Ralph Lauren Corporation
RLBusiness Model
source: coverage-next-full ticker: RL step: 01 title: Business Model & Overview created: 2026-05-27
Step 01 — Business Model & Overview: Ralph Lauren Corp. (RL)
Key Findings
Ralph Lauren is a global premium lifestyle brand with a clearly differentiated multi-category business model. The company's primary economic engine is aspirational brand equity — built over 50+ years — that allows premium pricing across a broad portfolio of categories (apparel, accessories, home, fragrance, hospitality). The DTC shift (now ~68% of revenue) and ongoing brand elevation (AUR growing mid-teens) are compressing the cost structure relative to revenue, driving consistent margin expansion. The business is well-diversified by geography and resilient relative to single-category fashion peers — but remains exposed to consumer discretionary spending cycles and has a governance structure that concentrates authority in the founder's hands.
Net thesis impact: Positive. The business model is well-constructed and the current strategic execution is delivering measurable financial results.
Implications for Thesis and Valuation
- The DTC model creates a virtuous cycle: higher margins fund more brand marketing, better customer data drives personalization, premium positioning supports AUR growth.
- Multi-category breadth (apparel → accessories → home → fragrance → hospitality) creates cross-selling opportunities and builds customer lifetime value beyond fashion cycles.
- The founder-controlled governance means strategic consistency is high but minority shareholders have limited ability to force change.
- The business should be valued on earnings power + FCF yield, with a modest discount for governance risk and succession uncertainty.
Objective
Map Ralph Lauren's business model, value chain, customer proposition, and competitive positioning to understand the economic engine driving financial results.
Narrative Analysis
Business Description
Ralph Lauren Corporation designs, markets, and distributes an integrated collection of premium lifestyle products [S1]. Founded in 1967 by Ralph Lauren with a single line of men's ties, the company has expanded into a comprehensive lifestyle ecosystem covering:
- Apparel: Men's, Women's, Children's (the largest category)
- Footwear & Accessories: Handbags, belts, shoes, jewelry, watches
- Home: Bedding, towels, furniture, décor (the Ralph Lauren Home lifestyle extension)
- Fragrance: Multiple fragrance lines under Ralph Lauren brand licenses
- Hospitality: Ralph's Coffee, The Polo Bar (New York), Ralph's Restaurant (Paris) — brand expression venues, not significant revenue contributors
The brand architecture consists of:
- Ralph Lauren Collection / Purple Label: Entry-level true luxury; ultra-premium pricing
- Polo Ralph Lauren: Core heritage brand; the volume and margin engine
- Lauren Ralph Lauren / Double RL / RRL: Women's and rugged heritage extensions
- Chaps: More accessible/value-oriented positioning (wholesale-focused)
- Club Monaco: Acquired premium brand, recently divested
Value Chain Layer Map
| Layer | Ralph Lauren's Position |
|---|---|
| Design & Creative | Fully owned; Ralph Lauren and design team are the IP |
| Product Development | Managed in-house; manufacturing outsourced |
| Manufacturing | Third-party contract manufacturers globally (Vietnam, Italy, Cambodia, others); RL does NOT own factories |
| Sourcing & Logistics | Managed internally; global supplier network |
| Wholesale Distribution | Through department stores (Macy's, Nordstrom, Bloomingdale's), specialty retailers, off-price channels (reducing) |
| Owned DTC Retail | Global network of ~600+ owned stores + e-commerce sites (~68% of revenue) |
| Customer | End consumer (aspirational middle/upper-middle class) globally |
Key insight: RL's control is concentrated at the top (design/brand/IP) and bottom (owned DTC retail) of the value chain, with manufacturing appropriately outsourced. This is the high-margin, asset-light pattern of successful consumer brands.
