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Wednesday, March 18, 2026 at 10 a.m. ET

President, Chief Executive Officer, and Director — Laura Alber

Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer — Jeff Howie

Chief Digital and Innovation Officer — Sameer Hassan

Laura Alber: Thank you, Jeremy. Good morning, everyone, and thank you for joining the call. I am excited to talk to you today about our fourth quarter and our full year 2025 results. In 2025, we delivered sustainable, profitable growth in a dynamic environment. This performance is a testament to strong consumer demand for our distinctive products and brands and our world-class team. In Q4, our comp came in at 3.2%. We drove an operating margin of 20.3%, with earnings per share of $3.04. We delivered these results despite no material changes in the macro environment and continued unpredictability around logistics and tariffs.

Normalizing for the 53rd week last year and the tariff impact this year, we delivered substantial operating margin improvements versus last year. As we look forward to 2026 and beyond, we are confident in our competitive advantages that have allowed us to take market share, and our focus is on widening that advantage. Just a few things on Q4 before we spend more time on the year and our outlook for 2026. In Q4 2025, we saw strength and momentum across our strong portfolio of brands and in our channels. Our retail teams drove a 4.3% comp in the quarter, and there was a continued acceleration in our gift-giving brands.

Both Williams Sonoma and our Pottery Barn Children’s business outperformed with Williams Sonoma driving a 7.2% comp and our Children’s business driving a 4% comp, and West Elm continued to pick up the pace with a 4.8% comp. Finally, our DTC channel was strong due to an improved customer experience, continued personalization, and incredible service. Thank you to our team. They continue to find leadership in our industry across product, service, and disciplined execution. Turning to the full year, we outperformed the industry with a comp of 3.5%. We delivered an operating margin of 18.1%, and full-year earnings per share increased 1% to a record $8.84, with the internal and external expectations on both the top and bottom lines.

And in fact, we raised our guidance twice during the year. Before we get into the year, let us talk about tariffs. The tariff landscape was uncertain and unpredictable in 2025. We expect it will remain that way in 2026. As we all know, policy can shift quickly, but as you saw in 2025, we have proven that we are resilient and capable of mitigation. As we look to 2026, we will continue to execute our mitigation strategies, which include vendor negotiations, resourcing where it makes sense, supply chain efficiencies, cost improvements, and select pricing actions. We will stay flexible and continue to adjust quickly as the tariff environment evolves.

We entered 2025 with a focus on three key priorities: returning to growth, elevating our world-class customer service, and driving earnings. Let me highlight the progress we made on each of these priorities in 2025. Starting with growth, we have been focused on building growth strategies across our portfolio of brands. In 2025, we drove positive top-line comps in all of our brands, and even as full-price selling increased, we gained market share. We focused on newness and innovation in product and brand development. We are not just competing on price. We are really competing on, and winning on, authority, aspiration, quality, design, exclusivity, and service. Collaborations were also an important part of our growth strategy in 2025.

These partnerships drove relevance and excitement. They continue to bring in new customers while increasing engagement with our existing customers. B2B was another standout for the year. In 2025, B2B grew 10%. We continue to win because we have paired design expertise with commercial-grade products and end-to-end service. That combination is a clear market differentiator in the B2B space. Our emerging brands also delivered strong performance in 2025, with double-digit comps all year. We have invested in the growth of our emerging brands with expansion in categories and new product development. Our ability to incubate and develop brands in a portfolio approach is one of our long-term advantages.

Our second priority for 2025 is customer service, and we are very proud of our progress. Our goal stayed simple: to deliver the perfect order on time and damage-free every time. Our supply chain team focused on operational excellence every day. They made industry-leading progress again on supply chain delivery and customer service metrics. Also, we are pleased with our improved customer handling by both our teams and our AI capabilities. That brings me to our third priority, driving earnings. Our profitability in 2025 reflected strong execution across the company. We have maintained tight control on SG&A. We also stayed lean on employment with a focus on productivity.

The implementation of AI helps by automating work and allowing our teams to do more with the same resources. We also extended AI more deeply across our e-commerce and operations platforms. For example, we extended personalization, deepened product discovery and ranking, and increased the influence of data-driven recommendations. These enhancements are improving relevance, engagement, and monetization efficiency across our brands. AI is also embedded in friction reduction, from smarter product discovery to accelerated checkout experiences, supporting stronger conversion and a more intuitive shopping journey. Beyond digital e-commerce, AI and advanced analytics continue to improve forecasting, routing logic, and customer service workflows, driving operational efficiency across our supply chain and care operations.

What differentiates Williams-Sonoma, Inc. is how AI amplifies our proprietary data, vertical integration, and deep brand expertise. Because we control the full ecosystem, we can apply AI in tightly integrated and scalable ways. In summary, AI is delivering measurable impact today and strengthening our long-term competitive advantages. Looking ahead, we are confident in our competitive advantages, and as I said earlier, we plan to further widen our moat. We have a powerful portfolio of brands, an in-house design team that drives exclusive product and newness, a vertically integrated sourcing and supply chain model, and leading omnichannel capability. And underpinning all of this is our experienced leadership team who knows how to execute.

In 2026, our plan is centered on the same three priorities we laid out last year. We just changed the words “returning to growth” to “accelerating growth.” We are going to accelerate growth, deliver world-class customer service, and drive earnings. These priorities all relate to one another. Growth creates leverage in our operating model, and improved customer service drives loyal and satisfied customers. When the customer is happy, our costs go down, driving earnings. Let us start with growth. We are focused on four areas: brand growth, product pipeline, brand heat, and channel experience. First, brand growth.

