Calgary Herald

Gildan Activewear slumps on printwear profit warning

- COLIN MCCLELLAND

Shares in casual clothing maker Gildan Activewear Inc., the owner of the American Apparel brand, plummeted by a third on Friday after the company said third-quarter sales dropped and that it will likely take a US$100 million hit on sales this year.

The Montreal-based company’s stock slid to as low as US$23.45, its biggest intraday drop since 2008, after the profit warning. Several analysts knocked their ratings and price targets on the stock.

The global company said its imprintabl­es, or printwear, business — where it makes shirts and jackets that teams and corporatio­ns can stamp on their logos — suffered weaker-than-expected demand that was due to continue.

Lower demand cut sales by about US$50 million in the third quarter that ended Sept. 29 as U.S. printwear sales fell in high single-digit percentage­s compared with expectatio­ns of low single-digit growth. Printwear demand in Europe and China was also softer, it said.

“The company estimates that lower demand expectatio­ns than previously projected will reduce the company’s sales projection for the fourth quarter by approximat­ely $70 million and anticipate­s distributo­r inventory destocking will negatively impact sales by approximat­ely $100 million,” Gildan said in a statement.

Adjusted earnings before interest, taxes, depreciati­on and amortizati­on for the full year is now expected in the range of US$545 million to US$555 million compared with previous guidance of more than US$615 million, Gildan said.

The slump comes months after Gildan reported the Asian economy was “on fire,” and could be symptomati­c of a wider industry downturn because of Gildan’s size, according to Bloomberg, citing Keith Howlett, an analyst at Desjardins Capital Markets.

“The printwear channel is reliant on demand from the promotiona­l products channel, and it is possible that economic anxiety has caused some companies to reduce discretion­ary spending,” Howlett said in a note. He downgraded his rating to sell from buy.

Gildan did say sales by its more recent retail business that includes its own-brand underwear was in line with expectatio­ns. The company has been able to compete with Hanesbrand Inc. and Fruit of the Loom owned by Berkshire Hathaway Inc. by building a global production chain.

Mark Petrie at CIBC said despite the magnitude of the profit warning, it wasn’t as bad as it’s been in the past for the retailer. “That being said, de-stocking issues can linger, and we have limited visibility overall, so it is difficult to have conviction in the pace and shape of a recovery.” He reduced his price target to US$30 from US$40.

Bank of America Merrill Lynch cut its rating to underperfo­rm from buy. “End demand from corporate customers has been especially weak, potentiall­y tied to a slowing economy,” analyst Heather Balsky wrote in a note. “The BOFAML macro team expects continued U.S. economic decelerati­on, which does not bode well for future demand in our view.”

 ?? GILDAN ?? As shares dropped by a third on Friday, Montreal-based Gildan said the weaker-than-expected demand for its stamp-on logo apparel business would continue.
GILDAN As shares dropped by a third on Friday, Montreal-based Gildan said the weaker-than-expected demand for its stamp-on logo apparel business would continue.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada