Victoria’s Secret (VSCO) earnings Q4 2025


Victoria’s Secret store in New York.

Scott Mlyn | CNBC

Victoria’s Secret topped expectations during its holiday quarter and forecast a better-than-expected year for sales growth on Thursday as CEO Hillary Super’s turnaround plan continues to resonate with shoppers.  

The legacy bra and underwear company beat Wall Street’s expectations on both the top and bottom lines and issued guidance that exceeded Wall Street’s expectations. 

For the current quarter, Victoria’s Secret is projecting sales to be between $1.49 billion and $1.53 billion, ahead of estimates of $1.42 billion. For the full year, it’s expecting that momentum to continue and anticipates sales will be between $6.85 billion and $6.95 billion, exceeding expectations of $6.8 billion. 

“In the quarter, our customer responded enthusiastically to our product and marketing, as demonstrated by growing new customer acquisition and increased [average until retails],” Super said in a statement. “Our 2025 results reflect the progress we have made against our Path to Potential strategy as we build brand heat and powerful connections with our customers around the world.”

Here’s how the retailer performed in its fiscal fourth quarter compared with what Wall Street was anticipating, based on a survey of analysts by LSEG:

  • Earnings per share: $2.77 adjusted vs. $2.52 expected
  • Revenue: $2.27 billion vs. $2.23 billion expected

Despite the strong results and guidance, Victoria’s Secret shares dropped more than 10% in midday trading Thursday.

The company’s net income for the three-month period that ended Jan. 31 was $183.63 million, or $2.14 per share, compared with $193.4 million, or $2.33 per share, a year earlier. Excluding impairment charges related to its Adore Me assets, restructuring charges and other one-time expenses, Victoria’s Secret’s adjusted net income was $238 million, or $2.77 per share.

Sales rose to $2.27 billion, up about 8% from $2.11 billion a year earlier.

Pink brand clothes for sale at a Victoria’s Secret store on Fifth Avenue in New York, US, on Thursday, Sept. 4, 2025.

Gabby Jones | Bloomberg | Getty Images

Since taking over as Victoria’s Secret’s top executive about a year and a half ago, Super has worked to reignite sales growth and profitability by changing the way the company markets to shoppers, doubling down on its $1 billion beauty business, recommitting to its 2000s-era Pink line and reasserting its command of the bra category. A year later, the strategy is showing sustained signs of progress.

Comparable sales have grown for three quarters in a row now, including during its most recent quarter where comps spiked by 8%, better than the 5.6% uptick analysts had expected, according to StreetAccount. It’s the longest period of sustained comparable sales growth in at least four years, according to metrics from FactSet. 

Since it was spun off from its former parent company, L Brands, in 2021, Victoria’s Secret has until recently, tried unsuccessfully to regain its relevance with consumers. Its focus on ultra-sexy styles over comfortable and practical undergarments, paired with out-of-touch marketing, pushed shoppers to emerging disruptors and other legacy competitors, leading to a decline in market share. 

It acquired digital upstart Adore Me in 2022 as a way to meet a wider range of shoppers and body types through the brand’s focus on inclusive sizing and a range of lingerie styles that span from sexy to comfortable. But the acquisition wasn’t enough to get Victoria’s Secret back to sustained growth. 

During the quarter, the company took $119.6 million in impairment charges related to Adore Me and also said it was initiating a “strategic review” of DailyLook, a brand acquired through the Adore Me transaction. Strategic reviews often include finding a buyer willing to acquire the brand.

Choose CNBC as your preferred source on Google and never miss a moment from the most trusted name in business news.



Source link

Kirsty Muir: British freestyle skier wins historic World Cup titles


Kirsty Muir has become the first British woman to win World Cup titles in both freeski slopestyle and overall park and pipe.

The 21-year-old Scot finished second on Saturday, behind home skier Sarah Hofflin, in the final slopestyle event of the 2025-26 season in Silvaplana, Switzerland.

Muir’s score of 75.54, behind 35-year-old Olympic bronze medallist Hofflin (80.07), was enough for her to claim a third consecutive podium, following wins in Aspen and Tignes.

It pushed her season score to 280 points to clinch the first slopestyle Crystal Globe of her career, by 69 points from Canada’s Elena Gaskell.

Muir also finished third in the big air season standings, on 219 points, giving her a combined total of 470 in the overall competition – which includes slopestyle, big air and halfpipe – to beat nearest challenger, Canada’s Naomi Urness, by 78 points.

The Aberdonian’s landmark wins followed disappointment at last month’s Winter Olympics in Milan and Cortina, where she finished fourth in both slopestyle and big air.

After coming so close to a medal, the X Games champion told BBC Sport after the Olympics that it just motivated her to go on and achieve more in the sport.

