On April 28, Sysco reported quarterly sales that fell short of analysts' expectations, a result the company attributed to softer restaurant demand for packaged food. Shares moved about 3% lower in early trading following the results.
For the quarter ended March 28, Sysco reported sales of $20.52 billion, underperforming the average analyst estimate of $20.57 billion compiled by LSEG. Despite the revenue miss, the distributor reaffirmed its full-year 2026 adjusted earnings per share outlook at the high end of its prior range of $4.50 to $4.60.
Operational metrics showed mixed trends across Sysco's U.S. foodservice business. Local U.S. Foodservice volumes increased 3.3%, while total U.S. Foodservice volumes rose 2.3% for the quarter. Sysco posted adjusted earnings per share of $0.94, which matched analysts' expectations.
Gross margin improved by 31 basis points to 18.6% in the period. The company attributed the margin expansion to volume growth, sourcing efficiencies and pricing actions. Those gains occurred even as product cost inflation ran at 2.8%, concentrated mainly in dairy, meat and seafood categories, according to the company.
Management flagged that higher costs and incentive compensation continued to squeeze margins as consumers became more price-conscious and reduced dining-out frequency. In response to ongoing industry dynamics, Sysco announced in March a major strategic move - a $29 billion agreement to acquire catering supplier Jetro Restaurant Depot, aimed at increasing reach among price-sensitive independent restaurants.
The quarter's results reflect a combination of operational offsets: volume gains and sourcing benefits helped lift gross margins, while product cost inflation and compensation-related expenses created margin headwinds. The company's ability to hold its full-year adjusted EPS guidance underscores management's confidence in meeting its profitability target, even amid a sales shortfall for the quarter.
Financial highlights
- Quarterly sales: $20.52 billion (est. $20.57 billion by LSEG)
- Adjusted EPS: $0.94 (in line with expectations)
- Gross margin: 18.6%, up 31 basis points
- Product cost inflation: 2.8% (mainly dairy, meat and seafood)
- Volume trends: Local U.S. Foodservice +3.3%; Total U.S. Foodservice +2.3%
- Strategic transaction: March agreement to acquire Jetro Restaurant Depot for $29 billion
Investors will likely watch subsequent quarterly trends in foodservice volumes, product cost inflation and incentive compensation levels to gauge how sustained consumer shifts in dining behavior affect Sysco's top-line growth and margin trajectory. For now, the company is navigating competing forces of modest margin improvement from operational actions and upward pressure from costs.