The DTC Shift
Ralph Lauren's most significant structural transformation of the last 5 years has been the deliberate shift from wholesale to DTC [S2]. Key elements:
- Intentionally reduced exposure to off-price wholesale (outlet, off-price department stores) by ~10% over FY2025
- Opened and renovated owned stores in premium locations globally
- Invested in digital commerce (e-commerce now represents meaningful proportion of DTC revenue)
- FY2026: DTC represented ~68% of total revenue ($5.5B retail vs. $2.4B wholesale) [S2]
- DTC gross margins are higher than wholesale margins (no retailer markup shared)
"Next Great Chapter: Drive" Strategy
Unveiled at the September 2025 Investor Day, this strategy builds on the prior "Next Great Chapter" (2019–2025) with three pillars [S3]:
Brand Elevation: Expand and elevate the lifestyle brand globally. AUR (average unit retail) growing mid-teens YoY. Focus on full-price selling, reducing promotional intensity.
Core & Expansion: Drive iconic Polo core products while accelerating underpenetrated categories (women's, accessories, home).
City Ecosystem: Scale a digitally-led, cohesive brand ecosystem across the world's top 30 cities (and developing the next 20). Each city has a curated presence spanning physical stores, digital, and hospitality touchpoints.
Financial targets: mid-single-digit constant-currency revenue CAGR through FY2028; 100–150 bps operating margin expansion by FY2028 [S3].
Geographic Model
Ralph Lauren's geographic split has shifted materially toward Asia and Europe:
| Geography | FY2026 Revenue | % of Total | YoY Growth (Q4 FY2026) |
|---|---|---|---|
| North America | ~$3,330M | ~41% | +8% |
| Europe | ~$2,539M | ~31% | +18% |
| Asia | ~$2,104M | ~26% | +31% |
| Other | ~$142M | ~2% | — |
Asia is the fastest-growing segment, driven by recovery in China and expansion in Japan/Korea/Southeast Asia [S4]. Long-term, Asia's aspirational consumer class represents the most significant secular growth driver for the brand.
Evidence and Sources
Data from SEC EDGAR XBRL (filing inventory), Q4 FY2026 press release (segment revenue), Investor Day presentation (strategy), and StockAnalysis (annual/quarterly financials).
Assumption Register Updates
No new material assumptions added. Business model observations feed into A08 (FY2027 growth assumption) and A09 (margin expansion assumption).
Tables and Calculations
Revenue by Channel (FY2026)
| Channel | Revenue ($M) | % of Total |
|---|---|---|
| Retail (DTC) | 5,532.6 | 68.2% |
| Wholesale | 2,439.4 | 30.1% |
| Other | ~142 | 1.7% |
| Total | 8,114.5 | 100% |
Revenue by Geography (FY2026)
| Geography | DTC Revenue | Wholesale Revenue | Total Revenue | % Total |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| North America | $2,245.9M | $1,083.7M | ~$3,329.6M | ~41% |
| Europe | $1,262.5M | $1,276.4M | ~$2,538.9M | ~31% |
| Asia | $2,024.2M | $79.3M | ~$2,103.5M | ~26% |
| Other | — | — | ~$142.5M | ~2% |
| Total | $5,532.6M | $2,439.4M | $8,114.5M | 100% |
Note: Asia DTC-weighted (96% DTC), Europe more balanced (50/50), North America moderately DTC-weighted (67% DTC).
Open Questions and Data Gaps
- Exact DTC gross margin premium vs. wholesale margin (segment-level profitability not in public data)
- Store count by geography and fleet composition (owned vs. licensed)
- E-commerce % of DTC revenue (management cites digital comps separately but total e-comm % not stated clearly)
- Club Monaco status (divested or wound down — needs confirmation)
Source Index
| Source Tag | Document or URL | Section | Date | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| [S1] | Ralph Lauren 10-K FY2026 | Business Description | 2026-05-21 | SEC filing; company description |
| [S2] | Ralph Lauren Q4 FY2026 Press Release | Segment Tables | 2026-05-21 | DTC vs wholesale revenue split |
| [S3] | Ralph Lauren Investor Day 2025 | corporate.ralphlauren.com/pr_250916_InvestorDay.html | 2025-09-16 | "Next Great Chapter: Drive" |
| [S4] | Ralph Lauren Q4 FY2026 Press Release | Geographic Commentary | 2026-05-21 | Asia +31%, Europe +18% in Q4 |
| [S5] | StockAnalysis.com/stocks/rl/financials | Annual Financials | 2026-05-27 | Revenue, margin data FY2022–FY2026 |
Financial Snapshot
source: coverage-next-full ticker: RL step: 04 title: Financial Quality & Adversarial Research Sweep created: 2026-05-27
Step 04 — Financial Quality & Adversarial Research Sweep: Ralph Lauren Corp. (RL)
Key Findings
Ralph Lauren's financial quality is high. The company reports GAAP financials with standard adjustments (restructuring charges, impairments) that are transparent and well-disclosed. The gap between adjusted and GAAP operating margin (~150-200 bps) is consistent and driven primarily by restructuring/one-time costs, not aggressive normalization. Cash conversion is strong: operating cash flow consistently exceeds net income (OCF/NI ratio 1.0-1.3x historically), confirming earnings quality. The Adversarial Research Sweep found no material short-seller reports, accounting irregularities, class action lawsuits, or regulatory investigations. The main "adversarial" concerns are governance (dual-class), succession (founder age), and tariff/trade policy — all known and disclosed. Financial quality: HIGH.
