WWD Digital Daily

Under Armour Shares Dive Over CEO Turmoil

The sports brand has had three CEOs in four years and founder Kevin Plank's return did not impress Wall Street.

- BY JEAN E. PALMIERI

Wall Street gave a firm thumbs down to the return of Kevin Plank to the top spot at Under Armour, punishing the company by sending its shares down by 10.2 percent to $6.99 in trading on Thursday.

While some analysts are hopeful that Plank is the fuel needed to return the company to its glory days, the fact that Under Armour has had three chief executive officers in four years was the reason for the stock's steep decline on Thursday, the day after the Baltimoreb­ased sports brand said Plank would succeed Stephanie Linnartz as president and chief executive officer.

The surprise announceme­nt of Linnartz's departure, and Plank's return, was revealed by the company Wednesday after the close of the stock market.

Linnartz, the former president of Marriott Internatio­nal, assumed the role of CEO of Under Armour in February

2023 and had been building her team to implement Protect This House 3, a threeyear turnaround plan designed to raise awareness of the Under Armour brand, deliver elevated designs and products to boost U.S. sales and maintain the company's momentum overseas.

But her plan did not have immediate positive impact and speculatio­n was rampant that the board was running out of patience and not willing to wait.

The biggest issue is the company's performanc­e in North America, its largest market, which accounts for around two-thirds of its overall sales. In the third quarter results released in February, Under Armour reported stronger than expected net income of $114.1 million, but sales in North America were down 12 percent. Internatio­nal revenue was up 7 percent with strength in Europe, the Middle East, Africa, Asia Pacific and Latin America.

In addition, Under Armour's continued attempts to gain a true foothold in the performanc­e footwear market has also been discouragi­ng with sales in that category down 7 percent in the quarter.

Craig Johnson, president of Customer Growth Partners, said Under Armour's struggles in North America mean the company is losing market share, which is “not a good position.” Right now, he estimated that Under Armour has a 4.5 percent share of the U.S. market, down from 5.5 percent last year while upstarts On and Hoka continue to make inroads and Lululemon gains more fans. The two biggest players, Nike and Adidas, are essentiall­y “treading water,” he said.

In addition, Johnson said that because Plank was still so entrenched in the company as executive chairman of the board and brand chief for the past four years, it must have been very difficult for Linnartz to chart a new path.

“It's a tough position when the founder is still hanging around, especially someone like Kevin who embodies the core DNA of the company, which is performanc­e.”

Despite the turmoil, Johnson is optimistic that the return of Plank to the CEO role may be just what the company needs. “I think he can do it, he's a dynamic guy and he's coming at it from a more mature, thoughtful perspectiv­e,” he said. “They still have a great brand, even if they've lost a half step on newness. The question is whether Kevin can duplicate Steve Jobs' return to Apple.”

Linnartz, the former president of Marriott Internatio­nal, assumed the role of CEO of Under Armour in February

2023 and had been building her team to implement Protect This House 3, a threeyear turnaround plan designed to raise awareness of the Under Armour brand, deliver elevated designs and products to boost U.S. sales and maintain the company's momentum overseas.

But her plan did not have immediate positive impact and speculatio­n was rampant that the board was running out of patience and not willing to wait.

The biggest issue is the company's performanc­e in North America, its largest market, which accounts for around two-thirds of its overall sales. In the third quarter results released in February, Under Armour reported stronger than expected net income of $114.1 million, but sales in North America were down 12 percent. Internatio­nal revenue was up 7 percent with strength in Europe, the Middle East, Africa, Asia Pacific and Latin America.

In addition, Under Armour's continued attempts to gain a true foothold in the performanc­e footwear market has also been discouragi­ng with sales in that category down 7 percent in the quarter.

Craig Johnson, president of Customer Growth Partners, said Under Armour's struggles in North America mean the company is losing market share, which is “not a good position.” Right now, he estimated that Under Armour has a 4.5 percent share of the U.S. market, down from 5.5 percent last year while upstarts On and Hoka continue to make inroads and Lululemon gains more fans. The two biggest players, Nike and Adidas, are essentiall­y “treading water,” he said.

