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Is AEO Stock Worth Buying or Holding After Mixed FY26 Signs?

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Key Takeaways

  • AEO trades below its industry and five-year median, offering a discount if execution improves.
  • First-quarter revenues rose 10%, gross margin expanded and AEO swung to operating income.
  • Tariffs, higher advertising spend and softer AE brand trends keep upside risks in focus.

American Eagle Outfitters, Inc. (AEO - Free Report) has a valuation that can draw attention, but the investment case is not one-sided. Aerie is growing quickly, profitability is improving and full-year guidance points to further recovery.

The caution is just as visible. Tariffs, higher advertising spend and softer American Eagle brand trends keep the stock in a balanced risk-reward setup.

AEO Looks Cheap on Forward Earnings

AEO trades at 9.4X forward 12-month earnings, below the Zacks sub-industry at 15.14X. The stock also sits below its five-year median multiple of 11.6X, giving investors a valuation discount to consider.

That discount can become more meaningful if execution improves across the portfolio. Abercrombie & Fitch Co. (ANF - Free Report) and Gap Inc. (GAP - Free Report) also sit in the specialty apparel conversation, where investors are weighing brand heat, consumer demand and margin durability.

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A lower multiple alone does not make AEO a buy. It does, however, create a clearer path for rerating if the company converts Aerie’s growth and cost actions into steadier operating income.

American Eagle Has Better Profit Potential

First-quarter fiscal 2026 results showed that the profit base is improving. Revenues rose 10% year over year to $1.20 billion, while earnings of 14 cents per share topped the Zacks Consensus Estimate of 11 cents.

Gross margin expanded to 38.2%, up 860 basis points from the prior-year period. Merchandise margins improved 710 basis points, helped by the comparison with last year’s inventory write-down.

Buying, occupancy and warehousing costs leveraged 150 basis points on higher sales and cost-optimization efforts. AEO also swung to operating income of $28 million from an operating loss of $85 million a year earlier.

AEO Guidance Supports the Bull Case

The forward view supports the argument that profit recovery is not only a first-quarter event. For fiscal 2026, management expects comparable sales to rise in the mid-single digits and operating income of $390 million to $410 million.

The second-quarter outlook also points to positive earnings momentum. AEO expects operating income of $45 million to $50 million, despite tariff costs and planned advertising investments.

This guidance matters because the market is not just evaluating Aerie’s current momentum. Investors are also testing whether AEO can convert better sales, tighter costs and stronger inventory discipline into more consistent profitability.

American Eagle’s Risks Can Limit Upside

The risk side starts with the American Eagle brand. First-quarter revenues and comparable sales for the brand declined 2%, with weakness concentrated in women’s bottoms, including denim.

Management is refining the bottom's architecture and using chase capabilities ahead of back-to-school. Until those actions show broader traction, AE’s softer store conversion and category misses remain watch points.
Tariffs are another pressure point. Management expects tariffs to hurt the second-quarter gross margin by 150-200 basis points, while total ending inventory rose 27% at cost with units up only 5%.

Selling, general and administrative expenses are also moving higher. They rose 11% in the first quarter, and the second-quarter outlook calls for mid-teens growth, primarily tied to continued advertising investments.

AEO’s Rating Signals Fit a Hold Debate

The bottom line is that this Zacks Rank #3 (Hold) company looks more interesting than clean. The valuation discount and profit recovery are real positives, but tariffs, advertising costs and the AE brand reset keep the setup from looking like an unqualified buy. You can see the complete list of today’s Zacks #1 Rank (Strong Buy) stocks here.

For investors using Zacks tools, the Zacks Rank and Zacks Style Scores should serve as confirmation points. A favorable Zacks Rank, particularly Zacks Rank #1 or Zacks Rank #2 (Buy), paired with Style Scores of A or B, would strengthen the case for fresh buying interest.

A Zacks Rank #3 profile would fit the current debate better, as it would suggest a stock that merits monitoring while execution risk remains. Weaker rank signals or soft Style Scores would argue for patience, even with the shares trading at a discount.

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