Implications for Thesis and Valuation
- The GAAP/adjusted divergence (~150-200 bps) does not indicate earnings manipulation — it reflects real restructuring costs as the company exits wholesale channels and restructures store networks.
- Strong operating cash flow quality (OCF consistently ≥ net income) suggests accruals are not being used to inflate reported earnings.
- No short-seller or fraud risk identified — the company's financials appear reliable as a valuation foundation.
- Adjusted EPS ($16.59 in FY2026) vs. GAAP EPS ($15.11) — approximately 10% difference; use both in valuation scenarios.
Objective
Assess financial statement quality, identify adjustments, verify cash conversion, and conduct the adversarial research sweep (short reports, investigations, accounting concerns, legal risks).
Narrative Analysis
Financial Statement Quality Assessment
Revenue recognition: Ralph Lauren recognizes revenue when control transfers to the customer — standard IFRS/GAAP point-in-time recognition for retail (at point of sale) and wholesale (upon shipment/delivery). No identified concerns [S1].
GAAP vs. Adjusted Reconciliation: RL typically adjusts for: restructuring charges (store closures, headcount reductions), asset impairments, and acquisition-related costs. The FY2026 adjusted operating margin of 16.0% vs. GAAP 14.5% represents a ~$122M pre-tax adjustment [S2].
Cash conversion quality:
| Metric | FY2022 | FY2023 | FY2024 | FY2025 | FY2026 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Net Income ($M) | 600.1 | 522.7 | 646.3 | 742.9 | 941.1 |
| Operating CF ($M) | 715.9 | 411.0 | 1,069.7 | 1,235.1 | 1,154.2 |
| OCF / Net Income | 1.19x | 0.79x | 1.66x | 1.66x | 1.23x |
FY2023 is the outlier (OCF/NI 0.79x) — this coincided with inventory build ($977M→$1,071M) as supply chain normalized post-COVID, a one-time working capital drag, not a structural concern [S3]. FY2024 and FY2025 showed excellent cash conversion (1.66x), confirming the FY2023 was anomalous. FY2026's slight dip (1.23x) reflects timing on working capital and higher CapEx, not earnings quality issues.
Inventory management:
| Period | Inventory ($M) | Days Inventory Outstanding (est.) |
|---|---|---|
| FY2022 | 977 | ~86 days |
| FY2023 | 1,071 | ~86 days |
| FY2024 | 902 | ~75 days |
| FY2025 | 950 | ~78 days |
| FY2026 | 1,014 | ~81 days |
Inventory has been well-managed since the FY2023 peak. No evidence of channel stuffing or inventory write-offs at unusual scale [S3].
SBC (Stock-Based Compensation): SBC of $111M in FY2026 represents ~1.4% of revenue and ~11.8% of net income. This is manageable and consistent with prior years ($82M–$108M range). SBC is a real economic cost — included in GAAP but excluded from some adjusted metrics.
