Constellation Brands reported QQ2 2026 revenue of $2.481 billion, down 15% year over year and down 1.34% quarter over quarter, with gross profit of $1.31 billion and a gross margin of approximately 52.8%. EBITDA reached $972.9 million and operating income was $874.0 million, yielding an operating margin of about 35.2%. Net income was $466.0 million, or $2.65 per share (diluted), up in absolute terms versus prior-year periods despite topline pressures, driven by continued leverage and a favorable mix in select segments. Management framed the period as heavily influenced by macro headwinds and a consumer environment that remains cautious on discretionary spend, particularly among Hispanic consumers, while brand loyalty shows resilience and even strength in certain franchises.
Strategically, Constellation reiterated its commitment to a 39%-40% beer operating margin target and 1-2% pricing on a market-by-market basis. The company highlighted ongoing investments in price-pack architecture, and emphasized that it would maintain marketing and brand-building expenditures despite weaker top-line growth. Tariffs are expected to contribute about $70 million of headwinds in beer and roughly $20 million in wine, with the overall tariff impact expected to track volume over the year. Management also signaled flexibility to slow additional capital spending beyond FY2026 if warranted, while continuing to fund longer-term capacity expansion given a constructive long-term growth trajectory.
The wine and spirits (W&S) business delivered meaningful momentum in Q2, with the division returning to share gains and posting 2% top-line growth in the quarter, supported by Kim Crawford, Meiomi, Ruffino, and The Prisoner brands. The company underscored that the W&S portfolio is returning to a stronger growth trajectory and that vintage releases and direct-to-consumer (DTC) activities tend to lift margins in the second half of the fiscal year. Overall, Constellation remains financially robust with robust cash generation and a disciplined approach to capital allocation, though near-term results will continue to hinge on consumer spending dynamics and macroeconomic conditions.
Investors should monitor: (1) progress in managing macro-driven volume softness, (2) effectiveness of price-pack and promotional tactics in driving topline in a constrained environment, (3) evolution of tariff headwinds and their pass-through to margins, and (4) durability of W&S margin improvement as volume benefits and vintage-driven pricing flows into the back half of FY2026 and into FY2027.