Toronto Star

U.S. revenue slump sends Hugo Boss shares south

- RICHARD WEISS BLOOMBERG

FRANKFURT— Hugo Boss AG shares fell the most in five months as weakness in the U.S. kept the German clothier’s sales revival in check.

U.S. sales declined 7 per cent, the company said Wednesday, after it stopped selling goods to outlet stores that carry different brands at discounts.

The shares fell as much as 6.4 per cent in Frankfurt, the steepest intraday decline since Nov. 16.

Boss is seeking to revive under the leadership of Mark Langer, the former finance chief who was promoted to chief executive officer a year ago. In November, Langer said the company will return to growth in 2018 as it eliminates brands, slows down store expansion and sells more apparel online.

Hugo Boss has limited distributi­on in the U.S. to the likes of Bloomingda­le’s Inc. and Nordstrom Inc. after discountin­g in the wholesale market there led to a loss of pricing power.

The quarter was characteri­zed by “difficult trading conditions in key markets and continued e-commerce disruption,” Citigroup analysts Thomas Chauvet and Silky Agarwal said in a note.

Langer said the company failed to offer enough entry-level products especially in its e-commerce business, alapse the company is trying to make up for.

Overall, the U.S. business is still “very much driven by discounts also outside the outlet stores, and we have some homework still to do, also within our collection­s, to bring back brand desirabili­ty,” he said. The brand is also closing unprofitab­le stores after doubling its shop network between 2010 and 2015.

 ?? DAVID LIVINGSTON­E ?? The interior of Hugo Boss’s Bloor St. W. store.
DAVID LIVINGSTON­E The interior of Hugo Boss’s Bloor St. W. store.

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