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Chris Markoch

Frozen Out: Lamb Weston Beats Earnings, but the Stock Still Slides

Lamb Weston (NYSE: LW), the king of frozen potatoes for both residential and commercial markets, scored a double beat in its Q3 FY2026 earnings report on April 1.

But investors continue to freeze out LW stock, which is down over 8% in 2026 so far. The chart, however, shows that much of the bad news is already priced in—and this could make LW stock an attractive asymmetric opportunity.

The company reported quarterly revenue of $1.56 billion, beating estimates of $1.49 billion and higher than the $1.52 billion it posted in Q3 FY2025.

Adjusted earnings per share (EPS) also came in higher than expectations. Analysts were expecting an EPS of 63 cents, but Lamb Weston delivered 72 cents. However, that number was significantly lower year over year. In Q3 FY2025, the company delivered adjusted EPS of $1.10, underscoring a theme investors have been watching for several quarters.

Right Strategy, Wrong Timing

The core problem that investors are wrestling with is that Lamb Weston’s results show the same problem. That is, the company continues to increase sales, even in a challenging macroenvironment. But it continues to see lower earnings.

Management attributed the quarter’s margin pressure to dynamics such as industry supply, factory utilization, and softer demand in certain markets. Some of those factors are beyond the company's control, but this problem surfaced in 2023 when the company began an aggressive international expansion. And aggressive growth comes with its own challenges.

In the case of Lamb Weston, those challenges have been exacerbated by a slowdown in restaurant traffic in many key international markets, which has compounded the pressure on earnings.

The company’s response, partially due to pressure from an activist investor, is its Focus to Win initiative that began at the start of Lamb Weston’s 2026 fiscal year. The company also set an aggressive cost savings goal of $250 million, which it said is on track to be surpassed in the fiscal year.

What the Results Don’t Show

The post-earnings reaction appears tied to the company’s outlook for continued operating-margin pressure. That’s a real concern and one that it may not have much control over.

The combination of low single-digit revenue growth and negative earnings growth isn’t ideal. However, in a difficult market, growth is growth. Sales, at least in North America, continue to grind higher.

That runs counter to the idea that consumers are turning away from the company’s processed foods at home or when dining out.  It’s also worth noting that Lamb Weston supplies McDonald’s (NYSE: MCD), which is also bucking trends.

Lower Input Costs May Help Build Cash

One underappreciated tailwind is what's happening at the farm level.

Lamb Weston's management noted that North American potato crop contract prices for 2026 are expected to decline by a low-to-mid single-digit percentage, while European contracted raw potato costs could fall by a mid-teen percentage point compared to 2025.

Lower input costs flowing through in fiscal 2027 could be a meaningful catalyst for margin recovery, particularly if North American volume momentum holds. Add in $339 million in year-to-date free cash flow and a capital expenditure budget that's been cut by $100 million, and the financial discipline story starts to look more credible than the stock price currently reflects.

LW Stock Now Looks Like a Deep Value

Having said that, the LW stock chart isn’t pretty, but it does offer hope for patient, value-oriented investors. To begin with, the stock also sold off sharply after its December 2025 earnings report—but that appeared to be a panic-driven event. The impact of which can be that it shakes out a lot of sellers.

Since then, the stock has had its ups and downs, but the swings have been milder. The post-earnings drop isn’t ideal, but with the stock at levels not seen since 2017, a value thesis could be forming.

Analysts aren’t exactly bullish, but the Lamb Weston analyst forecasts on MarketBeat have a consensus price target of $51.50, representing an upside of 31.5%. That goes along with a dividend that has increased for nine consecutive years and yields 3.9%.

It’s also constructive to look at the company’s fundamentals.

By most conventional ratios (price-to-earnings, price-to-sales, price-to-book), Lamb Weston is undervalued compared to its historical averages. It’s also trading at a discount to the broader consumer staples sector.

This is the kind of setup where a long-term investor might see asymmetric risk/reward.

The bad news is largely priced in; the question is just how long the international drag persists.

That’s not an easy question to answer, and investors won’t find the answer in the chart.

But with a dividend that pays them to hold the stock, Lamb Weston may be an attractive option for upside in the second half of the year.

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The article "Frozen Out: Lamb Weston Beats Earnings, but the Stock Still Slides" first appeared on MarketBeat.

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