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Capri Holdings Ltd (CPRI)·Q3 2025 Earnings Summary

Executive Summary

  • Q3 FY2025 revenue was $1.26B (down 11.6% YoY) and adjusted EPS was $0.45; GAAP results reflected a large, non-cash impairment ($675M) driving a GAAP net loss of $(547)M or $(4.61) per share .
  • Segment performance: Michael Kors revenue $0.91B with 16.2% operating margin, Versace $0.19B with (10.9)% margin, Jimmy Choo $0.16B with (3.8)% margin .
  • Guidance: FY25 revenue ~$4.4B and adjusted operating income ~$$100M; FY26 revenue ~$4.1B and adjusted operating income ~$150M, with cost actions to reduce operating expenses by ~$200M; Q4 FY25 revenue guided to ~$0.98B and operating loss of ~$25M .
  • Balance sheet/liquidity: net debt fell to ~$1.12B; amended credit agreement added a $700M term loan and extended revolver and term loan maturities to July 2027, repaying near-term loans (Versace €450M and $450M DDTL) .
  • Stock catalysts: aggressive pricing architecture reset at Kors, Versace assortment rebalancing (Tag Bag, Galaxia sneaker), wholesale stabilization expected after a steep Q4 decline, and Investor Day on Feb 19 detailing brand strategies and margin path .

What Went Well and What Went Wrong

What Went Well

  • Free cash flow positive: operating cash flow $309M and FCF $278M in the quarter; inventory down 13% YoY to $892M, reflecting improved working capital management .
  • Michael Kors profitability remained resilient with 16.2% operating margin despite revenue declining 12% YoY; management is refocusing on heritage “Jet Set” and price architecture to restore full-price sell-throughs .
  • Consumer engagement: databases grew (Versace +1.1M, +15%; Jimmy Choo +0.7M, +12%; Kors +9M, +11%), indicating brand awareness underpinning future demand .
  • Management quote: “We expect our performance to improve throughout fiscal year 2026 positioning us to return to growth in fiscal 2027 and beyond.” – John D. Idol .

What Went Wrong

  • Group revenue down 11.6% YoY with broad-based regional weakness (Asia down 20% for the group; outsized decline in China) and wholesale contraction; gross margin compressed 60bps to 64.4% on lower full-price sell-throughs .
  • Non-cash impairments ($675M OpEx, $602M net impact or $5.08/share) drove GAAP operating loss of $(590)M and GAAP EPS of $(4.61) .
  • Versace and Jimmy Choo posted operating losses; missteps in Versace assortment (too few statement items, reduced entry-level luxury offerings) and elevated pricing at Kors pressured sales and AURs; management is reversing course .

Financial Results

Consolidated P&L and Margins (oldest → newest)

MetricQ3 2024Q2 2025Q3 2025
Revenue ($USD Billions)$1.43 $1.08 $1.26
Gross Margin %65.0% 64.3% 64.4%
Adjusted Operating Margin %12.1% 3.0% 6.0%
Adjusted EPS ($)$1.20 $0.65 $0.45
GAAP EPS ($)$0.88 $0.20 $(4.61)

Segment Revenue and Operating Margins (oldest → newest)

SegmentRevenue Q3 2024 ($MM)Revenue Q2 2025 ($MM)Revenue Q3 2025 ($MM)Op Margin Q3 2024Op Margin Q3 2025
Versace$227 $201 $193 (6.2)% (10.9)%
Jimmy Choo$166 $140 $159 2.4% (3.8)%
Michael Kors$1,034 $738 $909 21.2% 16.2%

KPIs and Balance Sheet

KPIQ3 2025Notes
Inventory ($MM)$892 Down 13% YoY
Cash from Operations ($MM)$309 Inflow
Free Cash Flow ($MM)$278 Inflow
Cash & Equivalents ($MM)$356
Total Borrowings ($MM)$1,480
Net Debt ($MM)$1,120 Down vs $1,600 last year
Leverage Ratio2.77x Per credit facility definition
Foreign Currency Loss ($MM)$23 Q3 FX
Retail Stores (Total)1,205 Kors 747; Versace 234; Choo 224
Impairment Charge ($MM)$675 (OpEx) Net impact ~$602, $5.08/share

Guidance Changes

MetricPeriodPrevious GuidanceCurrent GuidanceChange
Total Revenue ($B)Q4 FY2025None (no guidance provided due to merger) ~$0.975 Introduced
Operating Loss ($MM)Q4 FY2025None ~$(25) Introduced
Gross MarginQ4 FY2025None ~Flat YoY Introduced
Operating Expenses ($MM)Q4 FY2025None ~$(50) decline QoQ Introduced
Versace Revenue ($B)Q4 FY2025None ~$0.200; FX headwind ~$7M Introduced
Jimmy Choo Revenue ($B)Q4 FY2025None ~$0.125; FX headwind ~$5M Introduced
Michael Kors Revenue ($B)Q4 FY2025None ~$0.650; FX headwind ~$15M Introduced
Total Revenue ($B)FY2025None ~$4.4; FX ~$(0.04) Introduced
Adjusted Operating Income ($MM)FY2025None ~$100 Introduced
Total Revenue ($B)FY2026None ~$4.1; FX ~$(0.10); store closures impact ~$0.06 Introduced
Adjusted Operating Income ($MM)FY2026None ~$150 Introduced
OpEx Reduction ($MM)FY2026None ~$(200) (includes ~$150M new cost actions) Introduced
Versace Revenue ($B)FY2025None ~$0.810; FX ~$(0.01) Introduced
Jimmy Choo Revenue ($B)FY2025None ~$0.600; FX ~$(0.005) Introduced
Michael Kors Revenue ($B)FY2025None ~$3.0; FX ~$(0.025) Introduced
Versace Op MarginFY2025None Negative high-single-digits Introduced
Versace Op MarginFY2026None ~Breakeven Introduced
Jimmy Choo Op MarginFY2026None Slightly negative Introduced
Michael Kors Op MarginFY2026None Low double-digits Introduced

