Hims & Hers fell 13% after reporting a first-quarter loss and issuing weak guidance, putting the focus squarely on revenue, margins and the tone of management’s outlook. For casual shareholders, the sharp drop suggests the result did more than miss on the quarter: it appears to have raised questions about how quickly the company can grow while protecting profitability.
That is often what matters most around earnings. A stock reaction like this usually reflects not just what a company reported, but whether the update changes expectations for the next few quarters. In this case, the key issue is whether softer guidance points to a more durable slowdown in growth or a period of pressure that could ease.
Revenue
Revenue is the first place to look because it helps explain whether the selloff is tied to demand, execution or a reset in expectations. When shares fall sharply after earnings, it can signal concern that future sales may not support the pace of growth shareholders had been assuming.
For Hims & Hers, the practical question is whether the latest outlook suggests weaker momentum ahead. If that view takes hold, sentiment can deteriorate quickly, especially for a company where the growth story has been central to the investment case.
Margins
Margins matter because they show whether the company is turning sales into profits efficiently. A first-quarter loss can be easier to absorb if revenue is holding up and spending is temporary. It becomes harder to overlook if lower profitability is paired with weak guidance.
That makes the next few updates important. Shareholders will want to see whether pressure on earnings is easing, stabilising or worsening, and whether management can show a clearer path to balancing growth with profitability.
The Question: Whether expectations are changing
The bigger issue now is whether this report forces a reset in expectations. After a 13% decline, the stock is telling a simple story: confidence in the near-term outlook has weakened.
What comes next will depend less on the headline loss itself than on whether guidance starts to support sentiment again. If revenue trends improve and margin pressure begins to ease, the reaction could prove temporary. If not, the selloff may reflect a broader reassessment of what the business can deliver over the next few quarters.