Amer Sports, Inc. (AS) just delivered a third quarter that should make shareholders happy, at least on paper. The sportswear company crushed earnings expectations and raised its full-year outlook, powered by its outdoor brands and impressively tight expense control. But here's the catch: nobody's entirely sure what happens next, and China is becoming the plot twist nobody ordered.
The headline numbers look great. Amer Sports posted adjusted earnings of 33 cents per share for the third quarter, sailing past the 25-cent consensus estimate. Revenue came in strong, led by the Outdoor Performance segment, where Salomon continues to be a star performer. Wholesale channels showed solid momentum, and the company's flagship Arc'teryx brand saw comparable sales jump roughly 27%. Those are the kind of numbers that usually send stocks soaring.
Guidance Goes Up, Sort Of
Management clearly felt confident enough to bump up their full-year outlook. The new GAAP earnings guidance landed at 88 cents to 92 cents per share, up from the previous 77 cents to 82 cents range. That sits comfortably above the 78-cent analyst estimate, which is always nice.
Goldman Sachs analyst Brooke Roach, who maintains a Buy rating with a $48 price target, called the quarter "healthy" against what she considered already tempered expectations. She pointed to especially strong gross margins and disciplined spending on the SG&A line, which combined to produce a hefty adjusted EBIT margin beat.
Roach also noted that Amer Sports laid out initial 2026 revenue expectations sitting at the high end of the company's long-term growth targets. That sounds promising, right?
The China Problem
Here's where things get interesting. Because Amer Sports pre-announced results back on September 18 during its Investor Day, most of the actual quarterly numbers were already baked in. That means investors spent Tuesday's earnings release focused almost entirely on what management said about the future, and that's where the enthusiasm dims a bit.
Roach cautioned that the third-quarter beat might be somewhat backward-looking, given what she described as "late-quarter brand perception disruptions in China." The strength that drove the outperformance was concentrated in Salomon, the Americas region, and wholesale channels. Great, but what about the world's second-largest economy?
More concerning, the implied guidance for the fourth quarter runs modestly below current consensus for both sales and earnings. That's not what investors want to hear heading into the crucial winter selling season.
All Eyes on the Conference Call
Roach expects the analyst call to be critical for determining where the stock heads next. Investors will be listening closely for details on Arc'teryx trends during the key winter months, and particularly for any color on what's actually happening in China. Brand perception issues can be vague and hard to quantify, which makes them especially nerve-wracking for shareholders trying to model future quarters.
The stock was trading up 7.93% to $33.19 on Tuesday, suggesting investors are willing to give management the benefit of the doubt for now. But with fourth-quarter guidance coming in soft and China uncertainties looming, the celebration might be short-lived if the conference call doesn't provide some reassurance.