Simply Good Foods posted a second-quarter earnings beat on Thursday, but the numbers underneath told a different story. Revenue came in well below expectations, and the company slashed its full-year outlook — sending the stock into a freefall at the open.
Q2 EPS came in at $0.45, topping the Wall Street consensus of $0.40. That sounds good on paper. But earnings were still slightly below last year’s $0.46, and the real damage came from the top line.
Revenue for the quarter dropped 9.4% year-over-year to $326 million. That missed the analyst consensus of around $346–$347 million. It also fell short of Simply Good Foods’ own January guidance of $343.5M to $347.1M.
The Simply Good Foods Company, SMPL
SMPL opened down 27% at $10.50 on Thursday. The stock had closed Wednesday at $14.41.
At that open price, SMPL was trading near its 12-month low of $13.62 — and well below its 12-month high of $38.15.
The company updated its FY2026 outlook, and the revision was steep. Simply Good Foods now expects full-year net sales of $1.31B to $1.35B. That’s a projected decline of 7% to 10% versus last fiscal year.
That’s a sharp reversal from prior guidance, which had called for net sales to range between a 2% decline and a 2% increase.
For Q3 2026, the company guided revenue of $329M to $338M. Analysts had been expecting $379.8M. That’s a wide miss on forward expectations.
Scalzo also pointed to the need to improve the company’s cost structure and margins.
Wall Street’s view on SMPL is mixed. The current consensus rating is Hold, with an average price target of $28.33 — well above where the stock is trading now.
Five analysts have a Buy rating, five have a Hold, and one has a Sell. Jefferies upgraded the stock from Hold to Buy in March, though it cut its price target from $23 to $22. Zacks moved the other direction, downgrading from Strong Buy to Hold in early March.
Despite the sell-off, the company’s balance sheet remains relatively clean. It carries a current ratio of 5.01, a quick ratio of 3.24, and a debt-to-equity ratio of just 0.23.
Institutional ownership stands at around 88.45%. Several large hedge funds, including Millennium Management and Voloridge Investment Management, significantly increased positions in Q3 of last year.
SMPL has now fallen more than 60% over the past 12 months and more than 32% in the last three months alone.
The stock’s 50-day moving average sits at $15.75, and its 200-day moving average is at $19.18 — both now well above the current price.
The post Simply Good Foods (SMPL) Stock Drops 27% After Revenue Miss and Guidance Cut appeared first on CoinCentral.


