Urban Outfitters' once-struggling namesake stores are now driving its sales gains

Dow Jones02-26

MW Urban Outfitters' once-struggling namesake stores are now driving its sales gains

By Bill Peters

Same-store sales at Urban Outfitters stores were up 9.6% in the fourth quarter

Urban Outfitters' stock is up more than 23% over the past 12 months.

Shares of Urban Outfitters were up after hours on Wednesday, after the clothing retailer reported fourth-quarter results that beat estimates, helped by a turnaround at its namesake stores.

The retailer - which also runs women's clothing outlets Anthropologie and Free People - reported fourth-quarter adjusted earnings per share of $1.43, with $1.8 billion in sales. Same-store sales were up 5.5%, with all three chains reporting increases. Urban Outfitters stores led those gains, with a 9.6% increase, following a decline in the prior-year period.

Analysts polled by FactSet expected fourth-quarter adjusted earnings per share of $1.26, on revenue of $1.79 billion and a 5% same-store sales gain.

Shares rose 3.2% after hours.

The chain's results come as Wall Street tries to get a read on consumers' attitudes this year, as well as the impact from the Supreme Court's ruling last week against the Trump administration's use of emergency-powers tariffs. Those tariffs had forced some retailers to shake up their supply chains, cut costs and raise prices. But President Donald Trump has already imposed new tariffs, and the court's decision could lead to a messy refund process.

Urban Outfitters' stock is up more than 23% over the past 12 months, as the company tries to make its namesake stores more welcoming and to maintain bigger gains at Anthropologie.

The company's Urban Outfitters locations have suffered as it lost sight of the preferences of its younger shoppers, who have struggled more acutely with inflation over the past several years. The company in 2024 said that it would shift away from the "alternative sensibility" of those stores, and that it would plan to target more consumers in the suburbs.

In November last year, Chief Executive Richard Hayne said that "customer engagement was lively" during the third quarter, and that customers were still showing a willingness to buy the company's clothing at full price, even as they held out for more generous holiday deals and spent cautiously overall. He said then that he felt there was "little need" to raise prices in 2026.

Some analysts expect a rebound for the retail segment this year, as wealthier shoppers benefit from more tax relief and as lower interest rates offer a potential boost to the economy.

-Bill Peters

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February 25, 2026 16:48 ET (21:48 GMT)

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