Williams-Sonoma, Inc. (WSM) is set to unveil its third-quarter earnings on Wednesday morning, and Wall Street is bracing for a mixed bag. The home furnishings retailer is expected to show revenue growth while posting slightly lower earnings per share compared to last year.
Analysts are projecting earnings of $1.87 per share for the San Francisco-based company, down from $1.96 per share in the same quarter last year. On the revenue side, though, the story looks brighter. The consensus estimate sits at $1.87 billion, up from $1.8 billion in the prior-year period.
The company has been riding some positive momentum lately. Back on August 27, Williams-Sonoma reported second-quarter revenue of $1.84 billion, marking a 2.7% year-over-year increase and edging past Wall Street's $1.83 billion estimate. That beat helped keep investor confidence steady, even as the broader retail environment remains choppy.
Shares of Williams-Sonoma closed Tuesday at $180.75, down 0.3% as investors await the latest results.
What the Most Accurate Analysts Are Saying
Several Wall Street analysts with strong track records have weighed in on Williams-Sonoma recently, and their takes offer a window into how the smart money is thinking ahead of earnings.
Wells Fargo analyst Zachary Fadem, who boasts a 77% accuracy rate, maintained an Equal-Weight rating on November 11 while bumping his price target from $190 to $205. That's a notable uptick and suggests confidence in the company's near-term trajectory.
Evercore ISI Group analyst Oliver Wintermantel, with a 73% accuracy rate, took a more cautious stance on October 14. He maintained an In-Line rating but trimmed his price target from $210 to $200, reflecting perhaps some concern about valuation or execution risk.
JP Morgan's Christopher Horvers, accurate 74% of the time, stayed Neutral but raised his price target significantly from $168 to $215 on August 28. That's a big jump and came right on the heels of the Q2 earnings beat.
Goldman Sachs analyst Kate McShane, with a 66% accuracy rate, also maintained a Neutral rating on August 28 while boosting her price target from $179 to $203. The post-earnings optimism was clearly shared across multiple firms.
Finally, Morgan Stanley's Simeon Gutman, accurate 68% of the time, kept an Equal-Weight rating and raised his price target from $185 to $200, also on August 28.
The pattern here is interesting: all five analysts maintain neutral-ish ratings, but most have been raising their price targets following the Q2 results. That suggests cautious optimism rather than unbridled enthusiasm. The home goods market remains competitive and sensitive to consumer spending trends, so analysts seem content to stay on the sidelines while acknowledging the company's solid execution.
As Wednesday's earnings call approaches, investors will be watching not just the numbers but also management's commentary on consumer demand trends and holiday season expectations. With price targets clustering around the $200 mark and the stock trading near $181, there's room for upside if the company delivers another beat and offers encouraging guidance.