Ottawa Citizen

Canada Goose margins miss on higher sales of less profitable clothes

- ARUNIMA KUMAR

Canada Goose Holdings Inc’s quarterly gross margins missed estimates on Wednesday, as the luxury apparel maker sold more of its lightweigh­t spring season clothes, which are not as profitable as its US$1,000 parkas.

Toronto-listed shares of the company fell as much as 9 per cent as investors dismissed its smaller-than-expected loss.

Canada Goose, known for its cold-weather, fur-trimmed parkas, ventured into raincoats, lightweigh­t jackets and knitwear a few years ago to cater to its customers’ seasonal needs and to move away from fur, which has increasing­ly become distastefu­l and is even banned in California.

“The affinity and desire we have seen for our seasonally relevant lightweigh­t offerings tells us our product expansion is working,” Canada Goose said in its statement.

The company said online and retail sales of its lightweigh­t, non-parka products rose to about a third of its total revenue in the quarter for the first time and that it expects to sell more parkas in the third and fourth quarter as the weather gets colder.

The cheaper products are, however, not as profitable as the company’s parkas. Gross profit margins plummeted 57.5 per cent in the first quarter from 64 per cent in the year ago period, and missed analysts’ estimate of a 61.6-per-cent drop, also hit by a higher proportion of sales going to department stores.

Still, the company’s loss of 21 cents per share was better than the 24 cent loss that analysts had anticipate­d.

Canada Goose has been spending on its direct-to-consumer business, including its e-commerce and company-owned retail outlets, as it looks to rely less on struggling department stores for sales.

Revenue rose 59.1 per cent and was ahead of estimates, as the company benefited from sales of costlier jackets and parkas to department stores and as it opened new retail outlets and launched products online on Chinese e-commerce company Alibaba’s Tmall marketplac­e.

It was also driven by internatio­nal customers’ request for earlier order shipments compared to last year and its acquisitio­n of footwear maker Baffin last November.

Net loss widened to $29.4 million, or 27 cents per share, in the quarter ended June 30, from a loss of $18.7 million, or 17 cents per share, a year earlier.

Canada Goose’s shares, which have fallen a little over four per cent so far this year, closed down 6.7 per cent at $53.31.

 ?? CHRISTINNE MUSCHI/BLOOMBERG ?? Canada Goose says sales of its non-parka products rose to about a third of its total revenue in the quarter.
CHRISTINNE MUSCHI/BLOOMBERG Canada Goose says sales of its non-parka products rose to about a third of its total revenue in the quarter.

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