Overview:
Lululemon opened at approximately $113 Friday on volume more than 2.6 times its daily average, after the retailer guided full-year EPS down 11% and warned Q2 revenue would miss consensus by roughly 6%. Ten major analyst firms cut price targets on LULU in the first hour, with Wells Fargo and Piper Sandler landing at $110 — near the opening price. Broadcom continued its slide with a further 1.89% premarket drop to $411, while the blowout May jobs report pushed yields higher and complicated the Fed
NEW YORK — Lululemon Athletica opened Friday at approximately $113 per share — down nearly 13% on volume already running at more than twice its daily average — after the company delivered one of the most severe guidance cuts in its history the evening before.
NEW YORK, June 5, 2026 — The S&P 500 opened down 0.63% to approximately 7,516, the Nasdaq Composite fell 1.13%, the Dow Jones Industrial Average edged up 0.07%, and the Russell 2000 gained 1.45% — a split tape that tells a specific story. Large-cap technology is absorbing two simultaneous body blows: Lululemon’s guidance catastrophe and Broadcom’s continued after-hours hangover. Small-caps and industrials, meanwhile, are reading a 172,000-job May payrolls print as a signal of economic resilience. The divergence matters. This is not a market in broad retreat — it is a market repricing specific earnings risk while rotating capital toward segments less exposed to AI multiple compression and consumer brand deterioration.
The Guidance Gap That Moved the Stock
Lululemon’s Q1 fiscal 2026 results were, on the surface, not disastrous. Revenue of $2.47 billion beat the $2.43 billion consensus. EPS of $1.69 cleared the $1.67 estimate. Under normal circumstances, that would be a hold-or-modest-rally situation. These are not normal circumstances.
The company simultaneously cut full-year 2026 revenue guidance to $11.0–$11.15 billion — flat to down 1% versus the prior year — from a range of $11.35–$11.50 billion. More damaging: full-year EPS guidance collapsed to $10.95–$11.15 from a prior range of $12.10–$12.30, a midpoint reduction of roughly $1.15 per share. Wall Street’s full-year EPS consensus had been $12.30. The company is now guiding to earn approximately 10% less than analysts expected just 24 hours ago.
Q2 guidance compounded the damage. Revenue of $2.45–$2.475 billion implies a year-over-year decline of 2–3% and lands nearly $150 million below the $2.60 billion consensus. The Q2 EPS range of $1.76–$1.81 against a consensus of $2.68 is not a miss — it is a restatement of the business model.
Gross margin contracted 410 basis points to 54.2%, and operating income fell 37% year-over-year. Management attributed the deterioration to tariff pressure, negative media coverage, social media criticism, and poor product launch execution — a list that raises more questions than it answers. Americas comparable sales fell 5%, marking the fifth consecutive quarter of decline in the company’s home market.
International operations remain a genuine bright spot: China revenue grew 30% in reported terms, 23% in constant currency. Rest of World climbed 13%. But international cannot offset an Americas business that has now declined for five consecutive quarters, and no analyst on the call this morning appeared willing to weight China momentum against domestic deterioration.
Wall Street’s Response: Ten Firms, One Direction
The analyst community moved with unusual speed and uniformity. By the opening bell, at least ten major firms had revised price targets downward. Wells Fargo cut to $110 from $150, Barclays dropped to $113 from $161, and Jefferies landed at $115 from $145 — all clustered near or below the opening price. BTIG downgraded outright to Neutral from Buy. UBS, Stifel, Baird, BofA, Evercore ISI, Truist, and Piper Sandler all cut targets in a range of $110 to $140.
The consensus rating sits at Hold, with 28 Hold ratings, 2 Sell, 2 Buy, and 1 Strong Buy. That distribution tells you the street is not capitulating entirely — but it is not buying either. For a market already rattled by Broadcom, the timing of LULU’s collapse adds a second data point to what is becoming a broader conversation about whether 2025’s consumer and technology consensus estimates were simply too optimistic across the board.
The Broader Tape: A Market Splitting at the Seams
The index divergence at the open is the story underneath the story. The Russell 2000 gaining 1.45% while the Nasdaq drops 1.13% represents a 258-basis-point spread — the kind of rotation that does not happen randomly. Traders are moving capital out of high-multiple names with guidance risk and into smaller domestic companies that benefit from a strong labor market without carrying AI valuation premiums.
The May jobs report accelerated that rotation. Nonfarm payrolls came in at 172,000 — nearly double the 80,000–85,000 consensus estimate — with April revised up to 179,000. The unemployment rate held at 4.3%. The 10-year Treasury yield jumped to 4.54% on the print, and rate cut probability for the summer moved lower. Good economic news, in the current Fed framework, is bad news for rate-sensitive growth stocks. The Nasdaq’s decline this morning is partly LULU and AVGO — and partly the bond market recalibrating.
