Thanks for signing up for DividendStocks.com! It's the daily newsletter built for dividend and income investors. Before we can begin sending your daily updates, there’s one quick step left. Please confirm your subscription using the link below so our emails reach your inbox. Click Here to Confirm Your Subscription to DividendStocks.com Here’s a small glimpse of what you’ll get access to: Dividend Stock Ideas — Each newsletter features dividend stocks with high yields, sustainable payouts, and strong growth potential. Ex-Dividend Stocks — Want to capture upcoming dividend payouts? Find out which stocks are going ex-dividend this week. Market News and Events — Stay in the loop on the latest developments impacting popular dividend names like AT&T, Exxon Mobil, IBM, Procter & Gamble, and Verizon. Bonus: As a thank-you for confirming, you’ll also receive a free PDF copy of Automatic Income, our popular guide to building wealth through dividend investing. Let’s get your dividend journey started! Discover Top Income-Generating Stocks Here See you in your inbox soon, The DividendStocks.com Team P.S. Don’t miss out click here to verify your subscription and secure your daily dividend insights and your free investing guide!
Special Report Lululemon's Share Price Bottom Is In: Nowhere to Go But UpReported by Thomas Hughes. Posted: 3/20/2026. 
Key Points - Lululemon is set up to rebound in 2026 as it builds momentum in international sales, drives cash flow, and buys back shares.
- Analysts weigh on price action in early 2026, as weak guidance undermines confidence, but outperformance is likely.
- Institutions are accumulating LULU at long-term lows, providing a floor for the action and limiting downside risk.
- Special Report: Elon's "Hidden" Company
Lululemon's (NASDAQ: LULU) share price may face hurdles in 2026, but signals from technical charts, valuation metrics, analysts, institutional activity, and recent earnings suggest lower prices are unlikely. There is always risk for this retail stock, but at current levels Lululemon's potential outweighs the risks, offering an attractive reward profile for investors willing to buy in. The charts are where it all starts. Across multiple timeframes, Lululemon's charts suggest a potential bottom and the beginnings of a rebound. I've worked for the CIA, personally met four US presidents, and spent 45 years studying the markets—calling Black Monday six weeks before it happened, predicting the fall of the Berlin Wall, and pinpointing the exact bottom in 2009. But what I'm about to share with you is the boldest prediction of my career. After meeting Elon Musk face-to-face at a private gathering of Wall Street elites and months of my own research, I'm now staking my reputation on one date: March 26, 2026. That's when I believe Elon will announce the SpaceX IPO—what Bloomberg is calling the biggest listing of all time. I have found an access code that lets you grab a pre-IPO stake before it happens, but in 72 hours, your window could close. Click here to see how to claim your SpaceX access code The monthly chart is the weakest of the set but remains in alignment, showing a bottom near $164 — roughly the late-2019 highs. That level also corresponds to the early-2020 lows during the initial COVID-19 market turmoil, and it is likely to act as a strong floor given the price action then and the opportunity today.  Weekly and daily charts strengthen the outlook, suggesting not only a price floor but also the earliest signs of an advance. In this scenario, Lululemon's stock is positioned to appreciate as 2026 progresses and to gain momentum over time as investment dollars rotate back into the name. Valuation metrics point to a deep-value opportunity: Lululemon's share price sits near early-2020 levels while revenue is more than 185% higher. The market assigned a premium in 2019 that no longer seems justified; even so, the outlook remains robust. Trading around 12X earnings, the stock appears undervalued. There is scope for near-term multiple expansion and considerable long-term upside — near-term valuations suggest nearly 100% upside relative to the S&P 500 average valuation, while longer-term forecasts imply 500% or more upside by 2035 or sooner. Analysts and Institutions Signal Floor for Lululemon Analyst sentiment has weighed on the stock in 2026. Even with price-target reductions following the fiscal 2025 earnings release, the overall trend is consistent with a market bottom. The low end of the revised targets falls below current levels, but the most pessimistic targets appear to be outliers. The consensus of six targets issued within the first 18 hours of the release is $180 — below the broader consensus but well above the critical support level; the high-end target points to $225. As it stands, analyst sentiment currently provides no immediate catalyst for a rebound, but that could change later in the year as additional quarterly results and guidance updates are issued. The company's 2026 guidance was the primary factor behind the sentiment shift and was likely conservative. If upcoming releases outperform those expectations — and management offers improved guidance — analysts and market sentiment could turn positive. Until then, institutional activity also supports the idea of a price floor, suggesting the downside is limited. Institutions own more than 85% of the stock. After distributing shares in the back half of 2025, they shifted back to accumulation in Q1 2026. The early Q1 balance shows more than $2 bought for every $1 sold — a strong pace that provides solid underlying support. Lululemon Ended 2025 on a High Note: Guides Downbeat for 2026 Lululemon reported a solid quarter to close 2025, generating $3.64 billion in net revenue — about 0.8% year-over-year growth and 170 basis points above consensus. The strength was driven by the International segment and was partially offset by mild declines in the Americas, against a tough comp that included an extra week in the prior year. Adjusting for that extra week, growth was stronger, at roughly 6%, with systemwide comps up 3% and 15 net new stores added. Margins were another area of relative strength. While the company faced margin pressure, the impact was less severe than feared. The result was a contraction in earnings, but the shortfall was smaller than forecast, leaving GAAP earnings per share (EPS) at $5.01 — nearly a quarter better than expected. More importantly, cash flow, the balance sheet, and capacity for share buybacks are in better-than-expected shape, which bolsters the case for a share-price rebound. Share buybacks are significant, having reduced the share count by 3.85% in fiscal 2025 and expected to remain aggressive in 2026. Balance sheet highlights show no red flags, indicating sufficient capitalization and manageable leverage to continue executing strategy and building shareholder value. |