Pool Corp. is down 39%, but Wall Street still sees the stock at $281


  • Pool (POOL) is at $213.66, down 39% on the year, with an analyst target of $266.09 (up 25%). Leslie’s (LESL) fell 95% to $0.95 with negative equity of $489.85M.

  • Poole’s Q4 decline was driven by operating expenses that rose 6% while revenue fell, but analysts had expected a 39% decline due to expanding margins and housing returns.

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Pool Corporation (NASDAQ: Pol) as of March 6, 2026 sits at $213.66, while the average analyst price target sits at $266.09. That’s a gap of about 25% that has been bridged just to reach consensus. But zoom out and the story gets more interesting: The stock is down 39% in the past year from $351.23, and it’s now trading near its 52-week low of $210.67. The disconnect between where a stock is trading and where analysts think it belongs is hard to ignore.

Pool Corporation is the world’s largest wholesale distributor of swimming pool supplies, equipment, and outdoor living products. With 456 sales centers globally, it sits at the center of a distribution network that connects manufacturers with pool builders, contractors, and retailers. It’s not a bright business, but it’s a dominant one. And that dominance is precisely why Wall Street hasn’t given up on it even though the stock has nearly halved from its highs.

The most recent selloff accelerated after Poole Corp. reported Q4 2025 earnings on February 19, 2026. The headline numbers were bad. Adjusted diluted EPS came in at $0.84 versus the $0.98 estimate, a decrease of nearly 14%. Revenue of $982.21 million missed consensus of $999.16 million and was down 0.5% year over year.

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The deeper problem was not the top line. This was the cost structure. Operating expenses increased 6% to $243.74 million, driven by higher employee costs, technology investments, and the opening of a Greenfield sales center. This led to a 14% year-over-year operating income drop of $52.01 million. For the full year, operating cash flow fell 44.5% to $365.85 million, largely because management pre-purchased inventory ahead of anticipated price increases, sending inventory down 13% to $1.45 billion.

The arc through 2025 tells the story: Q1 lost on air, Q2 stabilized, Q3 showed real recovery with positive earnings growth, then Q4 barely recovered. A pattern of spending growing faster than income is a central concern that the market is pricing in. Add in a consumer sentiment reading of 56.4 as of January 2026, which economists classify as recessionary territory, and you understand why raising the discretionary pool remains under pressure.

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