In 2026, we are focused on comp growth throughout the company, specifically accelerating the Pottery Barn comp and building on the momentum of the West Elm comp. We expect Williams Sonoma to continue performing well, supported by premium quality, authority in the kitchen, and strong seasonal storytelling. We are planning for growth in the Children’s business, with baby and dorm as highlights. And our emerging brands will contribute meaningfully, led by Rejuvenation. Finally, B2B remains a major opportunity for growth. Second, product pipeline. In 2026, our product pipeline will include an increased level of product newness. We will increase newness by offering new collections, finishes, and design details that are timely, on-trend, and unique.

Also, we will expand into proven collections that are built around newness that performed well last year, adding SKUs to add sales. We will also lean into advantaged growth categories that expand our reach and create new reasons for customers to shop with us. A great example is West Elm Office, our new collection of modern and flexible office furniture made with high-quality materials with endless configurations. We see other outsized opportunities for growth in dorm, baby, and certain Pottery Barn categories. And at Williams Sonoma, we will continue to expand our successful branded and exclusive assortment. This strategy increases differentiation and supports value and margin. Third, brand heat. We will continue to create excitement and buzz for our brands.

First, collaborations will be a key driver, with all brands delivering double-digit sales growth in collabs. Second, we will increase our social and influencer partnerships, and we will improve our storytelling across our websites, emails, and catalogs. Our fourth growth initiative is channel experience. We will continue to improve how customers discover and shop our brands, and we will build on the momentum we have seen in both DTC and retail. In DTC, our plan is to accelerate growth with elevated discovery both on-site and externally. We will also drive DTC-advantaged categories, and we will continue to use AI to create more personalized shopping journeys that improve engagement and conversion.

In retail, we will build on the momentum by expanding Take It Home Today, scaling Design Services 3.0, and investing in new stores, repositions, and relocations where the returns are compelling. Now, turning to delivering world-class customer service. We have always been a leader here and will continue to raise the bar as we keep pursuing the perfect order on time and damage-free every time. We believe we have continued opportunity from supply chain efficiencies across distribution centers, shipping costs, returns, replacements, and damages. AI is a key enabler here. Our AI service initiatives are expected to further reduce call center escalations and accommodations, while also improving inventory in-stocks and accuracy for customers.

And we are expanding AI tools to enhance supply chain intelligence, including better visibility into inventory and shipping. Finally, driving earnings. In addition to regular price testing, we will continue emphasizing full-price selling and improving product margin by reducing markdown depth. We will also continue to drive sourcing efficiencies through vendor cost reductions, resourcing, and organizational productivity. We will stay disciplined in controlling variable costs including employment and ad spend, and we will drive AI-enabled efficiencies, including savings in engineering costs, care center payroll, and creative costs. Turning to our outlook for 2026, our assumptions reflect what we know today.

We are not building into our assumptions a meaningful housing recovery, and allowing for all the uncertainties we know are out there and that we have discussed, we are guiding comp brand revenue growth of 2% to 6%, with a midpoint of 4%, and operating margin in the range of 17.5% to 18.1%, with a midpoint of 17.8%. This outlook reflects our current initiatives and the tariff environment in place today. Now let us review our brands. Pottery Barn ran a negative 2.3% comp in Q4 after delivering positive comp in each of the first three quarters. While Q4 was disappointing, Pottery Barn ran a positive 0.4% comp on the year, and Pottery Barn’s two-year comp improved over the year.

Different than other quarters, the percentage of our decorating assortment is larger in the fourth quarter, and that assortment relied heavily on last year’s program, and sales did not meet our expectations. While furniture was better, it was not enough to offset the softness in non-furniture. A highlight was our retail performance, which was strong in Pottery Barn, with customers responding to our inspirational stores and the in-person shopping experience, but DTC lagged. Retail tends to lower comp. As we look at 2026, we are focused on driving stronger growth in Pottery Barn, and we are working as a team on quarter-by-quarter strategy and execution. Pottery Barn is refocusing on its heritage aesthetic and strengthening its product pipeline.

We are also optimizing the core assortment. We are building proprietary collections and creating more brand heat through collaborations, influencers, storytelling, and store events. And we are investing in both digital and retail with a focus on conversion and personalization. The good news is that we are seeing better comp performance quarter-to-date. Now I would like to talk about part of our Children’s business, which delivered a strong fourth quarter, running a positive 4% comp. For the full year, Kids and Teens delivered a positive 4.4% comp with strength across both furniture and non-furniture. Collaborations and licensing remain key drivers, led by fashion favorite LoveShackFancy and the launch of the NHL collection.

Innovation was strong, and holiday gifting outperformed, driven by high-quality personalized gifts across life stages. As the largest specialty retailer of home furnishings for children, we see significant growth ahead. Our pipeline of new product introductions and continued collaboration growth is strong, and we are excited to launch Dormify in late April, which expands our reach in the college and dorm market and strengthens our position with the next generation of customers. Now let us talk about West Elm. West Elm had a positive 4.8% comp in Q4, accelerating from Q3, and delivered a positive 2.9% comp for the full year. I am proud to say that West Elm is officially on a roll.

West Elm made improvements across products, brand, and channel excellence. New introductions in both furniture and non-furniture drove results, and the brand’s mix shifted meaningfully towards new products. In Q4, the brand delivered positive comps across the board. Retail also performed well in West Elm. When customers walked into the stores, they saw more newness and better availability, and that showed up in the results. The strength in the brand and at retail gives us confidence to return to store count growth, with five openings planned in 2026.

Finally, collaborations have been a big part of the strategy at West Elm, and we could not be more excited than right now when we are launching our collaboration with Emma Chamberlain, a leading Gen Z voice known for authenticity and unique style. With over 14,000,000 Instagram followers, her collaboration with West Elm marks her first venture into the home space. If you have not seen it, be sure to check out the exciting, personality-driven assortment which launched yesterday. Now let us review the Williams Sonoma brand. Williams Sonoma finished 2025 strong with a positive 7.2% comp in Q4 and a positive 6.9% comp for the year. The Williams Sonoma brand continued to outperform across the board.

