across its main product range to counterbalance tariff expenses. More products will undergo price-point testing at lower thresholds moving forward. The company incurred approximately $58.5 million in tariff payments and is currently pursuing refunds after the Supreme Court struck down the tariffs. CFO Mandy Fields indicated that these anticipated refunds, combined with cost-reduction initiatives, could help mitigate the margin pressure from price decreases. Gross margin expanded 1.4 percentage points to 73% for the quarter, partially supported by those same price increases that are now being reversed. Rhode has evolved into the primary growth catalyst for E.l.f. throughout the past year. The celebrity-founded brand experienced 80% sales growth, fueled by its expansion into Sephora North America, Sephora UK, and Mecca, where it currently holds the top brand ranking at all three retailers. This fall season, Rhode is scheduled to debut across 19 European markets through Sephora. E.l.f. also highlighted a potential $15 million to $20 million challenge in fiscal 2027 from elevated oil costs linked to the U.S.-Israeli conflict with Iran. This potential impact remains outside the company’s current financial guidance. Fields noted that approximately 75% of E.l.f.’s manufacturing operations are based in China. The company reported it hasn’t observed consumers trading down to cheaper alternatives yet, with shoppers maintaining their beauty product expenditures. Amin confirmed that mergers and acquisitions continue to factor into the company’s long-range strategy, although current emphasis centers on driving organic expansion from its existing brand portfolio.