Halfords saw its stock leap after the retailer released preliminary full-year results for FY26, with shares rising 16.1% to 209p following the announcement. The results covered a 53-week period ending April 3, 2026 and showed underlying pretax profit of £45.4 million, a 4.1% increase compared with the prior year and ahead of the analyst consensus range.
Several operational metrics underpinned the upbeat reception. Gross margin widened by 210 basis points to 52.8% - its highest level in ten years - while return on capital employed increased to 14.2%.
On the cash flow front, Halfords generated £25.3 million of free cash flow on a 52-week basis and closed the period with net cash of £11.2 million. The board proposed a final dividend of 6.0p per share, taking the total dividend for FY26 to 9.0p.
Sales trends across the group were constructive. Group like-for-like sales rose 4.8% over the year. Within that, retail like-for-like sales increased 4.1% and Autocentres delivered a 5.8% uplift. Breaking retail down further, cycling sales were up 6.4% while motoring sales climbed 2.9%.
Management described the results as an early validation of the company’s turnaround work. Executives pointed to the ongoing "Optimise" strategy and said the performance reflects the early materialisation of the "Fit for the Future" plan. By hedging major input costs, the company has reduced near-term exposure to some cost pressures, which management said has insulated the bottom line.
That hedging and the stronger-than-expected FY26 performance supported the board’s decision to back consensus estimates for FY27 underlying pretax profit in the range of £42.0 million to £48.6 million.
The update acknowledged external headwinds. Halfords warned that conflict in the Middle East had created an uncertain macroeconomic backdrop. Despite this, the company said trading in March and April remained broadly in line with expectations, and that it has covered the majority of its FY27 energy costs and foreign exchange requirements through hedging.
Market reaction to the combination of a profit beat, decade-high margins, a stronger balance sheet and explicit forward guidance was pronounced. The shares reached a new 52-week intraday high of 210p, as investors appeared to reward evidence that the operational turnaround is gaining traction even though the broader UK retail environment remains challenging.
The broader market context was also noted. In the prior session the FTSE 100 advanced about 25 points, or 0.24%, supported by robust corporate earnings, while the wider UK market continued to navigate political uncertainty following domestic leadership changes and geopolitical concerns linked to the Middle East that have weighed on consumer sentiment.
Bottom line - Halfords delivered an FY26 performance that surpassed consensus, improved margins to a decade high, and strengthened its balance sheet, while management retained measured confidence in FY27 consensus profit expectations amid ongoing macro uncertainty.