In addition, Johnson said that because Plank was still so entrenched in the company as executive chairman of the board and brand chief for the past four years, it must have been very difficult for

Linnartz to chart a new path.

“It's a tough position when the founder is still hanging around, especially someone like Kevin who embodies the core DNA of the company, which is performanc­e.”

Despite the turmoil, Johnson is optimistic that the return of Plank to the CEO role may be just what the company needs. “I think he can do it, he's a dynamic guy and he's coming at it from a more mature, thoughtful perspectiv­e,” he said. “They still have a great brand, even if they've lost a half step on newness. The question is whether Kevin can duplicate Steve Jobs' return to Apple.”

Since her appointmen­t, Linnartz replaced many of the company's longtime employees and brought in a whole new team, including Yassine Saidi as chief product officer, Kara Trent president of the Americas, Jim Dausch as chief customer officer, Shawn Curran as chief supply chain officer, John Varvatos as head of design and Amanda Miller as chief communicat­ions officer. The company is still searching for a chief marketing officer and senior vice president for footwear.

This team that Plank is inheriting may shift again, sources speculate, as he sets out to rebuild the business with his own handpicked group.

In his employee letter, Plank added that his vision for the future of Under Armour is “not about revisiting any previous chapter” in the company's history, but “instead, we will leverage the wisdom of our past experience­s, applying this knowledge to ensure we make the best decisions in the chapter ahead — and make it our finest.”

Analysts were quick to weigh in with their thoughts about the abrupt change. Simeon Siegel of BMO Capital Markets, believes it was a “board-level decision” driven by a desire for further change — the directors were not satisfied with Linnartz's dramatic C-suite changes and introducti­on of a rewards program, he wrote. Now it's up to Plank to rediscover the magic that had marked the company's explosive early growth.

“We expect Mr. Plank is excited to reenter the role (this doesn't appear a temporary/interim move), but we recognize that with further C-suite fluctuatio­n, the burden of proof lies on management execution and results that show this is not repeating the recent past.”

Tom Nikic of Wedbush said the “musical chairs” of CEOs over the past few years “brings a level of inconsiste­ncy and uncertaint­y to the story that investors don't really want to see.” Jim Duffy of Stifel agreed, saying the “revolving door of CEOs will likely weigh on the stock.”

Neil Saunders, managing director of GlobalData, was even more harsh. He said the dramatic change in leadership

“is emblematic of a brand that can't quite decide which direction it wants to go in. Under Armour has already been through several rounds of change as it tries to address declining sales and issues with the brand but, as the latest set of poor quarterly results show, it has not yet found a successful path to rebuilding the business.”

He added that the departure of Linnartz, “who has just set out her vision for the company, likely means more shifts. The good news is that Kevin Plank is more than familiar with the company so should be able to quickly plot the route that he wants to take to get the brand back on track.”

But all these “twists and turns have created a brand that has become increasing­ly confusing to consumers and to wholesale partners,” he believes, and “remedying these problems are not simple, no matter who occupies the CEO seat.”

Linnartz also provided some further context on her impending departure on her LinkedIn page. She will remain as an adviser to Under Armour until April 30. She said she was “extremely proud of the progress our team has made. We have a strong foundation in place for future growth, including strengthen­ing our team, evolving our products and marketing and increasing our focus on profitabil­ity.”

According to Siegel, parting ways with Linnartz will result in separation costs of a one-time cash payment of $2.6 million, twice her current salary, her fiscal year 2024 performanc­e bonus, full vesting of her sign-on stock awards, valued at around $7.3 million, payment of her medical premiums for 24 months and the assumption of the lease on her Baltimore apartment until the middle of the year.

 ?? ?? Under Armour's Baltimore headquarte­rs.
Under Armour's Baltimore headquarte­rs.
 ?? Kevin Plank ??
Kevin Plank

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