Hims & Hers Stumbles at the Open as Regulatory Damage Hits 2026 Outlook Hard

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By Jordan Chussler Published

Quick Read

  • Hims & Hers (HIMS) fell 6.6% in pre-market after Q1 2026 revenue guidance of $600M-$625M missed estimates of $653M.

  • Hims & Hers cited a $65M headwind from regulatory changes to compounded semaglutide shipping.

  • Q4 revenue grew 28% to $617.8M and beat expectations. Full-year 2025 revenue reached $2.35B.

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Hims & Hers Stumbles at the Open as Regulatory Damage Hits 2026 Outlook Hard

© 24/7 Wall St.

Shares of Hims & Hers Health (NYSE:HIMS) are trading lower this morning after yesterday’s earnings, and the reason is straightforward: guidance. Yesterday we were watching whether management could offer a credible forward path after months of regulatory damage. The answer disappointed.

Guidance Gap Overshadows the Beat

Shares fell in after-hours trading Monday and were down approximately 6.6% in pre-market trading, sitting near $14.18 ahead of the open. The earnings print itself was not the problem. Q4 revenue came in at $617.8 million, up 28% year over year. EPS of $0.08 beat the $0.05 consensus estimate. Full-year 2025 revenue reached $2.35 billion, up 59% year over year, and subscribers exceeded 2.5 million.

The problem was Q1 2026. Management guided first-quarter revenue of $600 million to $625 million, missing analyst estimates of $653 million. The company flagged a $65 million headwind from changes in how personalized weight-loss products are shipped, a direct consequence of the regulatory crackdown on compounded semaglutide that has dominated the HIMS story for weeks. Full-year 2026 guidance of $2.7 billion to $2.9 billion was roughly in line with the $2.74 billion consensus, but the soft Q1 print set a cautious tone at the open.

An infographic titled 'HIMS & HERS HEALTH (HIMS) Q4 2024 Earnings & Market Reaction' on a 24/7 Wall St. template. A large red down arrow and '-6.6% PRE-MARKET REACTION' are displayed, with text noting the stock was down approximately 48% in the past month and 52% year-to-date due to regulatory headwinds. The 'THE HEADLINE NUMBERS' section for Q4 2024 shows EPS reported at $0.11 versus expected $0.2175, marked as a 'MISS', and Revenue reported at $481.1M. It also mentions a historical pattern of 4 consecutive EPS misses in FY2025. A section titled 'WHAT STOOD OUT: THE REGULATORY COLLAPSE' features a broken chain icon and lists four points detailing the collapse of the compounded semaglutide business. 'STRENGTHS (Q3 2025 REFERENCE)' shows Revenue of $599M (+49% YoY), Subscribers of ~2.5M (+21% YoY), and Adjusted EBITDA of $78.4M (+53% YoY). 'CONCERNS (RISKS)' lists an EPS Miss for Q3 2025 ($0.06 vs $0.10 estimate), Gross Margin of 74% (down 500bps YoY), Regulatory Headwinds as the primary driver of stock decline, and Stock Performance down over 50% YTD. 'FORWARD GUIDANCE' includes Q4 2025 Outlook for Revenue ($605M-$625M) and Full Year 2025 Guidance for Revenue ($2.335B-$2.355B), noting that Q1 2026 Guidance missed analyst estimates ($600M-$625M vs $653M). The bottom line concludes that the stock decline is driven by the regulatory/legal collapse of the compounded semaglutide business, overshadowing other metrics, and states the stock was down 60% over the past year.
24/7 Wall St.
This infographic details Hims & Hers’ Q4 2024 earnings, showing a significant pre-market drop and an EPS miss, largely attributed to the regulatory and legal challenges impacting its compounded semaglutide business. The challenges continued to overshadow past financial strengths and forward guidance.

Regulatory Overhang Remains the Real Story

As we covered in recent weeks, the regulatory collapse of the compounded semaglutide business has been the defining force on this stock. The FDA resolved the semaglutide shortage and moved to restrict copycat compounded versions, Novo Nordisk filed a patent infringement suit after Hims launched and then pulled a $49 compounded Wegovy pill, and a securities fraud investigation was initiated by outside law firms. That sequence sent HIMS down nearly 48% over the past month and more than 52% year to date heading into Monday’s print.

On the earnings call, CEO Andrew Dudum struck a defiant tone, emphasizing that the majority of revenue and profitability is driven by offerings outside of weight loss. Analysts noted that while international expansion would widen the long-term opportunity, the more important component for the stock is how Hims progresses with its weight-loss business.

What to Watch From Here

The Q1 guidance miss confirms what the market has feared: the semaglutide transition is creating a real near-term revenue air pocket, not just a perception problem. Watch whether the Hers brand’s momentum, now accounting for nearly 40% of U.S. revenue, and the Eucalyptus acquisition can provide enough diversification to offset that pressure. Analyst price target revisions after this morning’s open will be the next signal worth tracking.

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About the Author Jordan Chussler →

Jordan specializes in a wealth of finance topics, ranging from traditional equities, income investment vehicles and alternative assets to retirement savings, debt-based fixed-income securities and commodities, with a specific focus on gold and other precious metals. He takes pride in combining his personal interests and professional experience in finance and education to help readers increase their financial literacy and make better investment choices. Jordan has worked in digital publishing for 17 years after graduating from Lynn University as a member of both the Kappa Delta Pi International Honor Society and the U.S. Achievement Academy's All-American Scholar Program. He is the investing and banking editor for Money and previously served as managing editor of Weiss Ratings. As a contributing writer for BetterInvesting Magazine, Jordan covered topics focused on the fundamentals of investing, technical and fundamental analysis, mutual funds, debt securities, dividend investing, retirement savings strategies and passive income generation. His bylines can be seen at Nasdaq.com, Apple News, Money, MSN, BetterInvesting Magazine, Money Crashers, TipRanks, the Miami Herald and a dozen other newspapers.

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