SM
STEVEN MADDEN, LTD. (SHOO)·Q3 2025 Earnings Summary
Executive Summary
- Q3 2025 revenue rose 6.9% year over year to $667.9M, but came in below S&P Global consensus ($694.2M*); adjusted diluted EPS was $0.43, slightly below consensus $0.446, with tariffs driving margin compression and shipment delays in wholesale. *
- Direct-to-consumer (DTC) surged 76.6% to $221.5M (up 1.5% ex-Kurt Geiger), while wholesale fell 10.7% (down 19% ex-Kurt Geiger); adjusted gross margin improved to 43.4% on mix, despite tariff pressure.
- Management initiated Q4 2025 guidance: revenue +27–30% YoY; GAAP EPS $0.30–$0.35; adjusted EPS $0.41–$0.46, citing stronger Steve Madden product trends, tariff mitigation, and Kurt Geiger contribution.
- Key near-term catalysts: Q4 guidance inflection, accelerating boot/dress categories, price/mix AUR gains, and normalization of wholesale orders; risks include continued tariff headwinds and outlet drag in border markets.
What Went Well and What Went Wrong
What Went Well
- Strong DTC growth and product resonance: DTC revenue +76.6% (61.9% adjusted DTC GM) with boots, dress shoes, and casuals driving mix-led strength; marketing investment amplified Gen Z/millennial conversion. “Boots have been the standout… casual tall shaft styles… dress shoes across various heel heights… loafers, Mary Janes, and mules.”
- Kurt Geiger momentum and integration: Comp sales up mid-teens; >70% DTC mix supports consolidated gross margin; management advancing revenue synergies and logistics cost savings.
- Reinstated quarterly outlook: Q4 revenue +27–30% and adjusted EPS $0.41–$0.46 guided, underpinned by improved wholesale order patterns and pricing/sourcing mitigation.
What Went Wrong
- Tariff shock compressed margins and delayed shipments: Wholesale GM fell to 33.6% (from 35.5% LY), DTC GM to 61.9% (from 64.0% LY); GAAP operating margin dropped to 4.7% and adjusted to 6.9%.
- Wholesale contraction (organic): Wholesale revenue down 10.7% (down 19% ex-Kurt Geiger), with accessories/apparel underperforming (still expected down mid-to-high teens ex-KG in Q4).
- Outlet channel drag and value channels pullback: Outlets saw notable weakness, with five of eight largest stores on the Mexico border running ~40% down; mass/off-price were most impacted during the 145% tariff spike.
Financial Results
Consolidated Actuals (oldest → newest)
Values retrieved from S&P Global.*
Actual vs Consensus (S&P Global) and Surprise
Values retrieved from S&P Global.*
Segment and Margin Mix (oldest → newest)
KPIs (oldest → newest)
Guidance Changes
Earnings Call Themes & Trends
Management Commentary
- “As anticipated, the third quarter was challenging, driven largely by the impact of new tariffs… Consumers have responded favorably to our Fall assortments… position us to deliver stronger financial results beginning in the fourth quarter.” — Ed Rosenfeld, CEO (press release)
- “Order patterns from our wholesale customers are normalizing… mitigating a larger percentage of the gross margin pressure through strategic pricing actions and sourcing initiatives.” (prepared remarks)
- “Boots have been the standout… dress shoes… casuals like loafers, Mary Janes, and mules… marketing… increased investment across YouTube, TikTok, Snapchat, and Pinterest.” (prepared remarks)
- “Kurt Geiger comp sales were up mid-teens… integration remains on track… cost savings in freight and logistics.” (prepared remarks)
Q&A Highlights
- Core vs. Kurt Geiger in Q4: Core revenue guide ex-KG down ~2% to
4%; wholesale footwear and DTC positive; KG revenue $182–$187M ($135M DTC, >70% DTC mix). - Margin trajectory: Tariff impact to gross margin worsened ~100 bps in Q3 vs Q2; net impact in Q4 expected “considerably less” as mitigation builds; KG lowers gross margin mix by ~300 bps in Q4.
- Pricing and AUR: AUR up high-single digits in Q3 DTC; mid-teens in Q4; surgical pricing (fashion-forward styles tolerate increases better than basics).
- Channel dynamics: Value channels (off-price/mass) pulled back most during 145% China tariff spike; regular price channels stronger; outlet drag including border stores ~40% down.
- Kurt Geiger margin path: 2025 (May–Dec partial) ~6% EBIT; intermediate target to reach legacy Steve Madden levels or higher over time via SG&A leverage.
Estimates Context
- Q3: Revenue $667.9M vs $694.2M consensus (MISS); adjusted EPS $0.43 vs $0.446 consensus (MISS). Q2: Revenue $559.0M vs $576.6M (MISS); adjusted EPS $0.20 vs $0.241 (MISS). Q1: Revenue $553.5M vs $556.3M (MISS), but adjusted EPS $0.60 vs $0.456 (BEAT). *
- Forward implications: Q4 top-line guidance (+27–30% YoY) likely triggers upward revenue estimate revisions, while margin expectations should reflect ongoing tariff mitigation, mix (higher DTC/KG), and reduced promotions; wholesale accessories/apparel remains a headwind ex-KG.
Values retrieved from S&P Global.*
Key Takeaways for Investors
- Near-term inflection set-up: Q4 guidance signals revenue acceleration with improving product trends and pricing/mix tailwinds; monitor execution vs +27–30% growth and adjusted EPS $0.41–$0.46.
- Mix matters: DTC growth and KG’s >70% DTC skew support consolidated gross margin, but mix and tariff impacts keep operating margin below historical levels near term.
- Tariff mitigation progressing: Strategic pricing, sourcing diversification (including Mexico) and factory discounts are reducing net margin impact heading into Q4.
- Category strength: Boots/dress/casuals drive AUR and reduce promotional intensity; sustained product momentum is pivotal for Q4 holiday performance.
- Wholesale recovery: Order patterns normalizing, but value channels and wholesale accessories/apparel remain pressured; watch ex-KG wholesale footwear uptick (up 2–4.5% guided).
- Kurt Geiger synergy ramp: Revenue/SG&A synergies and international expansion into 2026; medium-term margin pathway toward legacy levels or higher.
- Balance sheet capacity: Net debt ~$185M with liquidity and new credit facilities; dividend maintained at $0.21 per share.