UO
URBAN OUTFITTERS INC (URBN)·Q3 2017 Earnings Summary
Executive Summary
- Record Q3 sales with total net sales up 5% year over year to $862.5M and diluted EPS of $0.40; retail segment comps +1% overall, led by Urban Outfitters (+5.2%) while Anthropologie (-2.7%) and Free People (-1.5%) lagged .
- Mix shift to direct-to-consumer supported comps but pressured gross margin via higher delivery/logistics; Q3 gross profit rate fell 15 bps to 34.8% despite maintained merchandise margins roughly flat year over year .
- Urban Outfitters delivered broad-based strength (women’s, accessories, expanded categories, positive store comps NA/EU); Anthropologie’s expanded categories were strong but women’s apparel remained a headwind; Free People wholesale grew strongly, aided by prior-year shipment timing .
- Management guided Q4 FY17 gross margin down year over year on markdowns and DTC delivery deleverage; SG&A mid-single-digit growth; FY17 capex plan reduced to ~$160M from ~$170M; FY17 effective tax rate guided to ~36% (down from prior 37%) .
- Key narrative drivers: accelerating digital penetration, fashion silhouette shift favoring bottoms/separates, proprietary/exclusive product strategy, and international expansion; margin headwinds from DTC logistics and occupancy deleverage remain focal points .
What Went Well and What Went Wrong
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What Went Well
- Urban Outfitters posted its best comps in 12 quarters with positive store comps NA/EU and double-digit DTC growth; women’s apparel and expanded categories (intimates, beauty, home, tech) excelled .
- Free People wholesale delivered a 30% sales spike (normalized ~13% adjusting for prior-year shipment timing) and strong forward bookings; expanded categories (Movement, Intimates, Shoes) drove growth, including Europe .
- Anthropologie’s expanded categories (home décor, beauty, BHLDN, Terrain) and larger-format stores outperformed, with strong digital growth and positive IMU, helping operating profit despite overall negative comps .
- Quote: “Urban brand… created compelling trend-right product… and delivered one of the most profitable second quarters in the brand’s history” (context for trajectory into Q3) .
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What Went Wrong
- Gross margin pressure from delivery/logistics due to higher DTC penetration and store occupancy deleverage; Q3 gross profit rate declined by 15 bps to 34.8% .
- Anthropologie women’s apparel continued to weigh on comps and markdowns, despite tight inventory; management expected higher markdowns into Q4 .
- Free People retail segment faced negative comps earlier in the year and took additional markdowns to clear slow-moving product; wholesale timing inflated Q3 growth vs prior-year base .
- Analyst concerns centered on balancing DTC growth with profitability, markdown depth, and IMU trajectory amid channel mix shifts .
Financial Results
Segment and Brand Net Sales
KPIs and Comps
Note: Wall Street consensus estimates (S&P Global) for Q3 2017 and prior quarters were unavailable at time of request due to provider limits; estimate comparisons are therefore omitted.
Guidance Changes
Earnings Call Themes & Trends
Management Commentary
- “The divergence in demand by channel… continued in Q3 this year. In general, the digital channel outperformed, stores lagged and wholesale delivered strong growth.” — Richard Hayne .
- “Urban… delivered a terrific quarter. Total retail segment comp sales grew by over 5%, driven by a double-digit increase in direct-to-consumer sales and positive store comps in both North America and Europe.” — Richard Hayne .
- “Anthropologie… expanded categories continued their strong comp growth rate in Q3 led by home décor… exciting news… change in our apparel trajectory” — David McCreight (context carries into FY18; Anthropologie commentary in FY17 Q3 focuses on expanded categories and apparel headwinds) .
- “Gross profit rate declined by 15 basis points… primarily due to increased penetration of the direct-to-consumer channel resulting in increased customer delivery and overall logistics expense rates.” — Frank Conforti .
- “Free People… wholesale business reported a 30% spike in sales… adjusting for… shipping delays last year, wholesale still produced solid gains.” — Richard Hayne .
Q&A Highlights
- DTC vs store profitability model: Management emphasized difficulty committing to an exact operating margin rate given rapid DTC mix shifts; near-term lever is markdown reduction via speed-to-customer and data analytics; longer-term levers include IMU improvement and occupancy cost adjustments .
- Gross margin moving pieces: The lion’s share of Q3 margin deleverage was delivery/logistics tied to DTC; markdowns deeper on specific underperformers (e.g., UO shoes, women’s accessories) .
- International growth/margins: Significant opportunity via owner-operated stores, franchise, JV, and wholesale; Europe performing well; mix shift to international/wholesale expected to grow .
- Inventory posture: Inventory managed tightly; enough stock to support stronger Q4 if demand continues; focus on speed and shared inventory concepts to rebalance between stores and DTC .
- Store strategy and rents: Landlords increasingly flexible (percentage rent deals, flatter renewals); objective to reduce store occupancy rate over time (context on ongoing negotiations aligns with Q3 FY17 comments on occupancy deleverage) .
Estimates Context
- S&P Global Wall Street consensus for EPS and revenue (Q3 2017, Q2 2017, Q1 2017) was unavailable at time of request due to provider limits; consequently, comparisons to consensus and beat/miss designations cannot be shown. Values would normally be retrieved from S&P Global.
Key Takeaways for Investors
- URBN’s Q3 showcased strong brand bifurcation: Urban Outfitters momentum across channels and categories versus Anthropologie apparel softness; expanded categories and digital scale underpin the group but apparel execution remains a swing factor .
- Digital penetration is accretive to sales but dilutive to near-term gross margin via delivery/logistics; margin recovery levers include markdown discipline (speed-to-customer, forecasting tools), IMU improvements, and occupancy cost relief .
- Free People wholesale remains a growth engine, with normalized double-digit trajectory and international upside; watch wholesale mix on IMU and margin .
- Larger-format Anthropologie stores and category adjacencies (home/beauty/BHLDN/Terrain) are strategic growth vectors with positive early economics and digital spillover .
- Guidance points to Q4 gross margin down y/y and SG&A investment in marketing/tech; FY17 capex and tax rate lowered, tempering cash outflow/tax headwinds .
- Medium-term thesis hinges on sustaining fashion-led comp momentum at Urban/Free People, resolving Anthropologie apparel mix, and monetizing international expansion while managing DTC-cost headwinds .