Kroger stock slid 3.7% in pre-open trading after the company released its fiscal first-quarter 2026 results ahead of the market open. The report offered a mix of outcomes: adjusted earnings per share of $1.58 and a 19% rise in adjusted eCommerce sales, alongside adjusted FIFO operating profit of $1,544 million. Yet the company's comparable-store performance raised red flags for investors.
Sales slowdown
Identical sales excluding fuel increased by just 1.0%, a notable deceleration from the 3.2% gain recorded in the same quarter a year earlier. That step down in underlying sales growth left traders and money managers questioning whether Kroger's turnaround has sufficient momentum to drive stronger near-term results.
Price cuts and margin concerns
A core element of CEO Greg Foran's strategy is a price-investment move to reduce prices on thousands of items to recapture market share from competitors such as Walmart, Costco, and Aldi. While lower prices could attract more shoppers over time, investors have expressed concern that this tactic risks compressing already thin grocery margins, a trade-off that could blunt earnings expansion in the near term.
Analyst and institutional activity
Ahead of the quarter, JPMorgan analyst Thomas Palmer trimmed his price target on Kroger to $70 from $72 but maintained a Neutral rating on the shares. On the institutional side, Caisse de Depot et Placement du Quebec substantially reduced its Kroger holding in Q1 2026, removing 1,783,550 shares - a decline of 96.4% from its prior position.
Market context amplified the reaction
The broader market backdrop offered little support. Investor sentiment was unsettled after the Federal Reserve left policy rates unchanged but released a more hawkish-than-expected median dot plot. The Fed's median projection now shows the benchmark rate ending 2026 at 3.8%, up from 3.4% in March, which implies that at least one additional rate increase could be possible. Treasury yields jumped in response, with the two-year Treasury yield moving above 4.2%, putting pressure on equity valuations.
Equity indices reflected the risk-off tone. The S&P 500 dropped 1.2% in the prior session, while the Dow Jones and Nasdaq also fell, creating a cautious market environment as Kroger reported results.
Headline beat but not enough
Although Kroger posted a headline revenue beat, the combination of slowing comparable-store sales, worries about margin compression tied to the retailer's price-investment strategy, a cautious analyst community, and a hawkish Fed outlook weighed on investor sentiment. In the company's earnings release, CEO Foran said the firm is "pleased with our first quarter results, but we know there is more work to do," and described Kroger as "building a culture that is never satisfied, with a constant focus on serving our customers better."
With Kroger's stock already trading near its 52-week low of $58.60, the pre-market move reflected skepticism that current initiatives will quickly translate into sustained earnings acceleration.
Key data points (as reported)
- Pre-market share move: -3.7%
- Adjusted EPS: $1.58
- Adjusted eCommerce sales growth: 19%
- Adjusted FIFO operating profit: $1,544 million
- Identical sales excluding fuel: +1.0% (vs +3.2% year earlier)
- JPMorgan price target: lowered to $70 from $72; rating Neutral
- Caisse de Depot et Placement du Quebec: sold 1,783,550 shares, a 96.4% reduction in Q1 2026
- Fed median year-end 2026 rate projection: 3.8% (up from 3.4% in March)
- Two-year Treasury yield: climbed above 4.2%
- S&P 500 prior session: -1.2% (Dow Jones and Nasdaq also declined)