G-III Apparel Group Ltd (GIII) just showed Wall Street that beating expectations is still possible even when tariffs are breathing down your neck. The apparel company reported third-quarter adjusted earnings per share of $1.90 on Tuesday, comfortably ahead of the $1.61 consensus estimate. The good news didn't extend to the top line, though—quarterly sales came in at $988.649 million, down 9% year over year and short of the $1.012 billion analysts were expecting.
Still, the earnings beat was strong enough that G-III felt confident raising its full-year guidance, even while acknowledging some serious headwinds ahead. "Looking ahead, we are raising our fiscal 2026 earnings guidance to reflect our third quarter outperformance tempered by the uncertainties around the consumer environment and tariff-related margin pressures," said Morris Goldfarb, chairman and CEO.
Let's talk about those tariffs, because they're not exactly a small problem. The company expects tariffs to have a gross impact of about $135 million. Now, G-III is working to offset that through supplier support, sourcing changes, and selective price increases, but even after all those efforts, there's still roughly $65 million in unmitigated impact baked into the updated guidance. That's a meaningful chunk of change.
Despite those challenges, the company raised its fiscal 2026 adjusted earnings per share guidance from a range of $2.55-$2.75 to $2.80-$2.90, well above the $2.68 Street estimate. The trade-off? Revenue guidance got trimmed from $3.020 billion down to $2.980 billion, slightly below the $3.020 billion consensus.
G-III Apparel shares rose 1.8% to trade at $31.36 on Wednesday, and analysts wasted no time adjusting their outlooks following the earnings announcement.
Telsey Advisory Group analyst Dana Telsey maintained a Market Perform rating on G-III Apparel and raised the price target from $30 to $34. Keybanc analyst Ashley Owens kept an Overweight rating and bumped the price target from $33 to $35. Meanwhile, UBS analyst Mauricio Serna maintained a Neutral rating but lifted the price target from $28 to $32.
The message from analysts seems clear: the earnings beat and raised guidance are enough to justify higher price targets, even with tariff uncertainty clouding the picture. It's a balancing act between solid execution and external pressures that aren't going away anytime soon.