2026 marks our 70th anniversary, and at 70 years, this brand is not mature; it is gaining momentum. The core of our kitchen business is accelerating, and our pipeline of proprietary, in-house design products and market exclusives continues to separate us from the competition. In Q4, customers came to us for holiday gifting, cooking, and entertaining. Also, Williams Sonoma has benefited from a strong gift assortment with products that perform, design that is distinctive, and assortments that reflect both who our customer is and who they aspire to be. 2025 was our biggest year ever for in-store events at Williams Sonoma. We held Skill Series classes on Sundays, and we hosted 120 celebrity chef and influencer book signings.

Highlights from the events in Q4 included signings of Martha Stewart, Trisha Yearwood, and Wishbone Kitchen. We look forward to welcoming customers into our stores throughout 2026 with even more opportunities to learn, engage, and be inspired. Now I would like to update you on B2B. B2B had another record-breaking quarter at 13.7%, anchored by our largest contract quarter in our history. Both contract and trade delivered double-digit growth, and corporate gifting had its best quarter ever. We saw strength in our core hospitality and residential designer businesses, and we gained momentum in emerging verticals like higher education, sports, and entertainment.

We also delivered several marquee projects, including the Waldorf Astoria Beverly Hills, Hilton Canopy in New York City, the Opryland Hotel in Nashville, multiple locations for WeWork, and corporate gifting for several premier clients, including the New York Yankees. For the full year, B2B grew 10%, and we exited the year with a strong pipeline heading into 2026. We remain excited about B2B as a growth engine. Now I would like to update you on our emerging brands, which continue to deliver strong growth and profitability. Rejuvenation had another quarter of double-digit comp growth, exceeding both our top line and bottom line expectations.

Performance is driven by momentum in cabinet hardware, bath, and lighting, as customers remain highly engaged in project-driven purchases. Product innovation continued to build with high-quality, design-driven products, distinctive details, and customizable options. With only 13 stores and great online growth, we are thrilled for the progress in Rejuvenation, and we continue to believe in the potential for Rejuvenation to be our next billion-dollar brand. Mark & Graham finished 2025 also with solid momentum, driven by a record-breaking holiday season and positive comps. We entered 2026 well positioned with a focused pipeline of launches across key gifting occasions, reinforcing the brand’s growth opportunity ahead. And I cannot forget our newest brand, GreenRow.

We are thrilled that on March 6, GreenRow opened the brand’s first store in Soho, New York. If you are in New York, I would encourage you to stop by and see it in person. The store truly captures the entrepreneurial spirit that exists in our company that allows us to bring new concepts to life and scale them profitably. We look forward to building the business of GreenRow in 2026 and beyond. Finally, I would like to talk about our global business. We continue to see strong performance across our strategic global markets, including Canada, Mexico, and the UK, through differentiated products, omnichannel enhancements, and growth in our design and trade businesses.

We are particularly encouraged by the customer response to the launch of Pottery Barn in the UK. As we reflect on the year—oh, what a year it was. We had many highlights, and we had a lot of things coming our way that we did not expect. However, at Williams-Sonoma, Inc., we delivered. We delivered a strong operating margin and record EPS. Our powerful portfolio of brands, strong channel execution, and growth strategies drove our results in 2025. As we look to 2026, we are focused on accelerating this growth. We are focused on delivering world-class customer service, and we are focused on driving earnings. We are confident in our future growth strategy and our profit profile.

Our company is competitively distinct with advantages that set us apart, with a team that delivers. And with that, I want to thank our teams again for their hard work and their commitment, and I also want to thank our vendors and our shareholders for their partnership and support. And with that, I will turn it over to Jeff to walk you through the numbers and our outlook in more detail.

Jeff Howie: Thank you, Laura, and good morning, everyone. We are proud to have delivered another quarter of growth with strong earnings, despite the headwinds from tariffs and anemic housing turnover. In fact, we have generated consistently strong earnings for several years, and now top-line growth for five consecutive quarters. That execution and momentum gives us confidence as we transition into fiscal year 2026.

Our ability to perform quarter after quarter reflects Williams-Sonoma, Inc.’s competitive advantages in the home furnishings industry, including a powerful multi-brand portfolio spanning categories, aesthetics, and price points to meet customers where they are; meaningful size and scale, enabling us to capture market share and capitalize on attractive white space opportunities; a differentiated multichannel platform that serves customers seamlessly across e-commerce, stores, and business-to-business; our relentless focus on customer service, which drives efficiency and cost savings across our supply chain; and finally, a proven operating model that consistently delivers highly profitable earnings. Now let us turn to the numbers and see how our competitive advantages and strong execution produced results.

I will begin with our fourth quarter performance, then review our full-year fiscal 2025 results, and finish with our outlook for fiscal 2026. As a reminder, fiscal 2024 was a 53-week year for Williams-Sonoma, Inc. For Q4 fiscal 2025, we are reporting comps on a comparable 13-week versus 13-week basis. All other quarter-over-quarter comparisons are 13 weeks versus 14 weeks. We estimate the additional week in Q4 fiscal 2024 contributed 510 basis points to revenue growth and 60 basis points to operating margin. Q4 net revenues finished at $2.36 billion for a positive 3.2% comp. Positive comps in both our furniture and non-furniture categories drove our results, with our furniture trends accelerating from Q3.

With the industry declining in the quarter, we gained market share even as we increased our penetration of full-price selling. From a channel perspective, both retail and e-commerce posted positive comps, with retail up 4.3% and e-commerce up 2.6%. Moving down the income statement, Q4 gross margin was 46.9%, down 40 basis points versus last year. The main driver of our lower gross margin was a 170 basis point decline in merchandise margins as the impact of higher tariffs flowed through our weighted average cost of goods sold. Occupancy costs contributed another 80 basis points to the deleverage, largely related to the 53rd week. Partially offsetting these headwinds were shrink and supply chain efficiencies.

