Stock Markets February 5, 2026

Peloton Lowers Third-Quarter Revenue Forecast as Equipment Demand Softens; Shares Dive

Company cites weak demand for bikes and treadmills amid cost cuts and price increases; quarterly results miss expectations

By Leila Farooq
Peloton Lowers Third-Quarter Revenue Forecast as Equipment Demand Softens; Shares Dive

Peloton Interactive projected third-quarter revenue below Wall Street expectations, citing continued softness in demand for its exercise equipment. The company reported a larger-than-expected quarterly loss and revenue that missed estimates, and said it has implemented workforce reductions and price increases as part of a turnaround plan. Shares tumbled roughly 25% to their weakest level in about 18 months.

Key Points

  • Peloton forecast third-quarter revenue of $605 million to $625 million, below analysts' average estimate of $638.4 million.
  • The company reported second-quarter loss of 9 cents per share and revenue of $656.5 million, both missing analysts' expectations.
  • Management has enacted cost cuts - including an 11% workforce reduction - and raised prices for equipment and subscriptions as part of a turnaround under CEO Peter Stern. Sectors impacted include consumer discretionary and the broader equities market where the stock has declined sharply.

Feb 5 - Peloton Interactive on Thursday set a third-quarter revenue range that fell short of analysts' consensus, pointing to lackluster consumer demand for its at-home exercise machines.

The New York-based maker of stationary bikes and treadmills forecast revenue for the third quarter between $605 million and $625 million. That guidance is below the analysts' average estimate of $638.4 million, based on data compiled by LSEG.

Peloton has continued to see softer sales of its hardware even as it pursues cost reductions. In January the company cut about 11% of its workforce, part of a broader turnaround effort under CEO Peter Stern. Since taking the helm, Stern has reorganized the product lineup and implemented price increases for both equipment and subscriptions.

For the quarter ended December 31, Peloton reported revenue of $656.5 million, which missed analysts' expectations of $674.3 million. The company also reported a wider-than-expected loss per share for the second quarter, at a loss of 9 cents per share compared with analysts' expectations for a 6-cent loss.

Investors reacted sharply to the outlook and results, sending Peloton's shares down about 25% to their lowest level in roughly a year and a half. The stock had fallen 29.2% in 2025 and was down 25.8% so far in 2026 including the most recent session losses.

Peloton's update comes as demand for discretionary goods remains pressured. The company and observers point to persistently elevated prices affecting U.S. consumers; data showed consumer confidence fell to its lowest level in more than 11-1/2 years in January. The company specifically linked softer equipment sales to this environment while also emphasizing its internal actions to reduce costs and adjust pricing.


Context and company actions

  • Leadership under CEO Peter Stern has focused on reshaping the product lineup and raising prices for hardware and subscriptions as part of a turnaround strategy.
  • Cost-cutting steps included an 11% reduction in workforce announced in January.
  • Quarterly performance showed revenue and earnings results that missed analyst expectations for the period ended December 31.

The company faces the near-term challenge of aligning sales with its revised pricing and cost structure while demand for nonessential items remains under strain.

Risks

  • Weaker-than-expected consumer demand for discretionary fitness equipment could continue to pressure Peloton's revenue and margins, affecting the consumer discretionary sector.
  • Persistently high consumer prices and low consumer confidence may reduce spending on nonessential items, creating uncertainty for companies reliant on retail and subscription sales.
  • Failure to achieve sufficient sales under the company's revised pricing and product strategy could prolong operating losses and keep downward pressure on Peloton's stock performance, impacting equity investors.

More from Stock Markets

Anthropic unveils upgraded Claude Opus 4.6 as software stocks see selling pressure Feb 5, 2026 Boeing and Airbus Shares Tick Up as Saudia Holds Early Talks on Potential Mega-Order Feb 5, 2026 Lesotho's Garment Sector Breathes a Sigh of Relief After Short Extension of U.S. Duty-Free Access Feb 5, 2026 Waymo Returns to Boston, Launches Learning Phase in Sacramento as It Scales Autonomous Fleet Feb 5, 2026 U.K. equities end lower as mining, metals and banking names drag index down Feb 5, 2026