
On Tuesday, Signet Jewelers (SIG +3.75%) stock was looking as shiny and attractive as the wares the company sells. The retail jewelry conglomerate’s shares were a hot item that trading session, thanks mainly to an earnings report that beat analyst estimates. Signet’s equity closed the day almost 4% higher in price.
Crushing it on the bottom line
For Signet’s first quarter of fiscal 2027, the company’s total sales came in at just over $1.55 billion, a marginal improvement over the same period the previous year. That was on the back of same-store sales that increased by nearly 2%. On a per-share basis, net income not under generally accepted accounting principles (GAAP) saw a steeper rise, gaining 32% to $1.56 per share.
Image source: Getty Images.
The company’s revenue was essentially in line with the consensus analyst estimate of $1.56 billion, but it beat convincingly on the $1.38 per share non-GAAP (adjusted) net income forecast.
In its earnings release, Signet attributed its better financials to higher sales across all product categories. It also did particularly well on Valentine’s Day, a banner holiday for the jewelry industry, and in the run-up to Mother’s Day (which actually fell just outside the quarter’s May 2 ending date). The leap in adjusted net income derived mainly from a corporate reorganization completed last year, plus what it termed “leverage from comparable sales growth.”

Today’s Change
(3.75%) $3.18
Current Price
$88.00
Key Data Points
Market Cap
$3.4B
Day’s Range
$82.01 – $89.80
52wk Range
$71.61 – $110.20
Volume
2.1M
Avg Vol
946.1K
Gross Margin
39.51%
Dividend Yield
1.54%
Guiding for more
This is clearly boosting management’s confidence, as Signet’s leaders raised their full-year profitability guidance. Adjusted net income is now expected to hit $9.20 to $11 per share; previously, that range was $8.80 to $10.74. Similarly, the company’s sales guidance was tweaked to $6.7 billion to $6.9 billion, from $6.6 billion to $6.9 billion.
I’m not sure I’d be as confident. Economic insecurity in this country doesn’t seem to be abating, not least because inflation remains a threat. I feel Signet, as a luxury retailer, might be particularly vulnerable to a downturn, especially a pronounced one. I’m not bullish on this stock currently.
Eric Volkman has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.



