Signet Jewelers Limited (SIG) posted a surprisingly strong quarter, but Wall Street still wasn't having it. Shares dropped 3.89% to $91.98 in premarket trading Tuesday, proving once again that beating expectations doesn't always equal a stock rally.
The jewelry giant reported third-quarter results that should have pleased investors: earnings, margins, and sales all came in ahead of expectations. Revenue hit $1.391 billion, up 3.1% year over year and topping the Street's $1.370 billion forecast. Same-store sales climbed 3.0%, showing genuine customer demand rather than just opening new locations.
The Pricing Strategy That Worked
Here's where things get interesting. Despite facing tariffs and surging gold costs—two things that usually squeeze jewelry retailers—Signet actually expanded its margins. How? By strategically raising prices and tightening up what they sell.
Average unit retail prices jumped 7% overall, with bridal jewelry up 6% and fashion pieces climbing 8%. Customers kept buying anyway, which tells you something about the strength of the company's positioning.
"Our pricing and assortment strategies were effective in delivering merchandise margin expansion despite tariffs and higher gold costs," said Joan Hilson, Chief Operating and Financial Officer. Translation: they raised prices intelligently and people still showed up.
The Numbers Behind the Beat
Signet reported adjusted earnings of 63 cents per share, crushing the 29-cent consensus estimate. That's not a modest beat—that's more than double what analysts expected.
Adjusted operating income nearly doubled to $32.0 million from $16.2 million in the prior-year period. Operating margin expanded to 2.3% from 1.2% a year ago. Gross margin hit $518.8 million, up about $34 million year over year, while the gross margin rate improved 130 basis points to 37.3%.
The margin expansion came from three places: better merchandise margins through pricing discipline, growth in higher-margin services, and spreading fixed costs over higher sales.
Holiday Outlook and Guidance Bump
"Looking forward, we believe we are well positioned for the holiday season with a focused assortment in key categories and price points, supported by a modernized marketing approach," said J.K. Symancyk, Chief Executive Officer.
The company expects fourth-quarter sales between $2.24 billion and $2.37 billion. That's where the market hesitation likely came from—the midpoint sits just below the $2.38 billion analyst estimate. Close, but not quite there.
On the positive side, Signet raised its full-year 2026 adjusted EPS outlook to $8.43-$9.59 from $8.04-$9.57, compared with the $9.13 consensus. The company also lifted its 2026 sales forecast to $6.70 billion-$6.83 billion from $6.67 billion-$6.82 billion, versus the $6.824 billion Street estimate.
Shareholder Returns
Signet declared a quarterly dividend of 32 cents per share for the fourth quarter of fiscal 2026, payable February 20, 2026.
So why the stock decline? Markets are forward-looking, and that slightly soft holiday quarter guidance probably spooked investors who wanted more upside heading into the critical selling season. Sometimes even a strong quarter isn't enough when expectations keep climbing.