Archive for June, 2010



Recent Retail News

Share/Save/Bookmark
  • Coach Looking to Europe for Expansion: Coach has signed a partnership arrangement with French department store operator Printemps and a joint venture with UK men’s wear company Hackett for distribution in the UK, Spain and Portugal. The first result of the deal in France will be a 1700 sq ft shop in Printemps Boulevard Haussman flagship in Paris scheduled for June. The agreement has plans for 14 such boutiques in the next 3 years.
  • Vera Wang Marries David’s Bridal: Vera Wang, perhaps the biggest name in luxury bridal, has signed a long-term agreement with David’s Bridal, the 308 store mall and strip center based volume bridal house. This looks like a win win for both parties and also for all of those brides out there in America (David’s has locations in all 50 states) whose aspirations are larger than their pocketbooks. The gowns will be priced from $600-$1200.
  • Armani & Reebok Partner Up: Giorgio Armani and Reebok are collaborating on an activewear collection for men and women called EA7/Reebok scheduled to ship to stores this summer. The product will be both apparel and footwear. The apparel will be priced at $65-$190 and the footwear at $140-$150. The plans are for a continued partnership beyond the first season.
  • Iconix Continues to Deal: Iconix announced that they are purchasing the iconic cartoon character “Peanuts” and related properties, for $175 million in cash from United Features Syndicate and EW Scripps. They are setting up a new subsidiary in partnership with the heirs to Charles Schultz, the Peanuts creator, with Iconix owning 80% and the Schultz family 20%. They estimate that the properties, which have $2 billion in annual retail sales, will generate $75 million in annual royalty revenue and add between 12 and 15 cents to EPS. Additionally, it is part of an initiative to further diversify the Iconix portfolio away from dependence on pure fashion.

Movado Exits Retail, but Real Problems Remain

Share/Save/Bookmark

Movado announced that they are closing 26 of their 27 regular price boutiques in an effort to streamline their business and focus on wholesale and retail outlets. They are keeping their Flagship store in Rockefeller Center in New York as the only shop selling regular priced product, while they have 31 outlet stores. The closing of the 26 stores will result in a decrease in revenue of about $30 million a year, but the retail operation has been a drag on profits and the hope is that this will help right the ship. The company had a loss of $55 million in 2009 on revenues of $378 million compared to a small profit of $2 million on $461 million revenue for 2008 and a profit of $61 million on $560 revenue for 2007.

Retailsails believes the problems go beyond retail though. While it is true that the luxury watch/jewelry sector suffered more than other businesses in the recession, Movado has additional issues to deal with. Their own brands are well-known and well-regarded, but the styling is a bit tired. Additionally, and most importantly, the two top trends for the past several years have been big and oversized or expensive limited edition mechanical, and Movado missed the boat on both of those. As for their licensed labels, the names are better than the actual merchandise.

They have been slow to address these concerns, and have also been slow to cut costs commensurate with the revenue drop. The cost of sales for the 5 years from 2005-2008 were consistently between 38-40%. In 2009 it jumped to 51%.

They did report an increase in sales for the most recent quarter of 16.7% which hopefully is a sign of things to come. But, they still have to show improvement on product development and marketing to be viable. Movado markets their own watch brands under Movado, Concord, Ebel and ESQ and also has licenses for Coach, Hugo Boss, Juicy Couture, Lacoste and Tommy Hilfiger.

« Previous Page


Follow RetailSails
Subscribe to RetailSails RSS  Feed Follow retail_sails on Twitter Subscribe to RetailSails by Email
RetailSails 2012 Chain Store Productivity Guide

Archives

Retailer Data

Follow RetailSails on Twitter


Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.

Join 49 other followers