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Gap (GAP) pays a 67-cent annualized dividend with a new $1.0 billion buyback authorization, trades at a 9x forward P/E with a $27.67 analyst price target and just raised EPS guidance to $2.30โ€“$2.40 on its 9th consecutive quarter of positive comparable sales.

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Lululemon (LULU) offers no dividend, trades at 10x forward P/E despite a 58% five-year decline, and faces FY2026 EPS guidance of $12.10-$12.30 amid gross margin compression and Americas weakness.

Gapโ€™s dividend, lower valuation, and accelerating business momentum make it the superior choice for retirement-focused investors, while Lululemonโ€™s turnaround challenges and lack of income leave it better suited for growth investors willing to tolerate execution risk.

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Act now: the analyst who called NVIDIA in 2010 just named his top 10 AI stocks โ€” and Gap didn't make the cut. Grab the names FREE today.

For investors, two apparel names currently are providing two very different pitches. When it comes to Gap (NYSE:GAP) and Lululemon Athletica (NASDAQ:LULU), which one belongs in a retirement-focused portfolio right now?

After running both through the lenses that matter most for income-oriented investors โ€” yield, valuation and risk profile โ€” the answer is more decisive than the brand prestige gap would suggest.

This one is short. Gap pays a quarterly dividend of 17.5 cents per share, raised this year from 16.5 cents, which itself was a step up from the 15-cent quarterly rate paid through 2024. The current annualized payout works out to 67 cents per share, and management just authorized a new $1.0 billion share repurchase, with roughly $599 million still remaining on the program.

Lululemon? No dividend. Capital returns flow exclusively through buybacks, including $1.2 billion repurchased in FY2025. Buybacks are useful, but they do not fund a retiree's monthly bills. For an income-seeking investor, this dimension is settled before the analysis even begins.

Gap trades at a trailing P/E of 8 and a forward P/E of 9, with a price-to-sales of just 0.49. Lululemon, even after a brutal repricing, sits at a trailing P/E of 10 and forward P/E of 10, with price-to-sales near 1.4.

Lululemon is undeniably cheaper than it has been in years. The stock is down 36% year to date and 58% over the past year, currently trading near $128. But cheaper than its own history is not the same as cheap. Gap is the absolute lower-multiple stock, supports the multiple with a dividend, and has analysts pointing to a target of $27.67 against today's $21.47.

Retirees care about drawdowns. Lululemon's beta of 0.90 looks tame on paper, but the realized volatility tells a different story: a 58% five-year decline alongside an interim co-CEO structure after Calvin McDonald's departure, 550 basis points of gross margin compression, persistent Americas comp weakness, and FY2026 EPS guidance of $12.10 to $12.30, an implied decline from $13.26.

Gap is moving the other direction. Management just raised the adjusted EPS guide to $2.30 to $2.40, marked a 9th consecutive quarter of positive comparable sales, and runs a stable bench under CEO Richard Dickson. Yes, Athleta remains a drag and online sales slipped 2% year over year, but the Gap brand alone posted a 10% comp in the latest quarter. Dickson framed the capital-return posture plainly: "increasing capital returns to shareholders, reflecting the growing strength of our balance sheet."

Lululemon's CEO message reads more defensively. Interim co-CEO Meghan Frank emphasized that "Driving improvement in our full-price sales over the course of 2026 is also a key priority, particularly in North America." That is a turnaround sentence, not a momentum sentence.

For retirement-focused investors, Gap wins, and it is not particularly close. It pays and raises a dividend, trades at a single-digit forward multiple, just raised guidance, and operates with a fortress balance sheet. Three dimensions, three wins.

Lululemon has a place, just not in this portfolio. Growth-oriented investors with a 10-year horizon and a stomach for execution risk get a once-rare entry point into a premium brand with 30% China Mainland comp growth and 17% international revenue growth. That is a different bet for a different investor. The retiree writing checks against this portfolio takes Gap.

Act now: the analyst who called NVIDIA in 2010 just named his top 10 AI stocks โ€” and Gap didn't make the cut. Grab the names FREE today.