American Eagle Beats Expectations in Q2 2025

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Revenue Performance

American Eagle Outfitters (AEO) reported $1.28 billion in net revenue for the second quarter ended 2 August 2025, a 1% decline year-over-year. Despite the dip, results beat analyst expectations by more than 4%. Comparable sales also slipped by 1%.

The company’s Aerie brand was a bright spot, with comparable sales rising 3%, offsetting a 3% drop in the American Eagle line.

CEO Jay Schottenstein credited higher demand, fewer promotions, and stronger inventory management for the quarter’s outcome, marking AEO’s second-highest Q2 revenue in its history.

Profitability and Margins

Gross profit rose slightly to $499.96 million, with gross margin expanding to 38.9%, up 30 basis points, driven by lower markdowns.

Selling, general and administrative expenses fell by 1% to $342.21 million, helped by reduced compensation costs, though advertising investments balanced the savings.

Operating profit increased 2% to $103.09 million, with operating margin improving to 8.0%. Net income grew marginally to $77.63 million, while diluted EPS rose 15% to $0.45.

Inventory and Shareholder Returns

Inventory rose 8% to $718 million, largely reflecting tariff-related cost increases, while units increased 3%.

AEO completed a $200 million share repurchase program, reducing outstanding shares by approximately 10% this year. Total buybacks so far in FY25 stand at $231 million. Capital expenditures reached $133 million year-to-date, with full-year guidance unchanged at $275 million.

Outlook

For Q3, AEO projects operating income between $95 million and $100 million, with tariffs expected to cut profits by $20 million. In Q4, the tariff impact could range from $40 million to $50 million.

For the full year, the company expects flat comparable sales, lower gross margin, and adjusted operating income between $255 million and $265 million.

Schottenstein noted that the fall season has started well, citing new product strength and high-profile campaigns with Sydney Sweeney and Travis Kelce as key drivers of customer engagement and sales momentum.

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