--- title: "RH Bets Big On Luxury Despite Margin Squeeze" type: "News" locale: "en" url: "https://longbridge.com/en/news/289651677.md" description: "RH reported a Q1 earnings beat with $800.3M revenue and raised FY26 guidance, targeting 4.5%-8% revenue growth and 14.2%-16% EBITDA margins. Management highlighted strategic expansion into luxury via RH Estates and new galleries but warned of near-term margin pressure from international startup costs, high build expenses, and soft housing markets. The company aims to be debt-free by 2029 through asset sales while navigating tariff impacts and backlog delays." datetime: "2026-06-13T00:02:54.000Z" locales: - [zh-CN](https://longbridge.com/zh-CN/news/289651677.md) - [en](https://longbridge.com/en/news/289651677.md) - [zh-HK](https://longbridge.com/zh-HK/news/289651677.md) --- # RH Bets Big On Luxury Despite Margin Squeeze Rh ((RH)) has held its Q1 earnings call. Read on for the main highlights of the call. ### Introducing TipRanks MCP for Agents - Deliver institutional-grade market data directly into Claude, ChatGPT, Cursor, and other MCP-compatible AI tools. - Designed for personal research, portfolio monitoring, and AI-assisted investment workflows. RH’s latest earnings call balanced optimism with caution as management paired a clear operating beat and a higher multi‑year outlook with blunt warnings on near‑term margin pressure. Executives leaned into the company’s long‑term potential in luxury home furnishings and new concepts, but acknowledged that international start‑up costs, a soft housing market, and elevated backorders will weigh on results in the coming quarters. ## Q1 Beat Signals Operational Resilience RH opened the year with a stronger‑than‑expected performance, reporting first‑quarter revenue of $800.3 million and an adjusted EBITDA margin of 7.1%. Both metrics landed above the high end of the company’s own guidance, giving investors evidence that the business can execute despite a difficult macro backdrop. ## Raised FY26 Targets Despite Margin Drags On the call, management raised fiscal 2026 guidance to revenue growth of 4.5%–8.0%, an adjusted EBITDA margin of 14.2%–16.0%, and adjusted free cash flow of $300 million to $400 million. Notably, these targets already bake in a roughly 270‑basis‑point EBITDA headwind from international pre‑opening and start‑up costs, suggesting confidence in the underlying earnings power. ## RH Estates and Global Galleries Aim Upmarket A major strategic highlight was the launch of RH Estates, centered on bespoke furniture and RH Couture upholstery, alongside new galleries in Madrid and Milan and an upcoming London opening. Management expects Estates to add about 500 basis points, or roughly $100 million, to second‑half revenue and to significantly expand RH’s reach in the high‑end luxury segment. ## Blueprint for Second‑Half Growth Acceleration To bridge from roughly flat first‑half results to about 12% growth in the second half, RH laid out a detailed three‑part plan. The company is counting on 4.5 percentage points of growth from reducing its backlog, 2.5 points from new store openings, and about 5 points from RH Estates and other new concepts. ## Defensive Moat in IP and Exclusive Product Mix Management highlighted that 65%–80% of the RH Estates assortment is covered by patent pendings or other protections, reinforcing the brand’s differentiation. Recent acquisitions such as Dmitriy & Co. and Joseph Jeup, along with exclusive sourcing, are designed to give RH a unique high‑end offering that rivals cannot easily copy or access. ## Deleveraging and Asset Sales to Strengthen Balance Sheet The company reiterated that reducing leverage remains a core priority, with a stated goal of being debt‑free by 2029. RH plans to support this by monetizing assets, targeting roughly $200 million to $250 million of asset sales annually over the next two years, and has consolidated 100% ownership of eight Aspen properties to speed that process. ## Backorders and Tariff Fallout Cloud Near Term Backorder and special‑order balances are running about $75 million higher than a year ago, equating to roughly 4.5% of revenue and tying up demand in the pipeline. The increase stems largely from tariff‑driven resourcing and logistics shifts, and management stressed that its outlook does not rely on any additional tariff‑related refunds. ## International Start‑Up Costs Hammer Margins The company was explicit that international and new‑gallery pre‑opening costs are a serious short‑term drag on profitability. These expenses shaved about 450 basis points off Q1 adjusted EBITDA, are expected to hit Q2 margins by roughly 380 basis points, and represent an estimated 270‑basis‑point drag for the full fiscal 2026 year. ## Macro and Housing Weakness Weigh on Demand Executives pointed to a challenging macro environment and soft housing markets, noting the U.K. may be under even more pressure than the U.S. They warned that a recovery in housing‑linked demand may not materialize this year, which could limit near‑term sales even as RH rolls out new concepts and stores. ## High Build Costs Delay Payoff from Investments RH also acknowledged that post‑COVID construction inflation has driven project costs well above initial expectations, especially for international and flagship locations. These higher‑than‑planned capital outlays hit at a time of weaker demand, extending the timeline for achieving full operating leverage from past investments. ## Execution Missteps and One‑Time Frictions Some performance headwinds stem from internal timing and execution issues, including later‑than‑planned marketing and catalog drops and supply chain delays tied to resourcing and transportation. Management also conceded that the timing of past share repurchases looks less than ideal in hindsight, given the subsequent rise in interest rates. ## Guidance Signals Cautious Optimism Looking ahead, RH guided Q2 revenue growth to a modest 0.5%–2.5% with adjusted EBITDA margins of 11.5%–13%, still burdened by roughly 380 basis points of pre‑opening costs. For the full fiscal 2026 year, the company is targeting 4.5%–8% revenue growth and 14.2%–16% margins, banking on backlog conversion, new stores, RH Estates, steady asset sales, and ongoing deleveraging to drive a second‑half rebound. The call painted a picture of a company willing to endure short‑term pain for long‑term positioning, with heavy investment in global flagships and differentiated product driving both risk and potential reward. For investors, the key questions now are whether RH can execute its backlog‑driven H2 acceleration and manage cost pressures while the housing market remains soft, and whether the Estates concept proves as powerful as management expects. ### Related Stocks - [RH.US](https://longbridge.com/en/quote/RH.US.md) ## Related News & Research - [Logan Capital Management Inc. Buys 17,516 Shares of RH $RH](https://longbridge.com/en/news/289581071.md) - [RH: Hold Rating Maintained as Back-Half Growth Dependence and Execution Risks Balance Fair Valuation](https://longbridge.com/en/news/289571132.md) - [These Analysts Increase Their Forecasts On RH Following Better-Than-Expected Q1 Earnings](https://longbridge.com/en/news/289623687.md) - [RH (NYSE:RH) Announces Earnings Results](https://longbridge.com/en/news/289510964.md) - [Rh - Q1 GAAP Net Revenues Decrease 1.7% To $800.3 Million - SEC Filing](https://longbridge.com/en/news/289511426.md)