Fast Retailing stock surged to a record high after the earnings upgrade, rising as much as 9.3% to 73,740 yen on Friday and briefly touching 74,220 yen.
The move made it the top performer on Japan’s Nikkei 225 index on Friday.
After delivering a stronger-than-expected second quarter, the company raised its full-year profit forecast and signalled confidence that demand in key overseas markets can keep momentum going.
The optimistic forecast came even as China remains uneven and new geopolitical risks darken the cost outlook.
The numbers were strong enough to stand out in a market that has become increasingly sensitive to any sign of softer consumer spending.
Operating profit for the three months through February rose 29.4% from a year earlier to 189.8 billion yen, comfortably ahead of the 161.6 billion yen average analyst estimate.
Fast Retailing also lifted its full-year operating profit forecast to 700 billion yen from 650 billion yen.
The upgrade puts the company on course for a fifth straight year of record earnings.
A strong quarter sends a clear message
Companies do not usually upgrade full-year guidance lightly, especially when the global backdrop is clouded by inflation worries, fragile consumer sentiment, and supply-chain volatility.
Fast Retailing’s decision suggests it sees the latest strength as more than a one-off seasonal boost.
That matters because Fast Retailing has become one of the most closely watched retail names in Asia.
Its performance is often treated as a real-world readout on consumer appetite in Japan and China, where the group has a large store base.
Even before the latest results, its Tokyo-listed shares had gained more than 18% so far in 2026, despite slipping 0.5% ahead of the earnings release.
Investors appear to be rewarding a retailer that is still managing to grow while much of the sector is fighting for consistency.
The biggest reason for that confidence is simple: Uniqlo’s growth story is no longer confined to Japan.
Fast Retailing’s international business continues to do the heavy lifting, with North America and Europe now central to the company’s expansion strategy.
The sales in those regions have been growing by roughly 30% to 50% a year since fiscal 2022.
Fast Retailing says it sees those businesses scaling much further over the medium term.
China’s softness and geopolitics keep the story complicated
Still, this is not a risk-free growth story.
China, which is Fast Retailing’s most important overseas market, remains a softer patch.
Weak consumer sentiment in the Asian country has slowed growth, leading the company to push ahead with store closures and restructuring.
Fast Retailing’s own statement was somewhat more upbeat, saying mainland China returned to revenue growth and double-digit profit growth in the first half.
But the broader message is that the market remains less dependable than it once was.
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