Shrink added 160 basis points due to favorable year-end physical inventory results, and supply chain efficiencies added an additional 50 basis points. Our relentless focus on customer service continued to produce margin benefits from reduced returns, accommodations, damages, replacements, and shipping expense. Continuing down the income statement, Q4 SG&A was 26.6% of revenues, up 80 basis points versus last year. The main driver of the 80 basis points deleverage was general expense, which was up 120 basis points from last year. This increase was due to our lapping of an indirect tax resolution and a favorable insurance settlement in last year’s results. Employment and advertising expense leverage partially offset the impact from general expense.

Employment expense leveraged 30 basis points, primarily due to lower variable labor costs across our distribution and customer care centers. Advertising expense was 10 basis points lower. Our in-house marketing team optimized spend while driving a quarter-over-quarter acceleration in e-commerce comps. On the bottom line, Q4 operating margin was 20.3%, down 120 basis points versus last year. Diluted earnings per share were $3.40. Turning now to our full-year fiscal 2025 results. There are two items in fiscal 2024 that I want to remind you about. First, in 2024, we recorded a $49 million out-of-period adjustment related to freight accruals from prior years. This benefited fiscal 2024 operating margin by approximately 70 basis points. Second, the 53rd week in fiscal 2024.

For the full year, we are reporting comps on a comparable 52-week versus 52-week basis. All other year-over-year comparisons are 52 weeks versus 53 weeks. We estimate the additional week in fiscal 2024 contributed approximately 150 basis points to revenue growth and 20 basis points to operating margin on full-year results. Full-year 2025 net revenues were $7.8 billion at a positive 3.5% comp. All brands posted positive comps for the full year, driven by growth across both our furniture and non-furniture categories. From a channel perspective, both channels contributed to the strength, with retail up 6.4% and e-commerce up 2.2%. E-commerce was more than 65% of total revenues for the year.

Full-year gross margin was 46.2%, a 30 basis point decline versus the prior year. The decrease was primarily driven by the 70 basis point impact from the prior year out-of-period freight adjustment, a 40 basis point reduction in merchandise margins related to tariffs, and 20 basis points of occupancy deleverage. These pressures were partially offset by 50 basis points of supply chain efficiencies and 50 basis points of benefit from favorable shrink results. Full-year SG&A expense increased 10 basis points to 28%. Advertising expense leveraged by 30 basis points, partially offset by deleverage in employment and general expense.

Employment deleveraged by 20 basis points due to higher performance-based incentive compensation, while general expense deleveraged by 20 basis points as we lapped the prior-year indirect tax resolution and the favorable insurance settlement mentioned previously. On the bottom line, full-year operating margin finished at 18.1%, 50 basis points lower year over year. Diluted earnings per share achieved a record $8.84, up 1% year over year. Turning to the balance sheet, we ended the quarter with over $1 billion in cash and no outstanding debt. Merchandise inventories were $1.5 billion, up 9.8% year over year. Included in year-end inventory is approximately $80 million of embedded incremental tariff costs. Excluding these tariff-related costs, inventories would have been in line with sales growth.

Overall, we believe our ending inventory levels and composition are well positioned to support our fiscal 2026 guidance. Turning to cash flow and capital expenditures, we generated over $1.3 billion in operating cash flow in fiscal 2025. We reinvested $259 million in capital expenditures to support our long-term growth and delivered an industry-leading 51.6% return on invested capital on that spend. This resulted in $1.1 billion of free cash flow, and we returned nearly $1.2 billion to shareholders in fiscal 2025. That return included share repurchases of $854 million, or 4% of shares outstanding, at an average price of $174.70. Additionally, we delivered $316 million in dividends to our shareholders, reflecting a 13% year-over-year increase.

Wrapping up my fiscal 2025 remarks, we are proud to have delivered growth and strong earnings for our shareholders, despite the headwinds from tariff policy and anemic housing turnover. These results are a direct reflection of the exceptional talent and dedication of our team at Williams-Sonoma, Inc. I want to thank our team for their hard work and for delivering such strong performance. Now let us turn to fiscal 2026. The macroeconomic, geopolitical, and tariff environment remains uncertain. As we have demonstrated, we know how to navigate uncertainty and deliver consistently strong earnings. As we look ahead to fiscal 2026, we see significant opportunity to not only deliver strong earnings but, more importantly, accelerate top-line growth.

Our guidance assumes no meaningful changes in the macroeconomic environment or housing turnover and does not include any benefit from the OB3 tax legislation. Our focus remains on what we can control: accelerating growth, delivering world-class customer service, and driving earnings. We expect fiscal 2026 net revenue comps to be in the range of 2% to 6%, with total net revenue growth of 2.7% to 6.7%. We expect operating margin to be in the range of 17.5% to 18.1%. On the top line, our guidance reflects our confidence in our strategies. We remain focused on accelerating growth through our compelling product lineup, continued investment in collaborations, and disciplined execution across our growth initiatives, including dorm, Rejuvenation, and business-to-business.

And if there are more favorable macro conditions, we see potential upside to that growth. On operating margin, our guidance reflects our best estimate of the tariff impact on fiscal 2026 results, based on three key assumptions. First, it reflects our estimate of how tariffs already paid, and those we expect to pay in fiscal 2026, will flow through our weighted average cost of goods sold. As higher tariff costs are embedded in our inventory, we expect the impact on operating margin to be front-half weighted and then moderate over the balance of the year. Second, our guidance assumes that all tariff rates currently in effect remain in place for the balance of fiscal 2026.