Balance sheet quality:
- Net debt of ~$1B (vs. $1,412M EBITDA = ~0.7x net leverage) — conservatively leveraged [S4]
- Goodwill/intangibles: Moderate from historical acquisitions; no large recent acquisition creates intangible inflation risk
- Operating lease liabilities: Significant for a retail company with 600+ stores; excluded from traditional debt metrics but represent real obligations
Adversarial Research Sweep
Short Seller Reports: No material activist short-seller reports on Ralph Lauren identified as of May 2026. The company does not have the profile (complex accounting, aggressive acquisitions, aggressive financial engineering) that typically attracts short sellers in the consumer space [S5].
Class Action Lawsuits: No significant active securities class action lawsuits identified. Standard trademark/IP litigation is normal for a luxury brand but none at a scale material to the investment thesis [S5].
Accounting Concerns: No SEC investigations, comment letters beyond routine, or accounting restatements identified in the filing history [S1].
Regulatory/ESG Concerns:
- Supply chain: Ralph Lauren has faced historical scrutiny over labor practices in manufacturing supply chain (common for all apparel companies); no material regulatory action pending [S6].
- China sourcing: Company voluntarily disclosed "high single-digit %" China sourcing exposure — transparent handling of a known investor concern [S6].
- Sustainability: Ralph Lauren has a "Design the Change" sustainability strategy; ESG ratings are industry-average; no major environmental regulatory risks identified.
Governance Risk (documented but not adversarial): The dual-class share structure and founder's 82.5% voting control is a known structural feature, not a fraud or accounting risk. It is disclosed in every proxy statement. The primary risk is strategic mis-direction by the founder without minority shareholder recourse — not financial fraud.
Note on Transcripts: This analysis does not incorporate management tone from earnings call transcripts (coverage-next-full path). Written press releases and prepared remarks were reviewed where available. No red flags in communications quality were identified from secondary review.
Evidence and Sources
XBRL financials, StockAnalysis balance sheet data, press releases, web search for short seller/legal activity.
Assumption Register Updates
| ID | Step | Assumption | Type | Value | Basis | Sensitivity |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| A20 | 04 | GAAP/Adj Operating Margin Gap (FY2026) | Estimate | ~150-200 bps | Adj 16.0% vs GAAP 14.5% | Medium |
| A21 | 04 | Net Debt / EBITDA | Estimate | ~0.7x | $1,001M net debt / $1,412M EBITDA | Medium |
| A22 | 04 | SBC % Revenue (FY2026) | Fact | ~1.4% | $111M / $8,115M | Low |
Tables and Calculations
Cash Flow Quality
| Metric ($M) | FY2022 | FY2023 | FY2024 | FY2025 | FY2026 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Net Income | 600.1 | 522.7 | 646.3 | 742.9 | 941.1 |
| D&A | 211.8 | 206.5 | 215.9 | 206.7 | 222.3 |
| SBC | 81.7 | 75.5 | 99.5 | 107.9 | 111.0 |
| Working Capital Changes | ~(178) | ~(394) | ~108 | ~178 | ~(121) |
| Operating CF | 715.9 | 411.0 | 1,069.7 | 1,235.1 | 1,154.2 |
| CapEx | (166.9) | (217.5) | (164.8) | (216.2) | (408.1) |
| Free Cash Flow | 549.0 | 193.5 | 904.9 | 1,019.0 | 746.1 |
| FCF Yield (on ~$22.5B mktcap) | 2.4% | 0.9% | 4.0% | 4.5% | 3.3% |
Adversarial Sweep Summary
| Risk Category | Finding | Severity |
|---|---|---|
| Short Seller Reports | None identified | None |
| SEC Investigation | None identified | None |
| Accounting Restatements | None in recent history | None |
| Class Action Lawsuits | No material active cases | Low |
| Supply Chain Controversy | Historical labor concerns typical for apparel; no major current actions | Low |
| Regulatory Tariff Risk | High single-digit China sourcing exposure; disclosed | Low-Medium |
| Governance Risk | Dual-class structure; founder voting control | Medium (structural, not fraud) |
| Succession Risk | Ralph Lauren age ~86-87; no explicit public succession plan | Medium |
Open Questions and Data Gaps
- Detailed breakdown of "adjustments" within FY2026 adjusted operating margin — restructuring vs. other
- Operating lease liability schedule — total future obligations
