Company Overview

Darden Restaurants doesn’t generate the kind of breathless coverage that AI chip stocks or cloud platforms attract. It runs Olive Garden, LongHorn Steakhouse, Ruth’s Chris Steak House, Yard House, and Chuy’s Tex-Mex — full-service restaurants serving millions of Americans every week. It’s the kind of business that gets ignored during bull markets and rediscovered during uncertainty. And right now, the setup is more interesting than most investors realize.

Darden reports Q4 FY2026 and full-year results before the open on Thursday, June 25 — six days away — creating a clean pre-earnings window. The backdrop is constructive: Darden raised its full-year FY2026 revenue growth forecast for the second consecutive quarter in Q3, lifting it to +9.5% from the prior +8.5–9.3%, and increased comparable sales guidance to +4.5% from +3.5–4.3%. The updated Q4 outlook implied comparable sales growth of +3.5–5% — which, if delivered, would represent one of the strongest consumer spending signals in casual dining in two years. The stock closed at $204 recently, sitting nearly 10% below its 52-week high of $228.27, despite an underlying business that has delivered seven consecutive quarters of double-digit e-commerce growth in its Olive Garden digital ordering business and consistent same-restaurant sales acceleration. In a week when the market is absorbing semiconductor volatility and waiting for Micron’s June 24 print, Darden offers a completely different kind of story.

Key Technical and Fundamental Drivers

June 25 Full-Year Earnings → Six Days Away, Two Straight Raised Guides
Darden releases Q4 FY2026 and full fiscal year results before the open on June 25, with analysts expecting adjusted EPS of approximately $2.98 on revenue of $3.73 billion. Darden has raised its full-year guidance in each of the last two quarters — a pattern of conservative guidance followed by operational outperformance that analysts have learned to take seriously. The Q4 print will also deliver full-year FY2026 results and initial FY2027 guidance, making it the most information-dense report Darden produces each year.

Two Consecutive Guidance Raises → Management Confidence Is Signal, Not Noise
The Q3 report marked the second consecutive quarter of upward revisions to both revenue and comparable sales guidance, with Darden raising FY2026 revenue growth to +9.5% and same-restaurant sales to +4.5%. When a restaurant company with 2,000+ locations raises guidance twice in a row heading into its strongest seasonal quarter, it typically means visibility is unusually high. Management noted the Q4 outlook implied comparable sales growth of +3.5–5%, reflecting confidence as the fiscal year concludes — language that signals Q4 was tracking at or above the trend lines heading into May.

LongHorn Steakhouse → The Outperformer Nobody’s Talking About
LongHorn Steakhouse delivered +7.2% same-restaurant sales growth in Q3, the strongest performance across Darden’s portfolio, continuing a streak of consistent outperformance. LongHorn has quietly become one of the most compelling brand stories in casual dining — a middle-market steakhouse concept with consistent value positioning, strong consumer loyalty, and an expansion pipeline that is accelerating. Darden expects approximately 70 new restaurant openings for full FY2026, with LongHorn representing a growing portion of the new unit pipeline.

Chuy’s Integration → Acquisition Accretion Beginning to Show
Darden acquired Chuy’s Tex-Mex, and the brand contributed to total sales growth alongside Olive Garden and LongHorn in Q3. The Chuy’s acquisition added approximately 100 restaurants to Darden’s portfolio and a fast-casual-adjacent concept that appeals to a younger demographic than Olive Garden. Integration is progressing, and the brand’s 3.9% same-restaurant sales growth in the Other Business segment — which includes Chuy’s — suggests the concept is performing in line with management’s underwriting. Full acquisition synergies are still being realized, representing a source of earnings upside over the next several quarters.

Consumer Spending Signal → “Taking Wallet Share From Fast Food”
CEO Rick Cardenas noted on the Q4 FY2025 earnings call that consumers are continuing to spend on casual dining, saying: “Our consumers want to go out and spend their hard-earned money. And we think we’re taking some wallet share from fast food and fast casual.” That comment, made nearly a year ago, has proven accurate through three subsequent quarters of same-restaurant sales acceleration. The consumer backdrop remains constructive for full-service dining: as fast food prices have risen and quality perceptions have softened, mid-tier sit-down restaurants with strong value-per-occasion positioning — Olive Garden’s endless breadsticks and LongHorn’s steak-at-reasonable-prices formula — are capturing incremental traffic from consumers trading down from higher price points and trading up from fast food.

Market Takeaway

Darden’s investment case heading into next Thursday’s print is built on a simple but durable foundation: a management team that has consistently delivered on or above its own guidance for two straight quarters, a portfolio of brands with genuine consumer relevance, a unit growth pipeline that is accelerating, and a stock that sits nearly 10% below its 52-week high despite the fundamental momentum being squarely positive. In a market week dominated by semiconductor prints and AI infrastructure volatility, Darden is the defensive consumer name with a near-term catalyst that most of the attention has drifted past.

The risks deserve honest treatment. Darden’s results are sensitive to the health of the American consumer — discretionary dining spending tends to compress faster than grocery spending when household budgets tighten. High U.S. mortgage rates around 6.6% are expected to keep the housing market subdued through 2028, which historically correlates with reduced casual dining frequency as families defer home equity events that typically precede restaurant celebrations. Commodity costs — beef for LongHorn, proteins for Olive Garden — remain elevated, and labor cost pressure in the restaurant industry hasn’t materially eased. Olive Garden’s same-restaurant sales of +3.2% in Q3 trailed the broader portfolio’s +4.2%, and any continued moderation in Darden’s flagship brand would be a concern for the full-year story. For traders watching Thursday’s session and positioning ahead of next week’s full-year print, the six-day window between now and the June 25 results is where the pre-earnings setup lives — with two consecutive guidance raises setting a bar that Darden has, so far, consistently cleared.