GI
G III APPAREL GROUP LTD /DE/ (GIII)·Q4 2025 Earnings Summary
Executive Summary
- Q4 FY2025 delivered solid growth and margin expansion: revenue up 9.8% y/y to $839.5M, GAAP diluted EPS $1.07 (vs $0.61), and non‑GAAP EPS $1.27 (vs $0.76), driven by stronger owned-brand mix and improved outerwear margins .
- Full-year FY2025 hit record EPS (GAAP $4.20; non‑GAAP $4.42), with inventories down 8% and total debt reduced ~99% to $6.2M after redeeming $400M notes, enhancing balance sheet flexibility .
- FY2026 outlook implies modest top-line decline as PVH licenses roll off but continued mix-driven profitability: sales ~$3.14B, EPS $4.15–$4.25, adj. EBITDA $310–$315M; Q1 FY2026 sales ~$580M and EPS $0.05–$0.15. Management expects slight gross margin expansion, ~100 bps SG&A deleverage, ~$9M interest expense, 28.5% tax, and ~$50M capex .
- Catalyst narrative: transformation toward owned brands (DKNY, Donna Karan, Karl Lagerfeld, Vilebrequin) with Donna Karan’s relaunch cited as the “best launch” in company history and >$1B long-term sales potential; ongoing mitigation of China tariff headwinds, AI adoption, and AWWG partnership to accelerate international growth .
What Went Well and What Went Wrong
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What Went Well
- Owned-brand mix drove margin gains: Q4 gross margin rose to 39.5% (vs 36.9% LY), aided by stronger outerwear profitability; non‑GAAP EPS rose to $1.27 (vs $0.76) .
- Donna Karan relaunch outperformed with high AURs/sell‑throughs; management: “best launch” and seeing ~40% growth outlook; DKNY and Karl Lagerfeld delivered double‑digit growth with expanding points of sale .
- Balance sheet improved: inventories −8% y/y to $478.1M; total debt ~$6.2M after redeeming $400M notes, enabling focus on growth investments and optionality for buybacks .
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What Went Wrong
- PVH license roll-off a continuing headwind; CK/Tommy down ~$188–$200M in FY2025 and stepping down further in FY2026, requiring replacement with go‑forward portfolio .
- Q4 impacted by Hudson’s Bay bankruptcy (negative effect on shipments), requiring adjustments to FY2026 exposure; also elevated bad debt reserve increased by ~$6M in Q4 .
- Tariff and macro: recent 20% China tariffs add cost pressure (largest exposure in Q2 FY2026) though management plans cost offsets, selective pricing (outerwear elasticity), and sourcing diversification .
Financial Results
Notes and drivers:
- Q4 y/y revenue +9.8% and EPS expansion reflect stronger owned brands and improved outerwear profitability; SG&A up with planned investments and higher bad debt reserve .
- Q4 vs Q3 seasonal step-down in sales/EPS as expected in apparel; margins held near Q3 levels due to mix .
Segment performance (Q4 FY2025 per CFO commentary)
Note: Segment totals may not reconcile to consolidated net sales due to eliminations/other adjustments; figures as disclosed in prepared remarks .
Balance sheet and cash metrics
Guidance Changes
Earnings Call Themes & Trends
Management Commentary
- Strategic focus: “Owned brands now represent just over half of our total net sales… an accretive licensing income stream… tremendous long‑term opportunity to capture market share globally” .
- Donna Karan relaunch: “We believe Donna Karan has over $1 billion in annual reported net sales potential” and “the best launch that we’ve had,” with ~40% growth outlook and highest margins in the company .
- Mix shift: “Calvin… and Tommy Hilfiger… represent approximately 34% of our total sales… expect… ~25% by end of fiscal 2026” .
- Tariffs: “We believe we can mitigate a vast majority of the impact… higher AURs in outerwear provide elasticity… will diversify sourcing away from China” .
- AI: “We’re using AI… including design… Converse… will be as futuristic as the market has to offer” .
Q&A Highlights
- PVH license roll-off and guidance: FY2025 CK/Tommy declines broadly as anticipated; FY2026 adjusted for further roll-off with retailers maintaining space for G‑III brands .
- Tariffs cadence: Limited Q1 exposure given inventory; greatest exposure in Q2; mitigation via vendor/customer negotiations and selective pricing .
- Q4 puts/takes: No shipment shift; Hudson’s Bay bankruptcy negatively impacted Q4; adjusted go‑forward exposure; outerwear stronger vs LY; gross margin strength from owned brands .
- AI initiatives: Evaluating broad use cases; leveraging AI in design and new Converse systems .
- Modeling clarifications: FY2026 slight GM expansion; ~<100 bps SG&A rate increase; interest ~$9M; capex ~$50M; tax ~28.5% .
Estimates Context
- S&P Global consensus estimates were not available at the time of analysis due to access limits; as a result, we cannot provide verified consensus vs. actual comparisons for Q4 FY2025. Values would normally be retrieved from S&P Global.
- Management characterized Q4 results as outperforming expectations and highlighted full‑year record non‑GAAP EPS and margin expansion, but this references internal expectations/guidance rather than third‑party consensus .
Key Takeaways for Investors
- Mix shift to owned brands is working, lifting margins and EPS even as PVH license sales decline; management expects further CK/Tommy step-down offset by owned and new licensed brands (e.g., Converse) .
- Donna Karan relaunch is a major growth engine with superior margins and strong wholesale/DTC traction; continued floor space expansion and category broadening underpin FY2026 .
- Near-term macro/tariff headwinds appear manageable via pricing elasticity in outerwear, vendor offset negotiations, and sourcing diversification; biggest tariff exposure in Q2 FY2026 is incorporated in guidance .
- Balance sheet strength (de‑levered, inventory normalized) provides optionality to invest behind brands, tech/AI, and selectively repurchase stock .
- FY2026 guide implies modest top‑line pressure but resilient profitability (slight GM expansion despite SG&A deleverage); watch execution on Converse launch, AWWG-enabled international expansion, and retail turnaround .
- Trading lens: narrative centers on durable margin mix shift, Donna Karan/DKNY momentum, and tariff mitigation credibility; updates on PVH shelf-space backfill and wholesale reorder cadence are key catalysts through FY2026 .