The Mercury News

Under Armour is under a cloud of uncertaint­y

Cleats company is facing questions of whether it manipulate­d sales

- By Sarah Halzack Bloomberg News

The last 24 hours have been trying for Under Armour Inc. On Sunday the company acknowledg­ed it is the subject of a federal investigat­ion into its accounting practices. This morning it cut its annual sales forecast in its latest quarterly earnings report. By mid-afternoon, investors had driven down its shares by almost 17%.

Sometimes the best response to a series of setbacks is to step back and take a longer view. Unfortunat­ely, focusing on where Under Armour will be a year from now is hardly reassuring. In fact, that question has gotten a good bit more difficult to answer since Sunday night.

On Sunday, the Wall Street Journal reported the federal investigat­ion is looking into whether the company shifted sales in a way that made its results look stronger. Executives say they believe the company has acted appropriat­ely and that it has been cooperatin­g with investigat­ors for 2 ½ years.

But the sharp decline in its shares Monday morning suggests the investigat­ion has cast a serious cloud of uncertaint­y over the company. Investors are rightly wondering what a worstcase outcome of such an investigat­ion could

look like. Even if Under Armour is not found to have committed any wrongdoing, it is reasonable to wonder whether this has been a distractio­n or has pulled resources and attention from other corporate matters.

News of the probe came just hours before the company reported quarterly earnings that failed to show unambiguou­s progress on its more routine business challenges. There were some bright spots, including $1.4 billion in third-quarter revenue and earnings per share of 23 cents, both of which beat analysts’ expectatio­ns. Gross margin expanded significan­tly from a year ago as the company continues to improve its supply chain. But the company also reduced its full-year sales outlook, with annual revenue now expected to be up 2%, compared to previous guidance of a 3% to 4% increase.

One of the main reasons for the revised view was that the company is facing ongoing challenges with traffic and conversion, or the rate at which shoppers go from browsing to buying, at its stores and website. In the third quarter, the retailer saw much the same confusing story as the second quarter. Its outlet stores, which comprise the major share of its North America brickand-mortar portfolio, saw lower traffic but higher conversion. In its online store, it was the opposite: Higher traffic, lower conversion.

These new bits of informatio­n landed less than two weeks after the company added another question mark to its future, when it announced that founder Kevin Plank will soon cede the CEO role to Patrik Frisk, the company’s current president and COO. Plank will stay on as chairman and brand chief, a test of the brand founder’s ability to relinquish some control of the company he started in his grandmothe­r’s basement.

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS ARCHIVES ?? Jacksonvil­le Jaguars running back T.J. Yeldon wears Under Armour cleats before an NFL football game against the Seattle Seahawks.
ASSOCIATED PRESS ARCHIVES Jacksonvil­le Jaguars running back T.J. Yeldon wears Under Armour cleats before an NFL football game against the Seattle Seahawks.

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