- Goodwill and intangibles balance — from historical acquisitions (Ralph Lauren Home, Club Monaco previously)
Source Index
| Source Tag | Document or URL | Section | Date | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| [S1] | Ralph Lauren 10-K FY2026 | Revenue Recognition, MD&A | 2026-05-21 | GAAP accounting policies |
| [S2] | Ralph Lauren Q4 FY2026 Press Release | GAAP/Non-GAAP Reconciliation | 2026-05-21 | Adj. operating margin 16.0% |
| [S3] | SEC EDGAR XBRL / StockAnalysis | Cash Flow, Inventory data | 2026-05-27 | FY2022-FY2026 cash flow and inventory |
| [S4] | StockAnalysis Balance Sheet | FY2026 Balance Sheet | 2026-05-27 | Net debt ~$1,001M |
| [S5] | Web search: Ralph Lauren short sellers, class actions | General news | 2026-05-27 | No material adversarial findings |
| [S6] | Supply Chain Dive | China sourcing and sustainability | 2025-2026 | High single-digit % China; labor practices context |
Recent Catalysts
source: coverage-next-full ticker: RL step: 12 title: Bull vs. Bear Analyst Debate created: 2026-05-27
Step 12 — Bull vs. Bear Analyst Debate: Ralph Lauren Corp. (RL)
Key Findings
The analyst debate on Ralph Lauren centers on a fundamental tension: does the current valuation (~25x P/E) appropriately price the quality of the brand elevation / margin expansion story, or has the re-rating already happened? Bulls argue RL is a premium branded compounder that deserves a sustained 22-28x earnings multiple given its DTC transformation, Asia optionality, and mid-teens EPS growth. Bears argue the stock has run significantly (+46% market cap in one year per StockAnalysis data), FY2026 revenue growth was partly one-time (FX, catch-up post-restructuring), and the FY2027 guidance of "mid-single-digit" constant currency suggests moderation — setting up potential multiple compression if growth decelerates.
Note: Transcript analysis was not performed (coverage-next-full path). The debate is inferred from consensus estimates, press release commentary, analyst price target range, and competitive/macro research. The following bull/bear bullets should be treated as Judgment-level, not Fact-level.
Net thesis impact: Mixed — the quality case is clear, the valuation case depends on execution continuity.
Implications for Thesis and Valuation
- The bull case is fundamentally about whether RL can sustain mid-single-digit revenue growth + 40-60 bps annual margin expansion for 3-5 more years. If yes, EPS compounds 12-18% annually and a 22-25x P/E justifies $430-500+ target prices.
- The bear case is fundamentally about valuation risk: at 25x P/E, any growth disappointment or multiple compression is painful. The stock has already re-rated significantly.
- The wide analyst price target range ($219 low – $511 high) reflects genuine disagreement about intrinsic value and execution risk, not uncertainty about near-term results.
Objective
Synthesize the bull and bear cases from filings, press releases, and consensus analysis. Identify the key contested assumptions and provide the mandated 3-bullet bull/3-bullet bear summary.
Narrative Analysis
Consensus Context
- 24 analysts covering RL as of mid-2026 [S1]
- Consensus rating: "Buy"
- Average price target: $427 (~13% upside from $377.75)
- Range: $219 – $511 (wide range reflects genuine valuation disagreement)
- FY2027 consensus revenue: $8.69B; EPS: $18.59
- FY2027 management guidance: mid-single-digit CC revenue growth + 40-60 bps margin expansion
The Bull Case
Thesis: Ralph Lauren is a premium branded compounder executing a multi-year DTC and margin expansion story that is in its mid-innings; the brand elevation strategy has structural tailwinds that make mid-teens EPS growth sustainable through FY2028.
Bull Argument 1: AUR Growth Validates Brand Elevation and Has Runway AUR growing mid-teens in FY2026 [S2] demonstrates consumers are willingly paying more for Ralph Lauren products — the brand elevation strategy is working. This is the highest-quality form of revenue growth (price over volume), implying no demand sacrifice. If AUR growth continues at even 8-10% while volumes grow 2-4%, gross margin can expand an additional 50-100 bps annually as the business mix improves. The strategic path from 14% GAAP operating margin to the 16-18% range is well-supported by the DTC model economics.
