TLDR
- Q2 adjusted earnings per share reached $0.28, surpassing analyst expectations of $0.24
- Quarterly revenue climbed to $1.56 billion, an 8% year-over-year increase, exceeding the $1.52 billion forecast
- Company upgraded full-year EPS guidance to $1.46–$1.52 and raised revenue growth expectations to 7%–7.5%
- Dividend increased 14% to $0.16 per share, marking the fourth consecutive year of growth
- Despite positive results, LEVI shares declined over 5% during after-hours trading
Levi Strauss delivered a solid Q2 performance on Wednesday, surpassing Wall Street projections for both earnings and revenue while simultaneously boosting its full-year forecast and increasing its dividend payment. Yet investors responded by sending shares down more than 5% after the closing bell.
For the fiscal quarter that concluded on May 31, the iconic denim manufacturer reported adjusted earnings per share of $0.28, comfortably above the Street’s consensus estimate of $0.24. Quarterly revenue reached $1.56 billion, representing an 8% year-over-year gain and beating analyst projections of $1.52 billion. The company’s profit from continuing operations totaled $95 million, showing improvement from the $80 million recorded in the same period last year.
The after-hours selloff represents a textbook example of “buy the rumor, sell the news” market behavior. Some market participants had anticipated a more substantial guidance increase, and the updated EPS range of $1.46–$1.52 came in slightly below the analyst consensus midpoint of $1.51.
During regular trading hours on July 9, LEVI shares had climbed approximately 1%. Over the trailing twelve-month period, the stock has appreciated 24%.
Regional and Channel Breakdown
Growth materialized across all geographic segments. The Americas division generated $815 million in revenue, representing a 9% increase, with U.S. operations contributing 5% growth. European operations produced $420 million, up 4%, though organic sales declined 1% due to a distribution center transition from the prior year. Asian markets delivered $284 million, marking a 10% gain. The Beyond Yoga brand contributed $43 million, jumping 16%.
The company’s direct-to-consumer segment, which now accounts for 51% of total net revenue, expanded 11%. Digital commerce specifically surged 19%. The wholesale channel recorded 5% growth.
CEO Michelle Gass explained during a CNBC interview that approximately two-thirds of the revenue expansion came from volume increases rather than pricing adjustments. She characterized the company’s primary customer base as remaining resilient.
CFO Harmit Singh highlighted improved gross margins and disciplined cost management as the primary factors behind enhanced profitability.
Guidance and Dividend
For the complete fiscal year ending November 29, Levi elevated its revenue growth projection to 7%–7.5%, up from the previous 5.5%–6.5% range. The adjusted EPS outlook was increased to $1.46–$1.52, compared to the earlier guidance of $1.42–$1.48.
Management’s forecast incorporates the assumption that U.S. tariffs on Chinese goods remain at 30% and tariffs affecting other countries stay at 20%.
The quarterly dividend payment was increased to $0.16 per share, representing a 14% boost from the prior $0.14 distribution. This gives LEVI an approximate dividend yield of 2.50%. The payment date is scheduled for August 5 for shareholders on record as of July 22.
This represents the fourth consecutive year the company has increased its dividend following a pause during the COVID-19 pandemic period.
Wall Street analyst sentiment remains bullish, with eleven analysts rating LEVI as a Strong Buy, nine issuing Buy ratings, and two maintaining Hold recommendations. The consensus price target of $28.09 suggests approximately 14% potential upside from present trading levels.