“I am really excited to go and try and learn some new tricks. I am excited to see where I can push myself and where I can push the sport,” she said.

“For the next two years I will go and do everything that I would like to do and forget about the Olympics, and then when it comes round to qualification again I will get stuck in.”



Source link

Five tech stocks to buy now, according to Bank of America




Source link

Winning stocks in the AI race between China and the U.S., per Bernstein




Source link

Newscast – The Week: Is There A Path To Peace?


Available for over a year

Today, Adam and Chris are joined by Lyse Doucet, chief international correspondent and Stephanie Flanders, head of government and economics at Bloomberg and host of Trumponomics to look at the latest developments in the US-Israeli war with Iran. They discuss the US’s 15 point plan for peace and Iran’s response and why both sides’ proposals are unlikely to lead to meaningful negotiations.

Apply for tickets to Castfest here https://www.bbc.co.uk/showsandtours/shows/castfest-2026

You can now listen to Newscast on a smart speaker. If you want to listen, just say “Ask BBC Sounds to play Newscast”. It works on most smart speakers.

You can join our Newscast online community here: https://bbc.in/newscastdiscord

Get in touch with Newscast by emailing newscast@bbc.co.uk or send us a WhatsApp on +44 0330 123 9480.

New episodes released every day. If you’re in the UK, for more News and Current Affairs podcasts from the BBC, listen on BBC Sounds: https://bbc.in/4guXgXd

Newscast brings you daily analysis of the latest political news stories from the BBC. The presenter was Adam Fleming. It was made by Anna Harris with Jem Westgate. The social producer was Beth Pritchard. The technical producer was Mike Regaard. The assistant editor is Chris Gray. The senior news editor is Sam Bonham.

Programme Website



Source link

Broadcom stock rallies, makes strong case for why AI growth will last


Broadcom beats on earnings and guidance as AI revenue doubles

Broadcom‘s stock surged nearly 5% on Thursday as CEO Hock Tan touted strong demand for the company’s chips amid the artificial intelligence boom.

He told analysts on Wednesday that he anticipates AI chip revenue in 2027 that’s “significantly in excess of $100 billion” as demand mounts for designing custom silicon.

That far surpassed many bullish estimates from Wall Street analysts, who now anticipate more potential upside after Tan said the company is nearing 10 gigawatts of capacity between six customers.

Analysts at JPMorgan estimate that the company can reach between $12 billion and $15 billion in revenue per gigawatt by 2027 and lifted the firm’s AI revenue estimates “conservatively” to $120 billion or more.

The company’s “leadership in AI networking and custom silicon enables the lowest inference cost for its hyperscaler customers, and we see it delivering ongoing cost reductions on pace with market leader Nvidia,” wrote analysts at Goldman Sachs.

The comments came alongside Broadcom’s better-than-expected quarterly results, in which AI revenue more than doubled due to AI accelerator and networking demand.

Over the last few months, chipmakers have grappled with a shortage in high-bandwidth memory as AI demand snaps up supply. But Tan told analysts that the company has secured memory and leading-edge wafer supply through 2028.

Tan managed to convince investors of Broadcom’s sustainable growth trajectory, allaying fears about the company’s profitability and questions about whether Broadcom shipping more racks packed with AI chips would weigh on margins. By comparison, leading AI chipmaker Nvidia’s blowout report last month wasn’t enough to convince investors.

“We have gotten our yields, we’ve gotten our cost to the point where the model we have in AI will be fairly consistent with the models we have in the rest of the semiconductor business,” Tan told analysts.

More hyperscalers making their own chips has also sparked some fears that Broadcom could get cut out of the market. However, Tan said the difficulty of competing against a juggernaut like Nvidia should benefit the company over “many years to come.”

Large language model makers “cannot afford to have a chip that is just good enough,” he said. “You need the best chips around because you’re competing against other LLM players, and most of all, you’re also competing against Nvidia, who is by no means letting their guard down.”

Broadcom’s upbeat results benefited Credo and Amphenol on bets that customers are opting for copper connectivity — the chipmaker’s core business segment — over optical technology to connect AI servers. Shares rallied 10% and 4%, respectively.

Lumentum and Coherent, which make newer optical tech, fell over 4% each.

— CNBC’s Jordan Novet and Katie Tarasov contributed reporting

Stock Chart IconStock chart icon

hide content

Broadcom year-to-date stock chart.

Broadcom CEO: AI revenue from chips could exceed $100 billion in 2027
Choose CNBC as your preferred source on Google and never miss a moment from the most trusted name in business news.



Source link

A little-known travel stock surged on earnings. Wall Street says buy




Source link