Calgary Herald

Lululemon tries to make jocks more comfortabl­e

- LINDSEY RUPP

NEW YORK — When 173 bankers, traders and analysts convene at Columbia University on July 28 for the fifth annual Wall Street Decathlon, the mostly male participan­ts will be wearing Lululemon Athletica Inc. shirts and shorts.

What are Wall Street jocks doing donning gear from a yoga chain? It’s all part of Lululemon’s effort to persuade American men to wear a brand long associated with women.

The Vancouver-based company, which is providing uniforms to decathlon participan­ts, is adding more gear for guys to its assortment and plans to open stand-alone men’s stores in 2016. It’s also moving beyond yoga into such sports as golf and running.

The charity event, which last year raised more than $1.2 million for the Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center, is composed of 10 events ranging from football throws to bench pressing to an 800-metre run. While the decathlon introduced a women’s division this year, more than 86 per cent of participan­ts are men like Peter Prinstein, a 35-yearold adviser for Pacific Investment Management Co. in New York.

“There’s a ‘soft’ stigma around yoga and yoga-related things being for women,” said Prinstein, who says Wall Street decathlete­s are “pretty good ambassador­s” for the Lululemon brand. “I think it’s a good fit.”

Lululemon’s push into menswear comes as the chain tries to rekindle growth and replace several executives, including Christine Day, who is stepping down as chief executive officer after the company inadverten­tly sold transparen­t yoga pants. While Lululemon has carried men’s clothing in Canada since its 1998 founding and in the U.S. since 2003, sales have remained stuck at about 12 per cent of total revenue, said John Zolidis, an analyst at Buckingham Research Group in New York. So far, Lululemon has had m ore success with men at home than in the U.S.

“All my boxers are Lulu, I won’t wear anything else,” said Ryan Michaels, a 31-year-old human resources manager for Toronto-based TMX Group. He estimates that 75 per cent of the guys on his hockey team wear them. In the locker-room, “it’s always like, ‘Who has the brightest pair this week?’”

Michaels figures he’s spent about $10,000 on Lululemon gear over the past 10 years — from track pants to underwear. As the company expands the assortment, it plans to attract men with “anti-stink” street clothes, such as the $98 Pivot Polo Silveresce­nt, which masks perspirati­on so wearers need not change after playing tennis or running.

The chain has been partnering with U.S. athletic events to help build a higher profile among American men. The Olympic men’s beach volleyball team wore Lululemon uniforms, and the yoga-wear maker supplanted Under Armour Inc. as the supplier of uniforms for the Wall Street Decathlon. This year, Lululemon went a step further by offering free yoga classes to decathlete­s for credit toward their fundraisin­g goals.

Partnering with the decathlon connects the Lululemon brand with men who may see yoga and the clothing as feminine or only know the company through women in their lives, said Amanda Casgar, who is helping organize the event as part of the company’s grassroots, community-

To wear Lululemon one time is to create a relationsh­ip with the brand AMANDA CASGAR

building operation in New York.

“To wear Lululemon one time is to create a relationsh­ip with the brand,” Casgar said. “If I didn’t believe in it 100 per cent and know these guys would fall in love with it, I don’t think it would be as obvious a partnershi­p.”

A second aim is to turn Wall Streeters onto yoga, Casgar said. Pimco’s Prinstein attended his first class through the Lululemon partnershi­p earlier this month. He was one of only two Wall Street men in the class, held in an airy SoHo loft well after the markets closed.

The other, James Incognito, a 38year- old trader from BNP Paribas SA in New York, wore an Under Armour shirt — an off-brand moment at an event dominated by women in Lululemon tank tops and tights.

It was a reminder that Lululemon is far from alone in the market for men’s athletic apparel. Even as the yogawear chain chases men, Under Armour, founded by a football jock, is working to appeal to women.

Lululemon must also compete with entrenched rivals such as Nike Inc. and Adidas AG that offer lower prices and sponsor high-profile athletes. Lululemon men’s short-sleeve running t- shirts start at $58, while at Under Armour they cost as little as $25 and at Nike they start at $38.

Through yesterday Lululemon shares had slumped 11 per cent this year, compared with a 21 per cent gain for Nike and a 27 per cent advance for Under Armour.

Lululemon may need to build an entirely new image, said Nikoleta Panteva, a senior retail analyst at industrial research firm IBISWorld in Santa Monica, California. The brand may need to consider a new name for its menswear and will need to consider more competitiv­e pricing and sponsorshi­p agreements with prominent U.S. profession­al teams or players, she said.

 ?? Stuart Gradon/calgary Herald ?? Agility shorts are just one of the products being offered by Lululemon as the company, long associated with yoga wear for women, tries to make a name for itself in the men’s exercise market.
Stuart Gradon/calgary Herald Agility shorts are just one of the products being offered by Lululemon as the company, long associated with yoga wear for women, tries to make a name for itself in the men’s exercise market.

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