Earnings Call Themes & Trends

TopicPrevious Mentions (Q-2 and Q-1)Current Period (Q3 FY2025)Trend
Pricing architecture (Michael Kors)Elevated prices, lower full-price sell-throughs; retail down low-teens; wholesale down high-teens ; Kors retail down mid-single-digits; Asia down 43% Reset to historical price points; rebuild core/signature; aim to lift full-price sell-throughs and AURs; Jet Set heritage marketing Improving through Spring/Fall 2025 as changes flow
Wholesale channelQ1/Q2 wholesale down double-digits/high-teens Q4 guide: wholesale down ~30%, then moderates with partner receptivity to Fall 2025 collections Worst in Q4, stabilizing thereafter
Asia/China demandAsia declines at all brands Q1; Kors Asia down 43% in Q2 Group Asia down 20%; outsized China decline; recovery not imminent but sequential improvement expected Still pressured; gradual improvement
Versace repositioningOngoing elevation; revenue declines YoY Quiet luxury emphasis; missteps in statement items/entry price points; reintroducing energy (Tag Bag, Galaxia sneakers); VIC growth double-digit Assortment recalibration in FY26
Marketing & brand narrativeDatabases growing; focus on long-term growth Kors “Jet Set” reboot; Spring campaign (Ibiza; Suki Waterhouse); strong fragrance/eyewear traction Reengaging core consumer
Store optimization & renovationsStore count reductions across brands Closing ~75 stores next year (mostly Kors full-price); renovate ~150 Kors stores over next 24 months Footprint rightsizing; productivity focus
Cost actions & transformationERP/transformation discussed and partially paused FY26 OpEx down ~$200M; transformation reassessment timing; workforce optimization Cost discipline accelerating
Liquidity & capital structureNet debt $1.53B in Q2 Net debt ~$1.12B; amended credit agreement and new $700M term loan extend maturities to July 2027; loans repaid Reduced near-term refinancing risk

Management Commentary

  • Strategic reset: “We made a number of missteps… in particular, at Versace and Michael Kors… We are refocusing on the heritage of the Michael Kors brand… and rebuilding our core and signature assortments” – John D. Idol .
  • Pricing/AUR: “Our AUR is down… by lowering certain prices… and getting better full price sell-throughs, we think we’ll elevate AUR to flat or growth next year” – John D. Idol .
  • Wholesale trajectory: “The greatest impact… in Q4… wholesale… last very large decline… accelerates in Q2–Q4 next year as strategies flow” – John D. Idol .
  • Cost actions and margins: “We expect expenses to decline approximately $200 million… as a result, operating income of approximately $150 million in fiscal 2026” – Thomas Edwards .
  • Liquidity: “Cash $356M and debt $1.48B… net debt ~$1.12B; strong free cash flow generation” – Thomas Edwards .

Q&A Highlights

  • Pricing architecture and AUR: Management acknowledged price hikes alienated Kors’ core consumer; resetting to good-better-best, lowering certain price points to drive full-price sell-throughs and ultimately higher gross margins/AURs over time .
  • Wholesale normalization: Q4 will reflect the steepest wholesale decline (~30%); partners responded positively to Fall 2025 lines, with stabilization expected through FY2026 as sell-in improves .
  • Asset sale speculation: Company will always consider shareholder value but strategy is to build all three houses; not focused on divestitures currently .
  • CapEx and store actions: FY25 CapEx ~$125M; similar in FY26 supporting Kors renovations; closing ~70–75 stores next year (majority Kors full-price); investing in e-commerce and data analytics .
  • Debt and FCF: Ending FY25 net debt expected ~$1.2B; FY26 targeted ~$200M lower, while funding marketing, analytics, and store renovations .

Estimates Context

Wall Street consensus EPS and revenue for Q3 FY2025 via S&P Global were unavailable at time of writing due to a temporary SPGI limit. As a result, we cannot assess beats/misses versus consensus for revenue or EPS in this recap. Adjusted EPS was $0.45 and revenue was $1.26B, per company disclosures .

Key Takeaways for Investors

  • Q3 print was weak on revenue/margins YoY and GAAP results were distorted by large, non-cash impairment; adjusted operating margin improved sequentially to 6.0% from 3.0% in Q2, suggesting early benefits from cost actions .
  • Michael Kors strategic reset (heritage “Jet Set,” rebuilt signature/core, price architecture normalization) is the pivotal driver for FY26–27 margin recovery and top-line stabilization; watch full-price sell-throughs/AUR trends starting Spring/Fall .
  • Wholesale is the swing factor near term: expect the steepest decline in Q4 (~30%), then moderation; better sell-in indicates potential stabilization through FY26 .
  • Liquidity improved with extended maturities to July 2027 and net debt down to ~$1.12B; strong Q3 FCF ($278M) provides runway to fund marketing and store renovations .
  • Versace recalibration (more energy, entry-level luxury balance) and product launches (Tag Bag, Galaxia sneakers) target aspirational consumers; monitor mix and margin progression in FY26 .
  • FY25 guide is conservative (revenue ~$4.4B, adjusted OI $100M); FY26 indicates expense reduction ($200M) and modest gross margin expansion; stock likely reacts to tangible evidence of pricing reset efficacy and wholesale stabilization at Investor Day .
  • Risks: continued Asia/China weakness, execution risk in assortment/pricing, and wholesale partner alignment; legal overhang from terminated Tapestry merger appears contained with reimbursement; FX headwinds embedded in guides .