Bull Argument 2: Asia / Geographic Expansion Is a Multi-Year Secular Tailwind Asia at +31% growth (Q4 FY2026) with DTC comps +25% [S3] represents a real, secular opportunity: the global aspirational middle class is expanding fastest in Asia, and Ralph Lauren's brand resonates strongly with this cohort (heritage, quality, aspiration). Asia is only 26% of revenue — even at maturation (say, 35-40%), the incremental revenue contribution over 5-7 years is meaningful. Unlike pure China luxury plays, RL's Asia exposure includes Japan, Korea, and Southeast Asia, providing diversification.
Bull Argument 3: EPS Can Compound at 12-18% Annually Through FY2028 The combination of (a) mid-single-digit revenue growth in constant currency, (b) 40-60 bps annual margin expansion, and (c) 3-4% annual share count reduction creates a structural EPS compounding formula. From FY2026 EPS of $15.11, growing at 15% gets to ~$20.50 by FY2028 — in line with Street consensus of $20.52. At 22x forward earnings, the stock could trade at $450-$510. The $427 consensus price target looks conservative relative to this path [S1].
The Bear Case
Thesis: RL's stock has already re-rated significantly; FY2027 represents a deceleration year, and the consensus underestimates the risk of multiple compression if growth normalizes.
Bear Argument 1: FY2026 Revenue Growth Was Unsustainable and FY2027 Will Disappoint on Reported Basis FY2026's +14.6% reported growth included significant FX tailwind and catch-up from the brand elevation pivot. Management FY2027 guidance of "mid-single-digit constant currency" growth (~4-5%) translates to approximately 6-8% reported growth with favorable FX, or 3-5% reported growth if FX reverses [S4]. The Street consensus of $8.69B (+7%) assumes neutral-to-favorable FX. A USD strengthening scenario of 200-300 bps would put reported revenue closer to $8.35-8.52B — a potential miss vs. consensus. Any guidance miss on reported revenue could trigger multiple compression on a ~25x stock.
Bear Argument 2: CapEx Surge Reveals DTC Economics Are More Capital-Intensive Than the Bull Case Assumes CapEx jumped from $216M to $408M in FY2026, and management guides 4-5% of revenue going forward — implying $350-430M annually [S5]. If revenue grows at mid-single-digits and CapEx stays at 4-5% of revenue, FCF yield compresses to 3-4% of market cap — not particularly attractive at the current valuation. The DTC model was supposed to be capital-light; the reality is that premium store renovations, digital infrastructure, and urban market expansion require ongoing heavy investment. FCF of $746M in FY2026 ($750M at ~3.3% of market cap) is a weak FCF yield relative to the multiple being paid.
Bear Argument 3: Succession Risk Is Underpriced and Will Eventually Create Uncertainty Ralph Lauren at ~86-87 years old is the creative soul of a brand that bears his name. David Lauren's creative capability remains unproven at scale. The market is currently pricing in continuity — no succession discount is apparent in the 25x P/E multiple. Any succession announcement or health/activity concern from Ralph Lauren himself could trigger a significant re-rating downward. Historical precedents (Apple/Jobs to Cook transition, Donna Karan brand fate) suggest that founder-brand companies face a meaningful execution risk post-transition, even when the plan is orderly. This risk is not adequately reflected in the current valuation [S6].
Bull Case — 3 Bullets
AUR-led revenue quality: Mid-teens AUR growth [S2] confirms consumers pay premium prices willingly — this is structural price/mix improvement (not volume inflation), which drives gross margin expansion and sustains the brand elevation story with years of runway remaining.
Asia secular optionality: At only 26% of revenue and growing +31% with DTC comps +25% [S3], Asia represents a multi-year geographic growth engine powered by expanding aspirational middle-class consumers — a tailwind that does not require additional capital-intensive new brand development.
EPS compounding formula: Mid-single-digit revenue growth + 40-60 bps annual margin expansion + 3-4% annual share count reduction = 12-18% annual EPS growth through FY2028, supporting $20+ EPS by FY2028 [S1] — manageable at 22-25x forward P/E.