This includes the Section 232 tariffs, the current Section 301 tariffs, and the Section 122 tariffs at the announced rate of 15%. While the Section 122 tariffs are currently set to expire in July, our guidance assumes they will be replaced with tariffs at a similar rate. Third, our guidance does not contemplate any refund of UFLPA tariffs, given the uncertainty around both timing and process. It is important to recognize that tariff policy has been volatile and subject to multiple revisions. Given the ongoing uncertainty, it is impossible to say where tariffs will ultimately land and difficult to determine what impact they will have on our business.

Our guidance reflects our best estimates based on the tariffs in place as of this call. As tariff policy changes, we may need to update our guidance. Turning now to capital allocation, our fiscal 2026 plans prioritize funding our business operations while continuing to invest in long-term growth. We expect to spend approximately $275 million in capital expenditures in fiscal 2026. About 95% of that investment will be focused on strengthening our e-commerce capabilities, optimizing our retail fleet, and driving supply chain efficiency. A key shift in the plan is a near doubling of capital investment in retail, reflecting the meaningful opportunity we see to accelerate growth through retail stores.

Our stores are a competitive advantage—powerful brand billboards that drive profitable sales. Our free interior design services continue to differentiate us. More than half of retail sales involve a design appointment, helping drive the 6.4% retail comp we delivered in fiscal 2025. We will remain disciplined, continuing to close underperforming stores that do not meet our profitability thresholds. In fact, since 2019, we have closed about 18% of our fleet. Starting in fiscal 2026, we are investing to drive more retail growth in two ways. First, we will continue repositioning stores from older malls into more vibrant lifestyle centers. We expect to complete 19 repositions in fiscal 2026, more than we have done in any single prior year.

Second, we expect to open 20 new stores in fiscal 2026, primarily across West Elm, Williams Sonoma, Pottery Barn Kids, Rejuvenation, and our first two GreenRow locations. These expected 20 store openings represent our most openings in a decade. Every project meets our strict profitability and return on investment criteria. We expect to end fiscal 2026 with approximately the same store count as we ended fiscal 2025 due to store closures. After fiscal 2026, we anticipate store count growth in the years that follow of approximately 1% to 3% per year. Embedded in our fiscal 2026 guidance is approximately 70 basis points of non-comp growth from this real estate activity.

Turning now to our commitment to returning excess cash to shareholders through a combination of increased dividends and ongoing share repurchases, today we announced that our Board of Directors authorized a 15% increase in our quarterly dividend to $0.76 per share. Fiscal 2026 will mark our 17th consecutive year of dividend increases—an achievement we are proud of and remain committed to sustaining. On share repurchases, we have $1.3 billion remaining under our current authorizations, and we will continue to repurchase shares opportunistically as part of our disciplined approach to delivering shareholder returns. Looking beyond fiscal 2026, we are reiterating our long-term outlook for mid- to high-single-digit revenue growth and operating margins in the mid- to high-teens.

It is worth noting that the high end of our 2026 guidance falls within our long-term outlook. Wrapping up our comments, we are proud to deliver strong results for our shareholders. As we look ahead, we are focused on accelerating growth, delivering world-class customer service, and driving earnings. We are confident we will continue to outperform our peers and deliver shareholder returns for these five reasons that remain consistent: our ability to gain market share in the fragmented home furnishings industry; the strength of our in-house proprietary design; the competitive advantage of our digital-first, but not digital-only, channel strategy; the ongoing strength of our growth initiatives; and the resiliency of our fortress balance sheet.

Before we open the line for questions, I would like to mention that our 2026 investor presentation has been released and is available on our Investor Relations website. I encourage everyone to have a look. With that, I will open the call for questions.

Operator: We will now open for questions. To ask a question, press 1. To withdraw your question, press 1 again. We ask that you please limit your questions to one and one follow-up. Our first question will come from the line of Chuck Grom with Gordon Haskett. Please go ahead.

Chuck Grom: Hey, thanks. Good morning. Congrats on a great year. Laura, can you talk about the opportunities for store growth in 2026 and beyond, particularly as you incubate new concepts, especially Rejuvenation? Also, how are you thinking about expanding B2B over the next few years? And then, Jeff, any handholding on margins and phasing throughout the year in addition to the tariff commentary?

Laura Alber: Thanks. I am shocked. I probably jammed. Yes. Good morning. Good morning. It is that coffee, Laura. Yes. I have had coffee. Thank you. I love this store question because it is a big pivot for us. We have been talking about our optimization strategy at retail and focusing on more profitable stores and all the moves we have made, and we have been reducing our fleet. And now, as we look forward, we do not see that as what our future holds. We see—this year is an inflection point, and we are going to be net neutral at the end of the year.

So we have the most new store openings that we have had in many years—over a decade. So even better than that. And so we are opening this year 20 new stores, 18 repositions, net flat. And we see growth in West Elm. We have growth in Pottery Barn Kids. We have embedded opportunity in Rejuvenation. We shall see about GreenRow. We opened our first store two weeks ago. We will see how that works. We have another one on the docket that we will open later this year. And there are more Kids stores open now. So we are excited about that change in trend and how profitable our stores are and how good they look.

It is a big deal for us in terms of our growth algorithm. Second question on B2B. As you look at the macro and think about all the different opportunities, it is the one that is continuing to be the outsized opportunity. And we had great growth last year as you saw and you heard in our prepared remarks, and I think it is going to be better this year, frankly. I love seeing the contract outpace the trade because it is more repeat business, and the combination of all the things that we do together gives us a competitive advantage. And I just think we have the best sales team in retail selling our B2B.

Then I will hand it back to Jeff on margin. If you want to make a comment on the other two, that is great too.

Jeff Howie: Well, I think, Laura, both Rejuvenation retail as well as B2B are good examples of how we are really focused on accelerating growth, and we see a meaningful opportunity to do so in fiscal 2026 as we have guided. I will say, Chuck, I am impressed—you got three questions in one. Diving right into the operating margin guidance for next year, we expect operating margins to be in the range of 17.5% to 18.1%, and really, tariffs are the big story here. There are three things to consider when we think about how tariffs are going to impact our operating margin in 2026. The first is the tariffs we have already paid that are embedded in our inventory costs.

