
Shopify delivered the kind of holiday quarter most e‑commerce platforms dream about as revenue surged more than 30%.
The strong quarter rode on the backs of gross merchandise volume (GMV) soaring and cash still piling up, yet the Shopify stock (NASDAQ: SHOP) still went into reverse.
After jumping in premarket trade on the back of a clean top-line beat and a new $2 billion buyback, shares flipped sharply lower as investors drilled into 2026 guidance and cash‑flow margins.
Why Shopify stock fell despite a beat
On the surface, the Q4 print looked textbook bullish.
Revenue rose 31% year on year to about $3.67 billion, ahead of roughly $3.59 billion expected, while GMV climbed to around $123.8 billion, beating Wall Street’s estimates.
Free cash flow hit $715 million in the quarter, a 19% free‑cash‑flow margin and Shopify’s tenth straight quarter with double‑digit cash‑flow margins.
“We closed Q4 with strong top-line growth and disciplined cash generation with revenue up 31% year-over-year and a 19% free cash flow margin,” CFO Jeff Hoffmeister said in the release.
The rub came in what management said about tomorrow.
For Q1 2026, Shopify guided revenue to grow at a “low‑thirties percentage rate” year on year, comfortably above consensus in the mid‑20s, but told investors to expect free‑cash‑flow margins in the “low‑to‑mid teens.”
Simply, the company is signalling that a smaller share of revenue will drop through as cash in the near term, as it leans into AI‑driven “agentic commerce” tools, marketing and international expansion.
Free‑cash‑flow margin is simply the percentage of sales left over after all the bills and investment spending are paid; for a company that had pushed that number close to 20%, a step down matters.
That guidance landed in a tricky valuation backdrop.
Heading into the print, investors flagged that Shopify was trading on a price‑earnings multiple above 80 times, far richer than most software and payments peers.
When management then told investors to reset near‑term cash‑flow expectations, the bar for “upside surprise” quickly turned into a trap.
The buyback question
From here, the earnings call details matter more than the headline beat.
Management has been explicit that heavier spending on AI‑powered commerce tools, marketing, and international go‑to‑market is what’s pulling the free‑cash‑flow margin down into the mid‑teens.
The follow‑through will show up in gross profit and GMV: B2B GMV, offline commerce, and international revenue were all standout growth drivers in 2025, and investors will want to see that momentum continue.
The new $2 billion buyback is another key piece of the puzzle.
The board has authorised repurchases of up to $2 billion of Class A shares, starting February 17 and running without a fixed expiry, with management indicating it will rely on pre‑set algorithmic trading programs.
How aggressively Shopify actually buys stock, and whether it leans in at these lower levels, will shape how supportive that headline really is, especially against the annual free cash flow now running around $2 billion.
A beat buys credibility, but it doesn’t buy immunity from guidance math.
Shopify just learned that even strong growth and a shiny new buyback won’t stop a richly valued stock from sliding if investors sense that the path from revenue to durable.
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