Sometimes, markets can be a harsher judge than the fashion police.
Levi Strauss & Co. reported top- and bottom-line figures Wednesday that beat Wall Street’s second-quarter forecasts, hiked its earnings guidance and increased its dividend. Shares in the jeansmaker nonetheless fell 5% in after-hours trading. With demand for denim steady, why did investors react like it’s cheap rayon?
Under CEO Michelle Gass, who took the top job in 2024, Levi Strauss has pursued a multifaceted turnaround, pivoting to a higher-margin, direct-to-consumer model to offset reliance on wholesalers. This has included moving Levi’s distribution to a combination of owned and third-party locations from a purely owned-and-operated setup, something that will lead to the closure of a Kentucky distribution center, and the loss of some 300 jobs, next month. Most importantly, it’s working: DTC grew 10.5% in the company’s 2025 fiscal year, and 11% year-over-year in this year’s second-quarter results reported Wednesday.
It’s also gaining broader momentum: Companywide, revenue climbed 3% in Gass’ first year, then 4% in 2025 to $6.3 billion. In the most recent quarter, sales rose 8% to $1.6 billion, and profit of $87 million increased 30% from a year ago. All of these things bested analyst expectations, but the price of success is that investors start to expect more:
Riding Higher: Levi’s hiked its quarterly dividend by 14% to 16 cents per share, or 64 cents a year, delivering an annual yield of about 2.6% based on the stock’s Wednesday closing price of $24.37. That’s better than the S&P 500’s roughly 1% and within the Goldilocks range that financial advisors consider relatively stable.
The post Investors Find a Fashion Faux-Pas in Levi’s Upbeat Earnings appeared first on The Daily Upside.


