Accenture (NYSE: ACN) beat its own Q3 FY26 revenue guide and posted a
9% increase in diluted EPS, but the stock cratered roughly
17% to about $129 on Thursday after the company narrowed
its full-year revenue-growth range down to 3–4% in local currency from
3–5%, flagged a lighter Q4 outlook, and disclosed
$19.3B of new bookings that were down both year over year and
sequentially. The print marked the lowest ACN close since 2017 and pushed the world’s largest
IT-services firm below a $80B market cap on a name that traded above
$300 in late 2024.
The Q3 print: clean beat, tone problem
Headline numbers were not the issue. Accenture delivered Q3 FY26 (quarter ended
May 31, 2026) revenue of $18.72 billion, up 6% in
U.S. dollars and 3% in local currency, slightly above the midpoint of the
$18.35B–$19.0B guide. Operating margin expanded
20 basis points to 17.0%, and diluted EPS came in at
$3.80, up 9% from $3.49 a year earlier.
Free cash flow was a robust $3.6 billion and the company returned
$2.2 billion to shareholders during the quarter through
$1.2B in buybacks (6.0 million shares) and a $1.0B
dividend payment at the new $1.63 quarterly rate, a
10% raise. Every one of those numbers is in the
official release.
What rattled the tape were the three things around the beat: a softer Q4 range,
a trimmed full-year revenue outlook, and a quarterly bookings figure that declined
year-over-year even as the FY26 backdrop is supposed to be reaccelerating.
| Metric (Q3 FY26) | Q3 FY26 | Q3 FY25 | YoY |
|---|---|---|---|
| Revenue (USD) | $18.72B | $17.73B | +6% (+3% LC) |
| Consulting revenue | $9.33B | — | +4% (+1% LC) |
| Managed Services revenue | $9.39B | — | +8% (+5% LC) |
| New bookings | $19.32B | $19.70B | −2% (−3% LC) |
| Operating margin (GAAP) | 17.0% | 16.8% | +20 bps |
| Diluted EPS | $3.80 | $3.49 | +9% |
| Free cash flow | $3.60B | $3.52B | +2% |
The guidance cut investors actually traded
Three months ago, Accenture told the Street to expect FY26 revenue growth of
3% to 5% in local currency. After Q3, that range is now
3% to 4%, or 4% to 5% if you strip out a roughly
1% headwind that management now attributes to the
U.S. federal business. Q4 guidance came in at
$17.75B–$18.4B in revenue, implying just
1–5% local-currency growth into the seasonally important fiscal
year-end. Adjusted EPS for the full year was narrowed slightly higher to
$13.78–$13.90 (was $13.65–$13.90) and GAAP EPS to
$13.38–$13.50 (was $13.25–$13.50), but the revenue print is
what equity holders punished.
The other red flag was bookings. New bookings of $19.32B were down
2% in USD and 3% in local currency, with
Consulting bookings at $10.26B and Managed Services bookings at
$9.06B. Bookings lead reported revenue by two to four quarters in this business,
so a decline at the same time as a guide trim reinforces the bear thesis that demand for
big, multi-year transformation contracts is being chewed up by shorter, smaller
AI-adoption work that simply does not refill the backlog at the same rate. CEO Julie
Sweet did highlight a positive offset, noting “104 quarterly client bookings of
$100 million or more year-to-date, up 13%” — large deals are still
landing; the overall mix is just lighter.
The federal-business asterisk
For the first time, Accenture explicitly carved the U.S. federal business out of its
local-currency growth math, telling investors to think about 4–5%
ex-federal versus 3–4% all-in. The carve-out is unusual and tells
you what is happening: federal IT outlays have softened enough in this fiscal year that
management does not want them benchmarked against the rest of the book. Health &
Public Service revenue grew just 2% in USD and 0% in local currency to
$3.85B in Q3, the slowest growth across the five industry groups.
Communications, Media & Technology was the standout at +10% USD / +9% LC
to $3.22B.
The AI-disruption overhang on the multiple
Accenture’s stated FY26 EPS midpoint is $13.84 adjusted. At today’s
print near $129, that is a forward P/E of roughly 9.3x
— a level the stock has not traded at since the early 2010s and a clear sign that
the market is now pricing in a sustained downshift, not a one-quarter air pocket. The
bear case, which the FT this morning framed as “AI threat mounts,” is
that generative-AI tools compress the hours-billable consulting revenue line faster than
the firm can re-platform into outcome-based or platform-led work. The bull case is that
the same AI wave is what is creating the 104 large-deal pipeline Sweet pointed to, and
that the $4.18B acquisition of a majority stake in Dragos plus all of
runZero and NetRise announced alongside the print is
exactly the kind of platform pivot that re-rates the multiple. Both sides will have to
wait for FY27 guidance in September to settle the argument.
What to watch into Q4 and FY27
- Bookings stabilization. Two consecutive YoY bookings declines would
hard-confirm the AI-disruption narrative. A bounce back to roughly $21B+ would defuse
it. - Generative AI revenue line. Accenture has previously broken out
Gen-AI bookings and revenue separately; investors will want to see the cumulative number
cross meaningful thresholds, not just the quarterly run-rate. - Federal book trajectory. The 1% drag the company carved out only
matters if it is one-and-done. If the FY27 guide carves it out again, the federal
business is structurally smaller. - OT Security integration. Dragos, runZero and NetRise close into a
single platform play. Execution there is the swing factor on whether the cybersecurity
carve-out actually re-rates ACN as a platform name.
Sources
- Accenture — Q3 FY26 Earnings Release (June 18, 2026)
- Accenture Investor Relations
- Google Finance — ACN quote
- Yahoo Finance — ACN
Disclosure: This article was produced with AI assistance and reviewed before publication. It is for informational purposes only and is not investment advice.