ELF stock is down around 8% on the day, touching a 52-week low of $58.04, as investors look past a strong earnings beat and focus on what’s coming next.
e.l.f. Beauty, Inc., ELF
The selloff is not about what e.l.f. Beauty did. It’s about what management said it will do — spend more on marketing and accept thinner margins in the near term to protect the brand.
That trade-off spooked the market.
Q4 results were actually solid. Revenue and profit both came in ahead of analyst expectations. The company has now delivered 22 consecutive quarters of sales growth, a streak most consumer brands would envy.
But Wall Street was looking for more than a streak. Investors had priced in continued hyper-growth, and the full-year guidance raise, while positive, fell short of those expectations.
The company did raise its annual forecast. The problem was the size of the increase. It wasn’t enough to satisfy a market that had been betting on a bigger number.
Management warned that next quarter’s profit margins will drop. The reason: a planned increase in marketing spend. The company says it needs to invest behind the brand as competition in the U.S. cosmetics market heats up.
That warning hit the stock hard. Margin compression, even if temporary, is a red flag for growth investors who have paid a premium for ELF on the expectation of efficient, high-margin expansion.
Year-to-date, ELF is now down nearly 20%. Over the past 12 months, the stock has fallen around 18%.
Analyst sentiment has shifted too. Morgan Stanley downgraded e.l.f. Beauty from Overweight to Equalweight this week and cut its price target from $80 to $67. The firm cited losses in U.S. cosmetics market share and flagged that those losses could become more visible once the company’s price increases take effect.
Evercore ISI recently initiated coverage with an In Line rating and a $68 target. The firm noted that e.l.f. Beauty is trying to evolve into a multi-category platform, but currently lacks a core business that is actively gaining market share to back that story.
Despite the selloff, the underlying business is not falling apart. Gross profit margins remain at 70%, and revenue growth is running close to 17% year-over-year. Analysts at InvestingPro have flagged the stock as potentially undervalued at current levels.
Jefferies has also pointed to e.l.f.’s early adoption of Generative Engine Optimization through AI, which the firm believes could reduce product development timelines and improve personalization.
The market cap now sits at $3.59 billion. Average daily trading volume is around 2.3 million units, and the current technical sentiment signal is a sell.
The stock is trading at $58.43 as of Monday, just above its 52-week low of $58.04.
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