Those will take a little while to flow through into our weighted average cost. The second thing to consider is the tariffs we are going to pay at the newer rates that have been announced. And then finally, it is just the uncertainty of the environment. So there are really three key assumptions that we have shared about how all these tariffs are going to flow through our operating margin. The first and most important thing to understand is it is not about a blended tariff rate.

It is about how the tariffs flow through our weighted average cost of goods, and that is really a function of the costs that we ended the year with that are embedded in our inventory. As we said in our prepared remarks, we expect the impact on our operating margin will be front-half weighted—heavily front-half weighted—and then moderate over the balance of the year as we start to comp the impact of tariffs in last year. Second, our guidance assumes all tariff rates currently in effect remain in place for the balance of fiscal 2026.

Just to be clear, this includes the Section 232 tariffs, the current Section 301 tariffs, and Section 122 at what the administration has announced is 15%. And while we know the Section 122 tariffs expire in July, our guidance assumes they will be replaced with tariffs at a similar rate when they expire. And the third piece—and I will just say this, I think it is a given—our guidance reflects our best estimates of the tariff impact based upon the tariffs in place as of this call. As we all know, tariffs have been subject to multiple revisions, and it is impossible to say where tariffs will ultimately land and what impact they will have on our business.

Taking a step back, in 2025 we demonstrated we could navigate the tariff uncertainty and deliver consistently strong earnings, and we believe we can do so again in fiscal 2026.

Operator: Our next question will come from the line of Peter Benedict with Baird. Please go ahead.

Peter Benedict: Hey, guys. Thanks for taking the question. So I guess one question would just be around, with the pivot to retail growth, you mentioned design services, you mentioned Design Services 3.0. I was curious if you could maybe expand on that. What is changing? What is different there? That is my first question.

Laura Alber: Yes, sure. We have been really building our services in the percent of sales charge almost, and we have told you how big that has been in part of our other brands that continue to have opportunity at that percent total. And in addition to purchasing homes with the big pieces like furniture, we have been adding the second layer of accessories, and that was really 2.0 for us—and all the accessories that go with, and then all the holidays that go with.

The biggest opportunity that we see in the future for design services is how we are going to use AI and how we are going to put it in the hands of our sales associates to better decorate customers’ homes. There is so much that we are doing with content and design services and Outward, and the combination of all of that together with our people. And I will let Sameer Hassan mention a few things about that.

Sameer Hassan: Yes, thanks, Laura. It is really exciting—the progress that we are seeing on the AI front. You heard Laura talk earlier in the prepared remarks about our strategies, and we are only starting to see it accelerate. What is really exciting about what we are seeing with the evolution of AI, and how customers are using it and how they are engaging with it, is that it really starts to play to our strengths as a business. AI works well when you have category authority. AI works well when you have expertise.

As customers are using it to find where there is value, where there is quality, where there are designs that meet their goals—both off our sites within these LLM engines, but also now on our site as we are building these AI tools to help guide them through product discovery and to guide them through interior design. You have probably seen what we have launched with Olive on the Williams Sonoma site as a culinary authority to help customers with real problems and connect the dots between inspiration, guidance, and ultimately shopping. We are really excited about the progress we have made on the AI front, and we are really excited about what is yet to come.

Operator: Our next question will come from the line of Oliver Wintermantel with Evercore ISI. Please go ahead.

Oliver Wintermantel: Yes, thanks, and good morning. Could you maybe talk a little bit about quarter-to-date trends, if you have seen any disruptions from the winter storms? We heard some other retailers said that there was a disruption. But, Laura, I think you said Pottery Barn is actually off to a good start quarter-to-date. So maybe some details on that, please.

Jeff Howie: Yes. Good morning, Oliver. So yes, of course there have been some disruptions in the winter, but it did not materially impact our results. There is always some weather someplace; it always impacts us in one way or another, particularly this time of year, but it is not a big factor. In terms of what we are seeing quarter-to-date, as you know, we do not provide a lot of quarter-to-date commentary. We are not seeing any big impacts from anything. Our consumer continues to be resilient, and it is hard to say exactly where we are going to be. Easter is ahead of us; there is another Easter shift this year.

But everything that we know today is embedded in our guidance.

Operator: Our next question comes from the line of Kate McShane with Goldman Sachs. Please go ahead.

Katharine McShane: We wanted to ask about the real estate strategy, too, just in terms of the two strategies of moving to more vibrant locations and the opening of 20 new doors. What does it mean for your occupancy costs in 2026, and will you be able to leverage a higher occupancy cost at that 4% comp at the midpoint?

Jeff Howie: Good morning, Kate. Good question. As you know, we do not guide individual lines like occupancy, or even gross margin or SG&A. I think the story on retail is one really about growth, and we are seeing a meaningful opportunity to drive growth through our retail stores. We delivered a 6.4% comp in retail in fiscal 2025, and we did so very profitably. That is because of what we talked about. First, our design services are a competitive advantage, and our customers are telling us that they love it and responding with opening up their pocketbooks. Second is the product we are delivering.

We have really added the newness that we have been talking about in the past several calls to those stores, and we have improved the inventory position in those stores. They are really performing very well. The third part of why we are delivering such strong comps—and why we are confident in investing in the future—is the performance. The performance they have delivered is really a function of the retail repositioning strategy that we have been through. Although this is a pivot, we are still going to be very disciplined. We will continue to close underperforming stores that do not meet our profitability thresholds, but we do see a meaningful opportunity to expand from here.

