Los Angeles Times

Fitbit sees healthy season

The fitness-tracking device maker’s shares jump 3.3% on signs of strong holiday sales.

- By Samantha Masunaga samantha.masunaga@latimes.com

Shares of Fitbit Inc. climbed 3.3% after the fitness-tracking device maker saw its first sign of strong Christmas sales.

Fitbit’s app ranked No. 2 in the free apps category on Apple’s app store Monday, second only to YouTube. On Christmas Day and the day after Christmas, Fitbit was No. 1 on that list, according to app analytics firm App Annie. Last year, it ranked 18th on Christmas and 15th on the day after, according to a research report from Raymond James & Associates.

Fitbit stock rose 95 cents to $29.86 on Monday.

This holiday season is a big test for Fitbit, which is facing increased competitio­n from other wearable fitness trackers and the Apple Watch.

An RBC Capital Markets report from November said Fitbit sold 4.8 million wearables in the third quarter, up 106% from the same period a year earlier.

And at a Barclays global technology conference in early December, Fitbit Chief Financial Officer William Zerella said the company had devices in 48,000 stores across the globe, 35,000 of which were in the U.S.

But when the San Francisco company filed for an initial public offering of stock in June, analysts questioned whether it would be able to hang on to its No. 1 position in the fitness-tracking wearables market as competitio­n from Jawbone and Garmin became more intense, not to mention the debut of the Apple Watch just two months earlier.

Despite the fanfare over the Apple Watch, which has some health-tracking features, Fitbit still gained market share. According to a report from research firm IDC, Fitbit controlled 22.2% of the market in the third quarter, compared with Apple’s 18.6%.

“We think we target a different customer than someone who is really looking for a general-purpose smartwatch,” Zerella said at the tech conference. “Apple will come up with new generation­s of their devices and will get smarter and do all kinds of other things, I’m sure, but obviously, we’re not standing still either.”

Fitbit’s holiday sales seem to mirror a larger trend this season. Holiday spending as a whole increased 7.9% from a year earlier, according to the MasterCard SpendingPu­lse report, which tracks retail sales from Black Friday to Christmas Eve. Part of the jump was the result of the rise in online shopping, which was up 20% this year.

 ?? Richard Drew Associated Press ?? CEO JAMES PARK shows one of Fitbit’s wearable fitness trackers outside the New York Stock Exchange ahead of the company’s IPO in June.
Richard Drew Associated Press CEO JAMES PARK shows one of Fitbit’s wearable fitness trackers outside the New York Stock Exchange ahead of the company’s IPO in June.

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