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Pop Mart Stock Crashed 22% After Record Earnings. Why?

by LABUBUBOX Editorial

On March 25, 2026, Pop Mart reported the kind of numbers most companies dream about: ¥37.12 billion in revenue (up 185%), ¥13.01 billion in net profit (up 293%). The market's response? A 22% single-day crash that wiped $8 billion off the company's market cap. Welcome to the paradox of hyper-growth stocks.

Labubu designer toy figures lined up
These little figures represent a ¥37 billion empire — and a stock that lost $8 billion in a single day.

The Math Behind the Massacre

Here is what Wall Street actually punished:

  • Q4 deceleration: Full-year revenue of ¥37.12B came in slightly below the ¥38B consensus. The miss was small, but the trend line mattered—Q4 growth slowed materially versus Q3's sprint.
  • Labubu concentration: The Monsters (Labubu) generated ¥14.16 billion—38.1% of total revenue, up from 23% the prior year. That is not diversification; that is doubling down on a single character.
  • Dividend cut: Payout ratio dropped to 25% from 35%, signaling the company wants to reinvest rather than return cash.
  • Guidance: Management guided for "no less than 20%" growth in 2026. After 185%, "only" 20% feels like slamming the brakes.
Collectible Labubu toy in packaging
UBS cut its price target by 15%; Morgan Stanley trimmed 2026–2027 earnings estimates by 4%.

What Collectors Should Actually Care About

Stock charts do not tell you whether your shelf was worth it. But they do signal something important: if Pop Mart's share price stays depressed, the company may slow store openings, reduce marketing spend, or become more conservative with new IP launches. That eventually touches what you can buy and where.

The flip side: a cheaper stock could attract activist investors or acquisition interest, which historically accelerates IP licensing deals.

Pop Mart blind box collectibles display
The real question is not "did Pop Mart fail?" — it is "can any toy company sustain 185% growth?"

Our Take

Pop Mart did not fail. The market simply repriced expectations. A company growing 20% with ¥13 billion in profit is not in trouble—it is just no longer priced for perfection. For collectors, the toys do not care about the ticker. Buy what you love, from sellers you trust.

Browse authenticated collectibles in our shop.

Sources: Reuters, Financial Express, TradingView. Not investment advice.

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