Home Investing News Kohl’s stock: why its post-earnings pop is an opportunity to ‘sell’

Kohl’s stock: why its post-earnings pop is an opportunity to ‘sell’

by
kohl's stock why post earnings pop an opportunity to sell

Evercore ISI remains “unimpressed” as Kohl’s (NYSE: KSS) came in ahead of earnings estimates for its fiscal Q4.

In a research note dated March 10th, the investment firm said structural cracks in the business remain wide, adding the post-earnings surge looks more like a “relief rally” than the start of a sustainable recovery.

According to its analysts, investors are weighing a surprise profit against a backdrop of shrinking sales – and a turnaround strategy that appears to be “backtracking.”

What didn’t work for Kohl’s stock in Q4?

Evercore ISI’s bear view is based on the apparent failure of Kohl’s recent strategic pivot.

The retailer spent much of its financial 2025 attempting to lure back budget-conscious shopper by expanding coupon eligibility and introducing lower entry-point pricing through private labels.

However, this strategy to bring value back “appears to have lost ground in the fourth quarter,” the investment firm noted.

Kohl’s performance in the holiday quarter signals its promotions aren’t resonating with a consumer base that’s increasingly selective.

According to its analysts, the company “needs to better align promotions to increasing consumer value requirements,” suggesting it’s currently misreading its own audience.

With revenue declining over 6% in the trailing twelve months and missing the Q4 consensus of $5.02 billion by some $50 million, KSS stock appears rather unattractive to own in 2026.

Trip assurance failure to hit KSS shares

Caution is warranted in playing Kohl’s shares also because the retailer continues to struggle with the basic physics of retail – having the right product in the right place.

In the earnings release, management cited significant challenges with “restoring trip assurance,” a retail term for ensuring a customer doesn’t leave empty-handed.

This was particularly evident in small-format stores, where poor inventory depth and botched allocation of seasonal products crippled fourth-quarter potential.

For a company that’s spent years battling “SKU proliferation” – having too many unique items but not enough of the ones people actually want – this latest lapse is a major red flag.

Evercore ISI views this as a “slight backtrack on what was a fairly clean story around reversing previous strategic missteps,” proving that Kohl’s operational hurdles are far from cleared.

How to play Kohl’s after Q4 earnings?

Evercore ISI recommends trimming exposure to KSS shares on the post-earnings surge, also because the retailer’s balance sheet lacks any evidence of earnings per share upside.

While companies often use buybacks or debt reduction to create value for investors, Kohl’s has no clear plans for either.

This leaves it entirely dependent on organic growth, which isn’t coming – as evidenced in same-store sales guidance that skewed negative (down as much 2% this year), with EBIT margins seen heading lower year-over-year.

All in all, without a catalyst for growth or a mechanism to return capital to frustrated investors, the post-earnings “pop” appears to be a gift for those looking to exit a deteriorating position.

The post Kohl’s stock: why its post-earnings pop is an opportunity to ‘sell’ appeared first on Invezz

Related Posts