The inflection investors waited a year for arrived Tuesday after the close. Starbucks (NASDAQ:SBUX | SBUX Price Prediction) delivered a Q2 FY2026 beat that finally gave CEO Brian Niccol’s “Back to Starbucks” turnaround the financial proof points it needed, and the market responded immediately. Shares jumped 9% on April 29 to $105.57, capping a 12% one-month run.
The Quarter That Confirmed the Turn
Adjusted EPS came in at 50 cents versus a 44-cent consensus, good for a 14% upside surprise. Revenue rose 9% year over year to $9.53 billion, beating estimates by 3%. Operating income climbed 38% to $828.1 million and net income expanded 33%.
Niccol was direct: “Our second quarter marked the turn in our turnaround as our Back to Starbucks plan drove both top and bottom line growth.”
Niccol’s Fingerprints on the Comp Line
The single number that defines this quarter is global comparable store sales of +6%, built on 4% transaction growth and a 2% ticket lift. North America did even better at +7% on 4% transaction growth. That is the cleanest signal a coffee chain can produce: more people walking in, more often.
Trace the arc. Q3 FY25 global comps were -2%. Q4 FY25 turned positive for the first time in seven quarters. Q1 FY26 hit +4%. Now +6%. The acceleration maps directly to Niccol’s playbook: improved staffing and service execution, a reimagined three-tier Starbucks Rewards program (Green, Gold, Reserve), a new hourly partner incentive plan, and the closed Boyu Capital JV for China retail, where Boyu now holds 60%.
Channel Development revenue surged 39%, and international operating margin expanded to 19% from 12%.
Guidance Raised, Risks Acknowledged
Management lifted the full-year bar. Global and U.S. comps are now guided to 5% or greater, up from 3% prior. Non-GAAP EPS guidance moved to $2.25 to $2.45, with 600 to 650 net new coffeehouses globally.
Risks remain real. North America operating margin contracted 170 basis points on labor investment, mix, tariffs, and elevated coffee pricing. China comps were just +1% with ticket down 2%. Shareholders’ equity sits at -$8.46 billion, and the P/E of 82 bakes in considerable execution.
What to Watch Next
Analyst consensus sits at $101.41 with 16 buys against 4 sells. Macro tailwinds help: BEA food services spending reached $1,523.2 billion in February 2026, up from $1,454.1 billion a year earlier. The next test: whether Niccol can hold the comp line while reinvesting in labor without surrendering North America margin. The 64th consecutive dividend of 62 cents, which is payable on May 29, suggests the board believes he can.