Broadcom added pressure from the technology side. After Thursday’s 12.59% collapse — on volume of 81 million shares representing roughly $33.75 billion in turnover — AVGO opened Friday down a further 1.89% to approximately $411. The company beat Q2 estimates and maintained its “more than $100 billion” fiscal 2027 AI revenue target, but investors who had priced in an upward revision to that number sold aggressively when none came. The two-session market cap loss approaches $320 billion. With 46 analysts still rating the stock Strong Buy and a consensus price target of $509, the long-term thesis has not collapsed — but near-term momentum is firmly negative.
The Dow’s marginal 0.07% gain reflects its different composition: less technology, more industrials and financials that read a strong jobs number as confirmation of economic durability. The index divergence today is less about fear than about a surgical repricing of which earnings multiples can be sustained in a higher-for-longer rate environment.
The Levels That Will Define the First Hour
For LULU specifically, the price action in the first 60 minutes will set the tone for the week. Opening volume of 8.46 million shares against a daily average of 3.24 million signals institutional repositioning, not retail panic — large blocks moving quickly as funds that held through the earnings print now reassess their mandate. The question is whether that selling is orderly or whether it accelerates.
At $113, LULU sits near the lower end of the analyst target cluster. Wells Fargo at $110 and Piper Sandler at $110 represent the most bearish institutional targets published today. A breach of $110 intraday would put the stock below every current Wall Street price target — a technically and psychologically significant development that could attract momentum sellers with no fundamental anchor to stop them until the 52-week low of $111.17.
The year-to-date decline now stands at approximately 40% from a starting price in the mid-$180s. The stock has lost more than half its value from the 52-week high of $339.15. At some price, the cash flow argument that Morningstar raises becomes compelling. Whether that price is $113, $100, or lower depends entirely on whether management’s explanation — media criticism, poor product execution — constitutes a fixable problem or a symptom of something more structural in the brand’s relationship with its core customer.
For the broader S&P 500, the 7,516 opening level puts the index 1.4% below its 52-week high of 7,620.90. The index can absorb individual stock drawdowns of this scale. What it cannot absorb easily is a second consecutive session where technology leadership fails to show up — particularly heading into a weekend with no scheduled catalyst to reset sentiment. As our earlier analysis noted, whether payrolls can rescue a market rattled by Broadcom remains an open question, and LULU’s collapse this morning has made the answer more complicated.
What to Watch Before Noon
The first hour of trading will answer three questions. Does LULU find institutional support above $110, or does the selling pressure push it to a new 52-week low? Does Broadcom stabilize around $411, suggesting Thursday’s move priced in the guidance disappointment, or does it continue lower and pull the Philadelphia Semiconductor Index with it? And does the Russell 2000’s outperformance hold, validating the rotation thesis, or does the broader risk-off tone eventually overwhelm small-cap optimism?
The jobs number has complicated the Fed narrative in ways that will reverberate through the session. Prior signals from the labor market had been ambiguous enough to sustain rate-cut hopes. A 172,000 print with an upward revision to April is not ambiguous. Traders betting on two cuts by year-end are reassessing that position in real time, and the Treasury market’s reaction — yields to 4.54% on the 10-year — is the clearest signal of where that reassessment is landing.
| Level / Event | Value | Signal |
|---|---|---|
| LULU intraday support | $110.00 | Floor of analyst target cluster; breach signals momentum selling with no institutional anchor until 52-week low at $111.17 |
| LULU stabilization level | $115.00 | Hold above midday suggests institutional buyers absorbing supply; potential for technical bounce into next week |
| AVGO continuation risk | $411.00 | Break below opens path toward $400 target; stability here suggests Thursday’s move was the full repricing |
| 10-Year Treasury yield | 4.54% | Further rise pressures high-multiple Nasdaq names; retreat below 4.45% would ease rate-cut repricing and support tech |
| S&P 500 opening level | ~7,516 | 1.4% below 52-week high; hold above 7,500 keeps the broader trend intact; breach raises risk of a test toward 7,400 |
The opening hour today is less a trading session than a sorting mechanism. LULU at $113 is either cheap or a falling knife, and the first-hour volume pattern will offer the clearest near-term answer. Broadcom near $411 is either finished repricing or still in process. The 10-year at 4.54% is either the new equilibrium in a strong-economy regime or an overshoot that corrects as the Fed maintains its data-dependent posture. By noon, traders will have a working answer to at least two of those three questions. The third — whether Lululemon’s brand problem is fixable — will take considerably longer to resolve.
This article is published by PreMarket Daily for informational purposes only. Nothing here constitutes financial advice, investment recommendations, or an offer to buy or sell any securities. Always consult a qualified financial professional before making investment decisions.

