Williams-Sonoma Inc. (WSM) just posted another respectable quarter, but the market wasn't exactly throwing confetti. The home goods retailer delivered resilient sales and industry-leading margins, yet shares slipped as investors fixated on what's coming next: a sharply higher tariff bill that threatens to squeeze profitability heading into 2026.
Here's the backdrop. Williams-Sonoma has been navigating a dramatically different tariff environment. The company's blended tariff rate has jumped from 6% a year ago to 35% today. That's not a typo. The third quarter actually came in lighter on tariff costs than expected because several increases got delayed, but management is bracing for a notable spike in the fourth quarter.
Telsey Advisory Group analyst Cristina Fernández maintained her Outperform rating on Williams-Sonoma but trimmed her price target to $220 from $225, applying roughly a 24x price-to-earnings multiple to her updated 2026 earnings estimate.
Fernández pointed out that the company delivered a solid third quarter with consistent comparable sales growth, strong full-price selling, and disciplined cost control that kept operating margins comfortably in the high teens. Comparable sales have held within a 3.4% to 4.0% range for three straight quarters, signaling steady demand across the company's major brands.
The roughly 2% stock decline following earnings wasn't about operational weakness. It was anxiety about tariffs. When your cost structure shifts that dramatically, investors get nervous, even when you're executing well on everything else.
To Williams-Sonoma's credit, the company hasn't just sat there absorbing the hit. Management has offset much of the impact through vendor concessions, sourcing shifts, supply-chain efficiencies, SG&A reductions, and selective price increases. Still, Fernández expects mild operating-margin pressure ahead.
There's a potential bright spot on the horizon. Fernández noted that a U.S.-India trade deal could ease future pressure. That matters because 16% of Williams-Sonoma's goods originate from India and currently face a 50% tariff. If that number comes down, it would provide meaningful relief.
The analyst emphasized that Williams-Sonoma remains well-positioned for the long haul. The company has a balanced revenue mix between furniture and non-furniture categories, white-space merchandise opportunities, a flexible cost structure, scale at roughly $8 billion in annual sales, and a debt-free balance sheet with about $900 million in cash. That's a pretty solid foundation when navigating uncertainty.
Williams-Sonoma maintained its 2025 revenue growth outlook of 0.5% to 3.5% and actually raised its operating margin forecast to 17.8% to 18.1%. Fernández now models 2025 earnings per share of $8.73 and 2026 EPS of $9.05, reflecting more conservative assumptions around rising tariffs.
TD Cowen analyst Max Rakhlenko also kept a Buy rating on Williams-Sonoma but lowered his price target to $210 from $225, taking a more cautious stance as the company navigates rising tariffs and ongoing cost pressures.
Price Action: WSM shares were trading higher by 1.80% to $177.76 at last check Thursday.