American Eagle Beats Expectations in Q2 2025

Date:

Share post:

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.

Related articles

Study Finds Cannabis May Increase False Memories

Researchers Examine THC’s Impact on Memory A new study from Washington State University suggests that cannabis may not only...

Allbirds to Exit Footwear, Pivot to AI

$50 Million Convertible Financing Secured Allbirds announced it has entered into a definitive agreement with an institutional investor for...

Starbucks Debuts ChatGPT Drink Finder

AI Tool Aims to Spark Beverage Inspiration Starbucks has introduced a beta app within ChatGPT designed to help customers...

Nine Killed in Turkey School Shooting

Attack at Secondary School in Kahramanmaras At least eight students and one teacher were killed in a shooting at...