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This article was written and reviewed by Doug Nathman and his team at Trefis. For questions, email [email protected]
A peculiar thing happened after financial software giant Intuit Inc. NASDAQ: INTU reported its third-quarter earnings. Intuit beat analyst expectations, delivering a 10% year-over-year revenue increase to $8.6 billion.
INTU tops Q3 estimates as TurboTax, Credit Karma and QuickBooks Online fuel growth, prompting higher fiscal 2026 guidance.
Intuit Inc (NASDAQ:INTU, XETRA:ITU) shares opened about 19% lower on Thursday despite the company posting fiscal third quarter results that topped Wall Street expectations, as investors focused on a weaker long-term outlook for TurboTax and plans to cut roughly 17% of its workforce. The financial software company reported fiscal third-quarter revenue of $8.56 billion, up 10.4% from a year earlier and slightly ahead of analysts' estimates of $8.52 billion.
Intuit Inc. (INTU) Q3 2026 Earnings Call Transcript
The headline numbers for Intuit (INTU) give insight into how the company performed in the quarter ended April 2026, but it may be worthwhile to compare some of its key metrics to Wall Street estimates and the year-ago actuals.
Intuit (INTU) came out with quarterly earnings of $12.8 per share, beating the Zacks Consensus Estimate of $12.48 per share. This compares to earnings of $11.65 per share a year ago.
Intuit NASDAQ: INTU reported fiscal third-quarter revenue growth of 10% and raised its full-year outlook, while management outlined plans to reduce the company's full-time workforce by 17% and adjust its approach to lower-income, price-sensitive tax filers.
Intuit Inc. is reducing its global headcount by approximately 17% as it moves to streamline operations and accelerate its investment in artificial intelligence, according to an internal memo reviewed by Reuters on Wednesday (May 20). The restructuring will result in the elimination of about 3,000 positions across the financial software giant.
Intuit wants to move "with greater velocity," CEO Sasan Goodarzi said as the finance software maker said it would cut 17% of its full-time workforce. The company's quarterly revenue came in just below consensus.
Intuit said on Wednesday that it's reducing its full-time workforce by 17%.