Stores that we have repositioned from tired, older indoor malls to these more vibrant, high-traffic lifestyle centers have all seen substantial top-line comp improvements over their prior locations, as well as bottom-line improvements from less occupancy at that individual location. That is why we are looking to do the most repositions this year that we have ever done. For new stores, we are seeing meaningful opportunity as well to go into white spaces in markets we are not in for certain stores, and there is a big opportunity there for us to continue that in the years ahead. Overall, we do not think it will have a major impact on our operating margin.

It is embedded in our guidance that we have given today, but it is really a story about growth. As we mentioned, we will be flat at the end of this year in terms of store count, but as we look beyond 2026, we are guiding that we will increase our store count by 1% to 3% per year each year.

Operator: Our next question will come from the line of Cristina Fernandez with Telsey Advisory Group. Please go ahead.

Cristina Fernandez: Hi, good morning, and congratulations on a good quarter and finish to the year. I had two questions. The first one is on Pottery Barn. As you look at the fourth quarter performance, how much of the disappointment was perhaps a lack of newness or the need to expand prices, and what changed in the first quarter to turn that from negative to positive? And then the second question is a follow-up on the tariff impact for the first half.

Should we think about the fourth quarter pressure—the 170 basis points on the merchandise margin—as a good guide point for the first half, or could it be higher given the mix of sales in the first half versus the fourth quarter?

Laura Alber: Great, thank you. So Pottery Barn, as you know, is a very strong, profitable, loved brand. As I said in my prepared remarks, we are really happy to see the tier comps improving, and in particular, stabilization in the furniture trend. As you all know, Q4 has a higher percentage of decor in Pottery Barn—substantially—than other quarters. Let us remember that post-COVID and housing flow, we were focused on decorating as a growth vehicle instead of furniture because people were buying garage furniture. We probably over-rotated a bit, to be honest with you. It reached an all-time high and saw a little bit of a giveback.

We are always self-critical, looking for places to improve, and we probably had too much reliance on best sellers from last year, and we were not in enough newness. As we go into the first quarter and into the year, the complexion of the categories changes back to be more balanced, and that is what is driving the improvement we believe.

Jeff Howie: Now, transitioning to your second question on what we should think about in terms of operating margin in 2026. As you know, Cristina, we do not guide the individual quarters, but I will help you with the shape of the year. The big factor in the first half of the year is the embedded tariff costs we have already paid. We are on weighted average cost accounting, so it takes a little while for that to work through our operating margin. As we have guided, the impact will be heavily weighted to the front half and then slowly moderate across the back half, as the impact starts to wear off and we start to comp tariffs we paid last year.

Operator: Our next question will come from the line of Jonathan Matuszewski with Jefferies. Please go ahead.

Jonathan Matuszewski: Great. Good morning, and nice quarter. Laura, last quarter you remarked that there were pockets of your assortment that remained underpriced. How should we think about the magnitude of pricing that is embedded at the midpoint of 4% comps for the year? Thanks so much.

Laura Alber: I do not think about it like that. I do not think about the midpoint of range with the pricing. I do not comment on the pricing, and then Jeff, I do not know if you want to make a comment. On the pricing, whether it is because of tariffs or just all the time, we are constantly looking for the best price-value relationship and how to give our customers the winning combination that makes them buy from us. The best thing we can ever do is give them a design they cannot resist at a fair price. They can count on us for quality. They know that they are going to get great service.

We have made such improvements with service, and we are also going to really help them put it together with everything else in their house, which is a big deal because a lot of the other players—especially the online players—it is one-and-done. You are not decorating; you are just buying an item, maybe for your garage. In terms of pricing, there are pockets always where, because of something, we blow it out and say, “Oh, it could have been a little higher,” and we think about that for next time and make adjustments. There are some items and categories that are still undervalued.

It is very competitive to open, so I do not want to go through them all because I do not want to give that list to our competition to look at. But we do see some opportunity. At the same time, we look at the opposite too, which is where are we seeing an overpriced situation; as we get cost concessions, should we drive more units and take the price down slightly? It is a pricing-testing mindset in the company. We share it across brands and how pricing affects demand.

Jeff Howie: Yes. I would just say, Laura talked about when we think about pricing, it is category by category, SKU by SKU—really looking at each one of those categories, each SKU, and how it compares to its competition. For us, it is a little divorced from how we think about growth and how we think about our guidance. From that standpoint, what we are really thinking about when we look at guidance is we are looking at our trends. Last year, we delivered a 3.5% comp, and in fact, if you look at our Q4 results, our two-year comp accelerated, which we see as a positive indicator.

Then we look at the confidence and momentum we have with our growth strategies—things like our white space opportunities that you have heard us talk a lot about, like West Elm Office, which we launched in January; things like dorm and baby. We have white space opportunities that are going to be additive to our results. Then we have emerging brands, and we talked a lot about Rejuvenation. It is a brand that has had double-digit comps for over two years, and we just see continued opportunity to grow that. We think over the long term, that can be a billion-dollar brand. We touched on B2B. It just delivered another double-digit quarter. It was up 14% comp.

It had its largest quarter of contract volume to date. We exited the quarter with a very strong book of business and leads going into fiscal 2026. Then there is retail. We have talked a lot on the call about retail. It delivered a 6.4% comp in 2025, and we see meaningful opportunity to expand that. So when we think about our comp range—and the midpoint of our comp guidance of 4%—it is really about our strategy, the momentum behind our business, and the fact that we are taking market share in this industry. We see an ability to leverage our competitive advantages and take even more market share.

Operator: Our next question will come from the line of Max Rakhlenko with TD Cowen. Please go ahead.

Max Rakhlenko: Great, thanks a lot. So first, Laura, can you speak to the health of the consumer and their willingness to stomach tariffs in the category? What is your take on the industry’s ability to maintain higher prices if tariff pressure does end up easing? Then, Jeff, quickly, any more color on the shrink benefit that you saw in the quarter? Should that continue into next year, and how should we think about that?

