Down 60% with a 6% yield and P/E of 13x – are Accent shares a generational bargain?

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It is fair to say that Accent Group Ltd (ASX: AX1) shares have had a brutal run.

The footwear and apparel retailer is now trading at just 93 cents, down 62% from its 52-week high of $2.46, and sentiment around the footwear retailer could hardly be worse.

But when a profitable, cash-generative business falls this far, the key question for investors becomes simple. Is this a value trap or a rare long-term buying opportunity hiding in plain sight?

What went wrong?

The company disappointed the market with a FY 2026 trading update last month that came in well below expectations.

For the first 20 weeks of the financial year, Accent reported group-owned sales tracking well below the market’s estimates. It also revealed that its gross margin had fallen 160 basis points year to date.

Management blamed this on challenging retail market conditions, including ongoing promotional activity.

As a result, its FY 2026 EBIT guidance was cut to between $85 million and $95 million, which was around 23% below market expectations at the time according to a note out of Bell Potter.

Attractive dividend yield

Despite its earnings downgrade, Accent remains profitable and cash generative.

Bell Potter is forecasting fully franked dividends of 5.3 cents per share in FY 2026, rising to 7 cents per share in FY 2027, and then 8.1 cents per share in FY 2028.

At today’s share price, this represents attractive dividend yields of 5.7%, 7.5%, and 8.7%, respectively.

For patient income investors, that kind of yield from a national retail leader is hard to ignore.

Cheap valuation

On Bell Potter’s numbers, Accent is trading on an FY 2026 price to earnings (P/E) ratio of roughly 13x. It then falls close to 10x on FY 2027 forecasts.

That multiple clearly reflects low confidence in near-term earnings, but it also assumes little value from any recovery in consumer spending or margin normalisation.

It also doesn’t appear to place much value on the roll out of the Sports Direct brand in Australia.

Accent has begun its roll out Sports Direct stores in Australia in partnership with Frasers Group, with the first store opening in November and at least three more planned in FY 2026.

Bell Potter notes a six-year target of around 50 stores, positioning Accent to increase exposure to a more resilient sportswear category.

While this initiative is unlikely to move the needle immediately, if executed well, it could reshape the earnings profile of the business over the next decade.

All in all, I think this could be a great time to make a patient investment in Accent shares while they are down in the dumps.

The post Down 60% with a 6% yield and P/E of 13x – are Accent shares a generational bargain? appeared first on The Motley Fool Australia.

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Motley Fool contributor James Mickleboro has positions in Accent Group. The Motley Fool Australia’s parent company Motley Fool Holdings Inc. has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool Australia has recommended Accent Group. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy. This article contains general investment advice only (under AFSL 400691). Authorised by Scott Phillips.

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