Vancouver Sun

Apparel sector bracing for a challengin­g year

As consumers stretch scarce dollars, `extra coat' not a priority, says retail expert

- TARA DESCHAMPS

Despite an unseasonab­ly warm winter, there's a chill across the Canadian retail landscape.

Less snow than usual in many parts of the country, along with high inflation, put a damper on splurging during the typically busy holiday season — and now retail industry watchers say apparel companies are staring down an equally fraught year ahead.

“When we look at our consumer research for Canadians right now, it's not as if they are queuing up in order to buy more, let's put it that way,” said Sandrine Devillard, a senior partner who leads consulting firm Mckinsey and Co.'s retail practice.

Their hesitance to spend is stemming from soaring prices, high interest rates, layoffs and a slog toward recovering from pandemic debt.

When Canadians are spending, Devillard said apparel isn't a priority. Instead, they are focusing on essential purchases like food and pastimes they were deprived of during the pandemic, such as travel or entertainm­ent.

“When they splurge, they'd rather splurge on experience­s than buying the extra coat because nobody needs an extra coat, frankly,” Devillard said.

That thinking has led to an “extremely volatile” apparel sector where Mckinsey expects yearover-year retail sales growth between two and four per cent in 2024, paling in comparison to the double-digit growth some markets saw in 2021.

The typically resilient luxury market will be hit too, with Mckinsey predicting its sales growth to slow to between three and five per cent this year, down from between five and seven per cent in 2023.

Mckinsey's forecast is partially based on a survey it conducted of 435 fashion industry executives about their outlook for the year, where the word most often mentioned by the leaders was “uncertaint­y.” Some 37 per cent of respondent­s expected conditions in the fashion industry to remain the same in 2024. Thirty-eight per cent expected the situation to worsen.

Those sentiments cropped up on recent earnings calls from Canada's biggest brands.

Greg Hicks, the president and chief executive of Mark's and Sportchek-owner Canadian Tire Corp., blamed “rising interest rates, stubborn inflation impacting discretion­ary spend and unfavourab­le weather” for the company's fourth-quarter profit dropping 68 per cent from a year earlier.

The challenges aren't letting up with credit card data he recently reviewed showing competitio­n across clothing retailers is high.

“Apparel-focused retailers are having a real challenge on the top line and we're therefore seeing the intensity ramp quite a bit,” Hicks said.

“Sportchek and Mark's are feeling it.”

To cope, 69 per cent of the executives Mckinsey surveyed indicated they will raise prices this year, compared with 58 per cent a year ago.

Some 44 per cent expect to raise prices by up to five per cent, while 25 per cent have even larger increases in the works.

Luxury parka purveyor Canada Goose Holdings Inc. could be one of the companies that raises their prices.

President Carrie Baker said on the company's latest earnings call that “there's quite a lot of headroom” for the brand “at much higher price points.” She didn't say how much higher they could take prices, but some of the Toronto-based company 's parkas already top $1,500.

Price hike chatter comes after Lululemon Athletica Inc. chief executive Calvin Mcdonald warned analysts recently that the apparel market is a “more dynamic, promotiona­lly driven environmen­t” these days.

His Vancouver-based company, which is known for its pricey athleisure wear, is resisting the urge to give in to these dynamics. It even skipped using “sale language” to promote its Black Friday deals.

Roots Corp. has a similar tack. Chief executive Meghan Roach said on the company's most recent financial call that it has “chosen to be less promotiona­l” over the last three years to boost its margins.

However, “discounts obviously are driving consumer purchasing behaviour,” so the company still participat­es in industry-wide sales periods like Black Friday and Boxing Week.

When they splurge, they'd rather splurge on experience­s than buying the extra coat because nobody needs an extra coat, frankly.

 ?? SEAN KILPATRICK/THE CANADIAN PRESS FILES ?? Greg Hicks, CEO of Canadian Tire, which owns Sportchek and Mark's, says the company's Q4 profit dropped 68 per cent from a year earlier. He blames “rising interest rates, stubborn inflation impacting discretion­ary spend and unfavourab­le weather.”
SEAN KILPATRICK/THE CANADIAN PRESS FILES Greg Hicks, CEO of Canadian Tire, which owns Sportchek and Mark's, says the company's Q4 profit dropped 68 per cent from a year earlier. He blames “rising interest rates, stubborn inflation impacting discretion­ary spend and unfavourab­le weather.”

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