Laura Alber: Makes sense. In terms of the consumer, I can only comment about what we are seeing. I am reading and hearing that other people are saying very different things, and you can see a lot of stepped-up promos in the competition—flighted buys with 20% off here and 20% off there. That is typically for a lot of the smaller companies that are trying to be sold or that are trying to establish themselves. They are playing that promo game. There is no sizable new entrant that we are seeing in the market. But I can comment that our customers are responding to our aesthetic, our newness, our collaborations. They love them.

I do not know if you got a chance to look at what we are doing with Emma Chamberlain and West Elm. That is the kind of thing that they are delighted by. She has 14,000,000 followers—so fun. She is such a great marketer, and the product is really easy to buy. That is how we are making the weather happen in our brand—stuff like that. Furniture is signal to us. I said that. B2B is growing. We are seeing a nice response from our consumers. But you do not take it for granted.

In every corner, every brand, we have strategies to improve the product line, improve the mix, improve our value equation, improve our service, and drive brand heat. That is a big part of who we are and why we continue to deliver. Second part of your question on shrink.

Jeff Howie: Simple. After completing physical inventory and reconciling all the inventory accounts, we had minimal shrink. You have been doing retail for a long time—you simply never know until you take physical inventory and reconcile everything. We attribute the favorable shrink results to our ongoing supply chain improvements and fewer returns, fewer damages, fewer replacements, less out-of-market shipping, better set-line inventory, and we think that is finally coming through in terms of physical inventory results. In terms of what it means for 2026, it is not a material driver, and any impact of shrink is embedded in our guidance.

Operator: Our next question will come from the line of Brian Nagel with Oppenheimer. Please go ahead.

Brian Nagel: Nice quarter. Congratulations. Nice year. Congratulations. I have two questions—I guess one is short term and then maybe a longer-term one. So, Jeff, on the short-term side, going back to prepared comments, there seemed like there were a lot of—if you look at gross margin—one-off items here in the fourth quarter. How should we think about, as we look at fourth quarter gross margin, is there a way to frame a normalized year-over-year change? And then as we look into 2026, recognizing you do not give specific guidance, how should we think about the puts and takes on the gross margin side?

Jeff Howie: Yes, Brian, it goes back to what I have been saying in the call and in the prepared remarks. When we think about the drivers of operating margin—and it flows a little bit through the gross margin—it really comes down to how the tariffs are going to impact us in 2026. There are three pieces here. One is the higher tariff costs we have already paid that are sitting on our balance sheet that have to work their way through our weighted average cost. Then there are the tariffs that we are going to pay in 2026. Then later in the year, as we head into Q3, Q4, we start to comp the tariffs.

When you put all that together, our guidance is that the impact of tariffs on operating margin will be heavily front-half weighted and then moderate over the balance of the year as we start to comp it and the impact of the embedded tariffs works its way through our weighted average cost.

Operator: Our final question will come from the line of Zach Fadem with Wells Fargo. Please go ahead.

Zach Fadem: Hey, good morning. Just a couple more on the gross margin line. First of all, Jeff, what is the weighted average tariff rate today, and how has that changed over the last two quarters? Second, can you remind us how your freight contracts renew, and how should we think about the impact of higher freight and oil today?

Jeff Howie: I will take the second one first—in the way higher oil costs are impacting our transportation costs. I would simply say it is very early, and it is a little difficult to tell how this plays out. I think we would all agree there is a lot of uncertainty about what is happening geopolitically in the world and what that means for the price of oil and how it trickles through transportation. We are seeing some noise out there of higher prices, but overall, what we know today is embedded in our guidance. It is such an area of uncertainty that our estimates we are providing today are just what we understand is going to happen.

In terms of gross margin—remind me what your question was.

Zach Fadem: Tariff rate today and how that has changed over the last two quarters?

Jeff Howie: We are not going to provide the specific tariff rate. As everyone has heard me say, we are not going to go up and down on the basis points or specific tariff rates every single quarter simply because it has been changing so much. Every time there is a change, every time there is a tweak, it would be virtually impossible to get on the phone with everyone explaining the latest permutation. Our guidance assumes that the higher tariff rates that we paid in fiscal 2025 that are remaining in our balance sheet flow through our weighted average cost. From that standpoint, it is still pretty high because those costs are still embedded in our inventory.

They will work their way through our weighted average cost of goods primarily in the front half of the year. As we said, the impact on our operating margin will moderate as we get through the back half of the year.

Laura Alber: I would like to comment a little bit on the cost of the war. Again, as Jeff said, there has been no huge cost increase that we have seen as of yet. We have seen some transportation costs increase on air, for example, and we have seen some domestic rates increase as well, but that is not material yet. We have not put in our guidance a material cost increase over the year that would come from cost of goods going up substantially or transportation going up substantially. Remember that we are not sailing in the Suez strait, thank God, and we have not actually seen our shipping times affected yet.

We have not seen supply chain delays as of yet. But as we all know, we cannot predict this. We have done the best job we can putting into our guidance a reasonable estimate, and we do not have a crystal ball on what this could mean longer term. What we are focused on, as you know—and wrapping this up—is really how we deliver in any environment. You have seen us do this with the same experienced management team through COVID, post-COVID giveback, and now through all this geopolitical uncertainty and tariff chaos. It is noisy out there, but we tend to be able to handle it better than most and be ahead of it.

We will take it as it comes, and we will continue to update you.

Operator: This concludes the question and answer. I will hand the call back over to Laura for any closing comments.

Laura Alber: Thank you all. I hope it is getting warmer across the country for all of you and that some sunshine is out, and please go visit our stores and see what we are doing. We appreciate your support, and we cannot wait to update you throughout the year. Thank you.

Operator: This concludes today’s call. Thank you all for joining. You may now disconnect.

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Williams-Sonoma (WSM) Q4 2025 Earnings Transcript was originally published by The Motley Fool