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Heading into tonight’s report, here are the needle-moving items from Q4 FY2026 (reported April 8, 2026) that frame the setup heading into tonight’s Q1 results.
Layer in $924.1M in FY2026 buybacks, plus another $75M in March 2026, and a 1% dividend hike to $1.03, and capital return remains the floor under the story.
Even after rebounding from recent lows, Constellation Brands still trades at roughly 12x forward earnings, well below many consumer staples peers.
Bulls argue that if management delivers a confident outlook, shows improving beer trends, and highlights World Cup-driven demand, investors could begin assigning the stock a higher earnings multiple.
With expectations remaining relatively muted heading into tonight’s Q1 2027 earnings report, positive guidance could have an outsized impact on sentiment.
Beyond sales growth, investors are watching whether stronger demand for beer can translate into higher profits.
Constellation entered fiscal 2027 with approximately 90% of its aluminum needs hedged, limiting the impact of higher aluminum costs that pressured margins after Section 232 tariffs were expanded.
If beer volumes improve alongside those lower input costs, earnings could outperform current Wall Street expectations.
One bullish thesis heading into earnings is that the 2026 FIFA World Cup could provide a meaningful demand boost for Constellation Brands’ beer portfolio.
Roughly 75% of tournament matches will be played in the U.S., while most games fall into North American viewing windows that historically support higher beer consumption.
Management has already said it plans to invest aggressively behind its brands during the tournament, particularly its premium light beer strategy.
Investors will be listening for any early read on World Cup demand and whether management believes it can provide a meaningful tailwind for fiscal 2027.
Tonight’s headline EPS number matters less than what management says about the rest of FY2027. Current guidance calls for comparable EPS of $11.20 to $11.90, Beer net sales growth of –1% to 1%, and a Beer operating margin of 37% to 38%, after the company withdrew its FY2028 outlook because of macroeconomic and tariff uncertainty.
Management has become more cautious after cutting FY2026 guidance last quarter, so investors will be listening closely for any changes in tone. The biggest questions are whether tariffs remain manageable, whether Pacifico and Victoria continue outperforming, and whether the Wine & Spirits business is finally stabilizing.
Bullish: Comparable EPS guidance above $11.90, Beer margins toward the high end of the range, or renewed visibility into FY2028.
Bearish: Comparable EPS guidance below $11.20, broader tariff headwinds, or further pressure on Beer margins.
This quarter marks one of the first major tests for CEO Bill Fink as investors look for evidence that Constellation Brands can navigate slowing consumer spending while protecting its industry-leading beer business.
The stock trades at roughly 12x forward earnings, a discount to many consumer staples peers, reflecting concerns around tariffs, softer wine and spirits demand, and questions about earnings growth.
The focus tonight is likely going to be around management’s commentary. Investors want reassurance that the beer segment can continue delivering solid margins and market share gains while the company executes its turnaround in wine and spirits.
A confident outlook for the second half of the fiscal year could help sentiment improve quickly. On the other hand, any signs of weakening demand or more cautious guidance would likely increase skepticism around current FY2027 earnings expectations.
Investors are watching Constellation Brands (NYSE:STZ) ahead of its Q1 FY2027 results, expected at 4:05 PM ET tonight. After a bruising stretch for the stock, this report will test whether beer momentum can survive tariff pressure and weakening consumer strength.
The last quarter set a cautious tone. In Q4 FY26, reported April 8, 2026, STZ posted EPS of $1.90 on revenue of $1.92 billion, beating EPS estimates by 11.11% but missing on revenue. Beer margins absorbed a 340 basis point contraction from aluminum tariffs and higher depreciation.
Management issued FY27 guidance, then withdrew its FY28 outlook citing tariff uncertainty. Nicholas Fink took over as CEO on April 13, 2026, succeeding Bill Newlands. Since the report, shares have fallen 6.42%, with the stock now at $136.44. The University of Michigan Consumer Sentiment Index sits at 44.8, a recessionary reading that shadows every beverage call this earnings season.
| Metric | FY2027 Guide | FY2026 Actual |
|---|---|---|
| Comparable EPS | $11.20 to $11.90 | $11.82 |
| Net Sales | $8.91B to $9.09B | $9.139B |
| Beer Operating Margin | 37% to 38% | n/a |
| Free Cash Flow | $1.6B to $1.7B | $1.794B |
Year-ago Q1 FY26 delivered EPS of $3.22 on revenue of $2.515 billion, both missing estimates.
Tonight, I’ll be watching Constellation’s beer margins above all else. Fink’s first quarter as CEO arrives with management committing to aggressive marketing spend in the first half of the fiscal year, including a heavy World Cup push that prompted TD Cowen to cut its target to $174 from $190 and BofA to trim to $152 from $154. CFO Garth Hankinson flagged offsetting aluminum tariff relief in FY27, but the Veracruz brewery ramp adds fixed-cost absorption headwinds.
The brand mix story matters too. Pacifico grew depletions 21% in Q4 and Victoria 17%, but those gains have to keep offsetting declines in Modelo Especial and Corona Extra. Newlands noted on the last call that “March is off to a solid start, better than planned with continued increasing momentum.” Investors will look at whether that carried through May.
Wine & Spirits is another swing factor. The remaining portfolio posted 8% depletion growth in Q4, but distributor inventory rebalancing will weigh on reported sales through FY27. Hispanic consumer demand, weak sentiment, and any commentary on Mexico tariff exposure might also be worth watching.
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