Bear Case — 3 Bullets
FY2027 reported-growth deceleration risk: Management guides mid-single-digit constant-currency growth [S4]; an adverse FX scenario (200-300 bps USD strengthening) could push reported revenue growth to 3-5%, potentially below consensus ($8.69B) and triggering multiple compression on a ~25x stock.
CapEx surge compresses FCF: FY2026 FCF of $746M ($11.97/share) trails EPS of $15.11 significantly [S5]; with guidance of 4-5% of revenue CapEx ongoing, free cash flow yield (~3.3%) is unattractively low for the premium multiple — the bull case demands both revenue growth AND CapEx normalization.
Succession risk is underpriced: Ralph Lauren (age ~86-87) controls brand identity; no explicit public succession plan for the creative/CCO function exists [S6]; any succession news or health event could cause a significant re-rating of a brand whose equity is literally the founder's name.
Evidence and Sources
Analyst consensus from StockAnalysis and MarketBeat; guidance from Q4 FY2026 press release; succession risk from Step 08; CapEx data from XBRL; competitor context from Step 02.
Assumption Register Updates
| ID | Step | Assumption | Type | Value | Basis | Sensitivity |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| A45 | 12 | FY2027 EPS (bull) | Estimate | $18.00-$20.00 | 15-18% EPS growth from $15.11 base | High |
| A46 | 12 | FY2027 EPS (bear) | Estimate | $16.00-$17.50 | 6-16% EPS growth, FX headwind + CapEx drag | High |
| A47 | 12 | Target P/E Multiple | Estimate | 20-25x (bull) / 15-18x (bear) | Quality premium vs. multiple compression risk | High |
Tables and Calculations
Bull vs. Bear Scorecard
| Dimension | Bull View | Bear View |
|---|---|---|
| Revenue Growth (FY2027) | +7-8% reported | +4-6% reported (FX headwind) |
| Op Margin Expansion | +60-80 bps | +20-40 bps (CapEx headwind) |
| EPS (FY2027) | $18.50-$20.00 | $16.00-$17.50 |
| P/E Target | 23-25x | 18-20x |
| Price Target | $425-$500 | $290-$340 |
| Key Pivot Variable | AUR sustainability + Asia comps | FX + CapEx normalization timing |
Analyst Consensus Summary
| Metric | Value |
|---|---|
| # Analysts | 24 |
| Consensus Rating | Buy |
| Average Price Target | $427 |
| Low Target | $219 |
| High Target | $511 |
| Current Price | ~$377.75 |
| Implied Upside (avg) | +13% |
Open Questions and Data Gaps
- Are analysts modeling constant-currency or reported revenue for FY2027? (Matters significantly for validation)
- What specific FX assumptions are embedded in the $8.69B consensus?
- Management's internal CapEx plan breakdown (growth vs. maintenance) — not public
Source Index
| Source Tag | Document or URL | Section | Date | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| [S1] | StockAnalysis + MarketBeat | Analyst consensus | 2026-05-27 | $427 avg target; $18.59 FY2027 EPS |
| [S2] | Ralph Lauren Q4 FY2026 Press Release | AUR commentary | 2026-05-21 | "Mid-teens" AUR growth; full-price selling |
| [S3] | Ralph Lauren Q4 FY2026 Press Release | Asia segment data | 2026-05-21 | Asia +31% reported; DTC comps +25% |
| [S4] | Ralph Lauren Q4 FY2026 Press Release | FY2027 guidance | 2026-05-21 | Mid-single-digit CC growth; 40-60 bps margin |
| [S5] | StockAnalysis Cash Flow | CapEx data | 2026-05-27 | $408.1M FY2026; 4-5% of revenue guided |
| [S6] | Steps 08 + 10 internal | Succession risk | 2026-05-27 | Ralph Lauren age ~86-87; no CCO succession plan |
Full Research Available
This primer covers steps 1–3 of 21. The full deep dive includes moat analysis, DCF valuation, bull/bear scenarios, management quality, earnings transcript analysis, competitive positioning, returns on capital, institutional/insider activity, and an investment memo.