Vancouver Sun

Canada Goose dives despite rise in earnings

- HOLLIE SHAW Financial Post

A double-digit jump in third-quarter sales and earnings didn’t prevent Canada Goose Holdings Inc. from taking a double-digit dive on the markets Thursday when the company maintained its forecast for 2018 rather than increasing it.

Chief executive Dani Reiss said Canada Goose is quite content to expand the luxury parka maker’s business methodical­ly, he made clear Thursday, despite an overt investor desire for rapid and aggressive sales growth.

The Toronto-based manufactur­er and retailer, whose coats sell for as much as $1,495, is in no rush to restock shelves when some of its designs have sold out in store and online, Reiss told analysts on a conference call to discuss results for the period ended Dec. 31.

Sellouts of some of the brand’s sizes and styles have been happening with greater regularity this winter season due to colder than average temperatur­es in parts of North America in December and thereafter. And Canada Goose frequently has had customer lineups outside of its locations this year during cold snaps in Toronto, New York and Chicago.

“We are not afraid to be sold out. Being sold out to me, and to our company, is a good thing, and I think it shows lots of demand for our product,” said Reiss. “We are not a commodity product.”

When asked whether the company had certain projection­s for deliberate­ly keeping stock low, an industry maxim known as the scarcity principle, Reiss said it performed no such measuremen­ts.

Canada Goose stock dropped 16.06 per cent to close at $40.15 in Toronto on Thursday. The shares were still trading at more than 140 per cent above their IPO price last March, however.

The firm’s lack of an updated forecast and the appointmen­t of new chief financial officer Jonathan Sinclair likely pulled down the shares, said RBC Capital Markets analyst Brian Tunick in a note to clients. Sinclair, CFO at luxury shoe brand Jimmy Choo, will replace John Black when he retires mid-year, Canada Goose said.

The firm’s net income was $62.9 million, or 56 cents per share in quarter, up from $39.1 million (38 cents), a year ago. On an adjusted basis, it earned 58 cents per share, beating average analyst estimates of 48 cents from Thomson Reuters.

Revenue soared 27 per cent to $265.8 million, while the company’s direct-to-consumer revenue almost doubled year over year to $131.6 million as the company continued to expand its e-commerce sites and proprietar­y retail stores.

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