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Gap, American Eagle fall as brand troubles weaken annual forecasts

By Thomson Reuters May 29, 2026 | 4:39 AM

By Akriti Shah and Neil J Kanatt

May 29 – Shares of Gap and American Eagle Outfitters tumbled 15% and 10%, respectively, in premarket trading on Friday after both retailers issued weak forecasts, signaling deepening ​pressure on consumer discretionary spending.

The Old Navy parent cut its annual ‌sales forecast as it works through a turnaround, while American Eagle kept its forecasts intact but cautioned on near-term gross margins, with both flagging weakness in certain women’s apparel categories.

The results underscore a widening split in consumer spending, with record low sentiment driven by the Iran ‌war forcing ​lower-income households to cut back, even as higher-income ⁠shoppers remain selectively willing to ⁠spend.

Earlier this week, Abercrombie & Fitch and Bath & Body Works posted strong quarterly results, indicating continued appetite from American shoppers for affordable indulgence.

“(Gap’s) moderated outlook is disappointing against the backdrop of a relatively resilient consumer through the first ​quarter of the fiscal year, broadly speaking,” Telsey Advisory analyst Dana Telsey said.

Pressure at Gap was centered around Old Navy, where seasonal women’s apparel, including dresses, ⁠failed to connect with shoppers, analysts said. ⁠BTIG analysts called Old Navy the “key swing factor.”

However, some analysts ​said that the company’s push into the higher-margin beauty category could help Gap in ​the longer term.

American Eagle also faced challenges as the strength at ‌Aerie failed to offset weakness at its core brand, with women’s bottoms hurt by shifting trends and a colder spring.

The company recently launched another campaign with actor Sydney Sweeney to attract Gen Z shoppers, a year after a viral and ⁠controversial ad featuring Sweeney fueled a stock rally.

Barclays analysts, however, cautioned that repeating last year’s success may be difficult even as marketing spending is expected to recur in ⁠the current quarter.

The American ‌Eagle brand continues to lag Aerie by a wide margin, ⁠challenging expectations of improvement, despite the brand’s plans to ​correct its ‌women’s assortment for the back-to-school season, Telsey added.

Gap currently ​trades at 10.30 ⁠times its estimated earnings for the next 12 months, compared with 9.70 times for American Eagle and 7.43 times for Abercrombie & Fitch, according to LSEG data.

Broader pressure was also felt in Europe, with Stockholm-listed shares of H&M falling about 1% earlier on Friday.

(Reporting by Akriti Shah, Siddarth S and Neil J Kanatt in Bengaluru; ​Editing by Vijay Kishore)