Paychex, Inc. (PAYX) delivered a classic Wall Street mixed bag on Friday: earnings that looked pretty good on paper, but apparently not good enough to keep analysts from reaching for their red pens.
The payroll and human capital management giant posted an 18% jump in total revenue to $1.557 billion for its fiscal second quarter. Adjusted diluted earnings per share came in at $1.26, up from $1.14 a year earlier and beating estimates by 3 cents. So far, so good. But GAAP diluted earnings per share actually dipped to $1.10 from $1.14 last year, and revenue missed expectations by $10 million. That miss seems to have gotten Wall Street's attention.
"We are proud of the significant progress we've made on key strategic priorities, enabling us to deliver the most comprehensive suite of HCM solutions in the industry," CEO John Gibson said in the earnings release. He pointed to strategic progress and AI-driven productivity improvements as drivers of better efficiency and stronger value for clients.
Paychex even raised its fiscal 2026 adjusted EPS growth outlook to a range of 10%-11%, with guidance now sitting between $5.48 and $5.53 per share. That's typically the kind of move that gets investors excited.
Shares responded positively at first, climbing 2.1% to trade at $114.66 on Monday. But the analyst community had a different take on the quarter's implications.
Three major Wall Street firms moved quickly to lower their price targets following the earnings announcement. Morgan Stanley analyst James Faucette maintained an Equal-Weight rating but dropped his target from $133 to $123. JP Morgan analyst Tien-Tsin Huang, who already had an Underweight rating on the stock, cut his target from $140 to $125. And Citigroup analyst Bryan Keane maintained a Neutral rating while reducing his price target from $139 to $120.
The downgrades suggest that despite management's optimism about AI-driven efficiencies and the raised guidance, analysts are taking a more cautious view on Paychex's near-term prospects. Sometimes beating earnings isn't quite enough when the revenue story falls a bit short.




