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Capri Holdings (CPRI) reported fiscal Q3 results on Feb. 3-4, 2026 that modestly beat expectations and materially reshaped its balance sheet following the sale of Versace.
Revenue for the quarter was $1.025 billion, down about 4% year-on-year, while non-GAAP EPS rose roughly 30% to $0.81, topping consensus by a few cents.
Management said improved full-price sell-through and lower promotional activity boosted underlying margins, offset by higher tariff costs.
Proceeds from the Versace sale (reported at about $1.4–1.5 billion) were used to cut net debt from roughly $1.6 billion to about $80 million.
Capri provided FY26 guidance of $1.30–$1.40 EPS and roughly $3.45–$3.5 billion in revenue, and signaled priorities to reinvest in Michael Kors and Jimmy Choo, renovate stores and enhance digital capabilities, with a previously authorized $1 billion buyback program expected to begin in fiscal 2027.
The earnings period coincided with wide analyst activity Feb. 3–4: Barclays raised its price target to $32 (overweight), Robert W. Baird upgraded to outperform ($26), while Goldman Sachs and Wells Fargo trimmed targets to $24 and $21 respectively; Telsey held at $23.
🔗 Based On
GuruFocus New ArticleGoldman Sachs Adjusts Price Target for CPRI Amid Neutral Rating | CPRI Stock News
GuruFocus New ArticleCPRI Analyst Rating Update: Wells Fargo Lowers Price Target | CPRI Stock News
GuruFocus New ArticleBarclays Raises Price Target for CPRI, Keeps Overweight Rating | CPRI Stock News






















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