Sonos Q2 Earnings Call: Growth Returns Amid Margin Squeeze
Sonos Inc ((SONO)) has held its Q2 earnings call. Read on for the main highlights of the call.
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Sonos’ latest earnings call struck a cautiously upbeat tone, as management pointed to renewed revenue growth, rising gross profit, and a return to positive adjusted EBITDA. At the same time, executives warned that surging memory costs and uncertain tariff refunds will weigh on margins, tempering what otherwise looks like solid operational momentum.
Revenue Growth and Return to Top-Line Expansion
Sonos’ Q2 revenue climbed about 8% year over year to $282 million, landing near the top end of guidance and marking a return to top-line expansion. First half revenue grew 2%, and Q3 guidance of $355 million to $375 million implies roughly 6% growth at the midpoint, signaling sequential acceleration into the back half.
Gross Profit and Margin Strength
Gross profit continued to improve, with GAAP gross profit up 10% to $125 million and non-GAAP gross profit up 6% to $130 million. That translated into a healthy Q2 GAAP gross margin of 44.3% and a non-GAAP gross margin of 46%, underscoring the underlying strength of the business despite emerging cost headwinds.
Profitability Progress and Earnings Metrics
Sonos returned to positive adjusted EBITDA, posting $2 million in Q2, a $3 million improvement from a $1 million loss a year ago and a 48% increase on a reported basis. The adjusted EBITDA margin expanded by roughly 510 basis points, while non-GAAP EPS improved sharply to a small loss of $0.02 versus a $0.18 loss in the prior year period.
Regional Performance and Product Demand
Growth was broad-based but strongest outside the Americas, with APAC revenue up 25% year over year and EMEA up 21%, while the Americas rose a modest 2%. Demand remained robust for key products like the Era 100 and Arc Ultra, and new launches such as Sonos Play and Aero 100 SL enjoyed positive early reception from customers and reviewers.
Balance Sheet Strength, Buybacks and Liquidity
The company closed the quarter with a net cash balance of $249 million, including $40 million of marketable securities, providing a solid liquidity cushion. Sonos also returned capital to shareholders, repurchasing $40 million of stock, or roughly 2.5 million shares, reducing the share count by about 2.1% with $65 million still authorized for future buybacks.
Strategic Product Pipeline and Organizational Momentum
Sonos emphasized its product roadmap, highlighting the strong global press response to Sonos Play and the Aero 100 SL, priced at $189 to broaden entry into the ecosystem, with the AMP Multi slated for a fall debut. The company also added Frank Barbieri as chief operating officer to consolidate key commercial and digital functions, and management underscored growing use of AI across internal operations.
Memory Cost Inflation Pressuring Margins
The biggest near-term risk comes from rising memory prices, which shaved about 200 basis points off Q2 gross margin and are expected to create an approximately 400 basis point year-over-year headwind in Q3. Management warned that memory inflation should intensify into Q4, posing ongoing pressure on full-year profitability and dampening the margin outlook into next year.
Tariff Uncertainty and Gross Margin Outlook
Sonos guided Q3 GAAP gross margin to a range of 42% to 44.5%, with non-GAAP roughly 150 basis points higher, incorporating both memory inflation and tariff-related uncertainty. While a tariff refund of up to about $40 million could eventually provide a meaningful benefit, the company is not assuming any of that upside in Q3 due to uncertain timing, leaving margins more exposed in the near term.
Negative Free Cash Flow and Seasonal Cash Use
Free cash flow was negative $70 million in Q2, which management framed as consistent with the company’s typical seasonal pattern of cash use in the second quarter. Even so, investors will watch whether Sonos can translate its improving earnings profile into more durable, positive free cash flow as the year progresses.
Rising Inventory Levels and Working Capital
Inventory ended the quarter at $161 million, up 16% year over year and composed of $144 million in finished goods and $17 million in components. Management tied the increase to new product launches and tariff-related costs, suggesting a deliberate build ahead of demand but also signaling more cash tied up in working capital.
Operating Expenses and Limited Near-Term Leverage
Non-GAAP operating expenses came in at $137 million, roughly flat versus last year and only slightly below the midpoint of guidance, indicating limited near-term leverage on the cost base. While GAAP operating expenses declined, the non-GAAP figures show that even as revenue improves, operating cost efficiencies remain a gradual, not immediate, driver of margin expansion.
AI Ambitions but Unclear Monetization Path
Leadership repeatedly highlighted AI as a major strategic opportunity for Sonos, both in enhancing products and improving internal operations and customer engagement. However, management declined to detail specific AI-driven products or revenue models, leaving the timing and scale of any AI-related monetization a longer-term, rather than near-term, investment thesis.
Guidance and Forward-Looking Outlook
For Q3, Sonos guided revenue to $355 million to $375 million, up 3% to 9% year over year with negligible currency impact and no contribution from AMP Multi. The company expects GAAP gross margin between 42% and 44.5%, GAAP operating expenses of $150 million to $160 million, and adjusted EBITDA of $20 million to $48 million, while cautioning that memory inflation should leave 2026 margins below 2025 levels even as it targets a stronger second half.
Sonos’ earnings call painted a picture of a company regaining growth momentum and sharpening its product edge but facing real cost and margin pressures that investors cannot ignore. With healthy cash, ongoing buybacks, and a promising pipeline offset by memory inflation, tariff uncertainty, and limited AI visibility, the stock’s appeal hinges on management executing through these headwinds while converting top-line gains into sustainable cash generation.
