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Further Reading from MarketBeat
Was Decker’s Double Beat a Bullish Signal—Or Mere HOKA’s-Pocus?Submitted by Chris Markoch. Publication Date: 5/23/2026. 
Key Points
- Deckers posted record revenue and EPS, supported primarily by HOKA and UGG growth.
- International sales surged while U.S. growth remained nearly flat, highlighting geographic concentration risk.
- Fiscal 2027 guidance implies slowing earnings growth and modest margin compression despite strong demand.
- Special Report: Elon Musk’s $1 Quadrillion AI IPO
Deckers Outdoors (NYSE: DECK) reported fourth-quarter and full-year fiscal 2026 earnings after the market closed on May 21. The headline numbers were strong: record revenue, record earnings per share (EPS), and higher guidance. It was the kind of report investors should love. But dig beneath the surface, and a more complicated picture emerges. In this case, two dominant brands are doing the heavy lifting while the rest of the portfolio contracts. So far, investors seem cautiously bullish.
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DECK opened only 1% higher the morning after the report, following significant volatility in the after-hours and pre-market sessions. The Headline Beat Isn't the StoryOn paper, the results were hard to argue with. Full-year revenue climbed 9.8% to a record $5.47 billion, and diluted EPS rose 11% to a record $7.02, handily topping the prior year's $6.33. For the fourth quarter alone, net sales hit $1.12 billion—another record—up 9.6% from the same period last year. Gross margin held firm at 57.6% for the quarter, a slight improvement from the prior year's 56.7%. The company also rewarded shareholders with a $3.5 billion increase to its share repurchase authorization, bringing the total outstanding authorization to approximately $5 billion. With $1.9 billion in cash on the balance sheet and no outstanding debt, Deckers has the financial muscle to support that move. The HOKA and UGG ShowThe story, however, is really one about two brands. HOKA continued to carry the business, posting quarterly net sales of $671.2 million, a 14.5% jump. Meanwhile, UGG contributed $408.6 million, up 9.2%. For the full year, HOKA grew 15.9% to $2.59 billion, and UGG grew 8.2% to $2.74 billion. Together, they account for essentially all of the company's business that matters. Both brands carry something that can't be manufactured overnight: genuine cultural cachet. HOKA has carved out a loyal following among serious runners and the wellness-adjacent consumer who wants performance credibility in an everyday sneaker. UGG has long since transcended its beach-boot origins to become a year-round lifestyle brand with staying power across demographics. Crucially, both brands skew toward a consumer segment that has shown remarkable resilience throughout the current economic environment. That is, the upper tier of the income distribution. These are shoppers who are still buying, still paying full price, and still choosing brand identity over bargain-hunting. Direct-to-consumer (DTC) comparable net sales grew 8.2% in the quarter, which confirms demand is real and not just a function of wholesale channel stuffing. The Part They'd Rather Keep HiddenHere's where the story gets more complicated. The "Other brands" segment—which includes Teva and, until recently, Koolaburra and Sanuk—saw a 35.6% drop in net sales in the fourth quarter, falling to just $39.5 million from $61.3 million a year ago. For the full year, the decline was 33.9%. Management has been transparent that the Koolaburra phase-out and the Sanuk sale are driving these declines, and technically, those are strategic decisions, not market failures. But the magnitude of the drop is notable. It signals a company that is actively narrowing its portfolio rather than broadening it. That’s essentially a concession that its future is a two-brand story. Is that a bad bet? Maybe not. HOKA and UGG are genuinely powerful assets. But it does raise a question worth considering: what happens if either of those brands hits a rough patch? The geographic split tells a similar story of concentration risk. International sales surged 25.5% in the quarter, while domestic sales crept up just 0.3%. Strong international momentum is a genuine positive, but it also introduces currency exposure and geopolitical risk—risks the company itself flagged in its forward-looking statements, citing "escalating global conflicts" and "changes to global trade policy, including tariffs." What the Guidance Actually SaysFor fiscal 2027, Deckers guided for $5.86 billion to $5.91 billion in revenue—high-single-digit growth—with diluted EPS of $7.30 to $7.45. That implies roughly 4%-6% earnings growth at the midpoint, a deceleration from the 11% EPS growth posted this year. Gross margin is expected to compress slightly to approximately 56.5%. The multi-year framework through fiscal 2030 targets consistent high-single-digit revenue growth and low-double-digit EPS growth, with share repurchases doing some of the heavy lifting on the per-share math. It is a credible framework—if you believe HOKA can keep growing at low-double-digit rates, and UGG can sustain mid-single-digit gains in an uncertain consumer environment. The tariff caveat is worth noting: the outlook "does not assume the collection of refunds for tariffs previously paid." That's a conservative assumption, but it also signals that tariff headwinds are real and already baked into management's thinking. The Market's Verdict—Or Lack ThereofThe after-hours price action in DECK stock told a story almost as interesting as the earnings themselves. Before the report hit, shares fell more than 5% in post-market trading—possibly on positioning or pre-announcement anxiety. Then, as the numbers crossed the wire, the stock swung violently higher, surging more than 10%. And then, as investors processed the details, it gave back much of those gains, falling more than 5% again before appearing to stabilize near the day's closing price of $102.62. That kind of whipsaw action is a classic sign of a market trying to reconcile good headlines with complicated details. Deckers Earnings Spark Debate Over Premium Consumer DemandDeckers is a genuinely well-run company with two of the more durable brand franchises in footwear. The balance sheet is fortress-like, the cash generation is real—over $1 billion in free cash flow this year—and management has a clear, if narrowing, strategic vision. Prior to earnings, analysts were buying into that vision. Deckers had a consensus price target of $121.42, representing about 17% upside from the pre-release close. But the results also confirm what the skeptics have been saying: this is increasingly a two-brand company operating in a bifurcated consumer environment where premium holds and everything else erodes. If you believe in HOKA's runway and UGG's durability, the May 21 report is validation. If you're worried about consumer fatigue at the high end, or about what tariffs and a strong dollar might do to international momentum, the cracks are visible if you look for them. |
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