Summary
Deckers is coming off a Q3 FY26 beat with record revenue and raised full-year guidance, yet shares still trade near multi-year valuation lows.
HOKA and UGG are both growing double digits simultaneously.
Forward P/E near 16x is roughly half DECK’s 3-year average, with buybacks now meaningfully accretive.
Tariffs and consumer-spending fears are already reflected in the price; Q3 proved management can navigate both without sacrificing growth.
had one of the ugliest consumer stock declines of 2025, with a drawdown of more than 60% during the year. That now sets up DECK to re-emerge as one of the more compelling risk/reward setups in the retail sector.
I’ll be up front. The bear case is still weighing heavily on the stock. There’s tariff pressure, an exhausted U.S. consumer, and brand fatigue. The good news is that this has all been tested in real time and we’ll be taking a closer look today.
But it is the Q3 FY26 earnings report from January that basically shut down each point. The company posted record revenue, record profits, and even raised full-year guidance.Shares are currently trading at 16x forward earnings on a business that is still showing solid growth.
That’s the backbone of the bull case we’ll explore.
If you see DECK as a fundamentally strong franchise, but currently mispriced, you’ll want to pay attention to the details today.
From Worst Performer to Setup of the Year
DECK was among the worst-performing consumer names of 2025, declining over 50% in 90 days at the start of the year, and dropping over 60% at the max drawdown. The initial drop came on the heels of tariff anxiety and fears that the post-pandemic footwear boom had peaked.
With no recovery showing up during the rest of the year, we still have the opportunity to grab the stock that was once trading at a multiple north of 30x just a couple of years ago, trading around the mid-teens today. These are valuation levels that have not been seen in DECK since before HOKA became a billion-dollar franchise – and that was back in 2022.
The Q3 FY26 Print: A Clean Beat
The Q3 earnings release was beyond impressive:
Revenue: $1.96 billion, up 7% year over year, with strength across both owned brands and channels.
Normalized EPS: $3.33, beating consensus by $0.56.
As a result of the favorable results, the company went on to raise full-year FY26 EPS guidance to $6.80–$6.85, from the prior range of $6.30-$6.39.
This led to an initial surge in the stock of roughly 15%, as investor hype followed the record-setting results. However, shares didn’t go much higher from there and are currently trading below the highs posted in January. Which brings us to the heart of the story – HOKA and UGG.
The Dual-Engine Flywheel: HOKA + UGG
Most footwear stories are single-brands. Deckers is fortunate to run two growth engines at once, and both are producing.
HOKA remains arguably the best growth asset in performance footwear, continuing to take share from legacy brands. UGG has long been dismissed by bears as a seasonal accessory brand. But they are posting double-digit growth alongside HOKA.
This dual engine powering Deckers stock is what investors are going to be banking on for the stock to climb from here.
Having two growth drivers diversifies the top line and reduces the risk that a single trend reversal derails the story. Plus, it allows Deckers to invest in expansion with a focus on improving operating income rather than coming across as stretching its business thin.
Whether you buy the growth engine, it’s hard to deny that the math is what reveals the value in Deckers today.
Valuation: Simple Math Reveals Value
I love when we see simple math like this that makes the value picture clear as day.
We have a business that is still growing revenue in the high single digits and EPS in the double digits. Yet, DECK is trading at roughly half its historical multiple.
The simple math is when you apply a low-end historical multiple to the low-end of guidance to understand the value at hand. We’ll apply a 22x forward earnings (based on historical multiples) to the low end of the FY26 guide, which gives us an implied price at roughly $150 per share.
Shares currently trade around $110.
That is 36% in upside without assuming any operational improvement beyond what has already been included in 2026 guidance.
Why the Bear Case Is Already Priced In
That’s the bull case. The bear case is a common argument directed towards Deckers: tariffs, consumers, and competition. Let’s break these down.
Yes, tariffs initially led to compressed margins. But Q3 FY26 already absorbed tariff headwinds, and Deckers still beat consensus by $0.56 while raising guidance.
Then there’s the argument the consumer is outright exhausted. That may be true, for the consumer as a whole, but we saw HOKA and UGG grow double digits in the same quarter. This doesn’t suggest their consumers are exhausted and shows demand for their brands holding up well.
As for the competition, Deckers has always battled Nike, On, Brooks, and others. It’s always been an industry with stiff competition and it is a valid bear case. However, HOKA continues to take share, and the strong Q3 beat was delivered into that competitive environment.
Risks Worth Monitoring
Before we wrap up, no bull outlook, or bear outlook for that matter, is without risks.
And today I have three risks that you need to monitor as some of the potential shortfalls Deckers could face:
A truly exhausted U.S. consumer that pressures UGG’s holiday cycle, which remains a meaningful contributor to annual profitability.
HOKA growth normalization toward mid-single digits rather than the low-double-digit growth currently embedded in sell-side models.
Tariff escalation beyond what Q3 guidance absorbed, which would pressure the gross margin and the raised FY26 EPS range.
To me, none of these invalidate the bull opportunity here, but each is a legitimate reason the multiple may not rerate as quick as some would like.
Bottom Line
Deckers is being priced for a broken growth story since early 2025. Meanwhile the company is actively delivering a true growth story, coming off a record quarter. We have two premium brands that are hitting growth in stride, showing strong pricing power that is set to eventually sway investor sentiment from skeptical, to constructive.
For long-term holders willing to accept the volatility that comes with retail stocks, at roughly 16x forward earnings this is one of the most attractive entry points DECK has offered in years.
Written by, Chad Shoop, CMTSigmanomics.com





















