Fashion

LA Unions Bite Back At SIMA

by The Editors on August 28, 2008

As if the Stop The Toll Road campaign could get any weirder, now the Los Angeles/Orange Counties Building and Construction Trades Council is charging that the Surf Industry Manufacturers Association is spreading untruths about the project and that “the lies being perpetrated by the opponents to this project are costing the region hundreds of jobs at a time when the economy is already in peril.”

R 241 opponents, specifically the Surfrider Foundation and the Sierra Club’s Friends of the Foothills, are using SIMA resources to repeatedly assert false claims that the toll road will cause the closure of the San Mateo campground and damage the surf break at Trestles,” said Trades Council Executive Secretary Richard Slawson. “Their assertions are nonsense. Even a noted researcher at Scripps Institution of Oceanography has studied the project and determined that it will have no impact on surfing or wave formation. . . . According to the LA/OC CBCTC, rather than helping the environment and protecting surfing locations, they are engaged in a smear campaign that manipulates and distorts the facts in an effort to stop a project that has been studied for more than 20 years, will bring much needed traffic relief to the region and provide hundreds of jobs for the local workforce.

The group is threatening a boycott of products by SIMA members Billabong, Hurley, Nixon, O’Neill, Quiksilver, Vans, and Volcom saying:

We value integrity in public debate and recognize differences of opinion. However, our members will not continue to support companies who knowingly sponsor groups who seek to lie or misinform the public.

We hate new roads no matter where they are going or what impact they have, but it is interesting to see how the other side is spinning it. For the entire letter follow the jump.

[Link: MarketWatch]

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Analyst Says Volcom Is Hanging Tough

by The Editors on August 27, 2008

The teen retail marketplace has been plummeting lately, and when PacSun announced their numbers last week Volcom got pulled down pretty hard. Now, Jeffrey P. Klinefelter of Piper Jaffray has written saying that Volcom management “remains confident that it’s bookings at major retailers are intact.”

We continue to recognize the strong authenticity of the brand as well as its solid execution in rolling out its new European strategy,” Klinefelter wrote.

Maybe that’s why the stock is up today.

[Link: Forbes.com]

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ASR Launches Show For Jacked Up Shit

by The Editors on August 27, 2008

Virtue

It’s nice to know that all the mixed martial arts, freestyle motocross, and tattoo clothing companies won’t be skeezing up the isles of the fall ASR show, but how jacked up is it that there are now enough 909 brands to warrant not only their own magazine, but their own ASR-powered trade show September 5-6, 2008 at the San Diego Hard Rock Hotel called Virtue?

Tito OrtizHere are some of the brands that will be showing (try not to laugh, ’cause they’ll kick your ass): Hitman, sinister, Extreme Pain, Punishment, Hostile, Contract Killers, and more.

The inked up, bad-ass, pornstar-dating thug crowd is no doubt huge, but to see it all marketed as fashion makes it look more like some new game show on Japanese television. Then again, we’ll never really understand what motivates people who live that far inland.

Either way, ASR show director Andy Tompkins is stoked:

Virtue has been met with a resounding enthusiasm on both the buyer and exhibitor front,” he says. “Many retailers have benefited by carrying this growing category, but don’t fully understand the market. Virtue will give an all-around look at the products and lifestyle, while also featuring seminars to help retailers to better understand how to make this category work for their businesses.”

And what about a seminar given by Jenna Jameson dating ultimate fighter Tito Ortiz titled “How to Stay In The Fight! MMA in the Marketplace?” We’re almost too scared to go.

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Quiksilver Finds Buyer For Rossignol

by The Editors on August 27, 2008

It appears that Quiksilver has found someone on whom to unload their flagging ski company Rossignol. The company is Chartreuse & Mont Blanc and it’s lead by Bruno Cercley a former CEO of Rossignol.

The proposed transaction is valued at EUR100 million, which comprise of EUR75 million in cash and a EUR25 million Seller’s Note. Quicksilver intends to use the net proceeds from the sale to repay existing indebtedness.

Chartreuse & Mont Blanc is mostly owned by Macquarie Group which also owns a minority interest in the Jarden Group (owners of K2 and Adio), according to a story on MarketWatch.

What a stunning business transaction this has been. Here are the numbers: They bought Rossignol in March of 2005 for $320 million. Then sold off the Cleveland Golf portion of the company in November of 2007, for $132.5 million. So, it looks like Quiksilver only lost about $30 million on the deal in a little under three years. Nice work.

[Link: RTT News and MarketWatch]

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Billabong Gets Back In The USSR

by The Editors on August 25, 2008

According to the Australian newspaper The Age, Billabong plans to open up shop in the heart of Russia.

Billabong plans to set up a flagship store in one of Moscow’s trendy shopping districts as a way to assert its dominance in the international youth-wear market. . . . Billabong is sold in over 100 countries including the Czech Republic, Hungary, Poland and Estonia, which makes up about 1% of global sales.

Which reminds us: “Every Russian, looking at Moscow, feels that she is a mother; every foreigner, looking at her and not knowing her maternal significance, must feel the feminine character of this city, and Napoleon felt it.”

[Link: The Age]

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Overpaid CEO Of The Day: PacSun’s Sally Kasaks

by The Editors on August 22, 2008

PacSun’s CEO Sally Frame Kasaks has won 24/7 Wall Street’s Overpaid CEO of the Day award for August 22, 2008 thanks to her total compensation last year of $3.2 million and the fact that the PacSun stock is off over 60 percent during the last year.

After posted flat revenue of $312 million for the last quarter, and operating income of only $3.7 million, Pacific Sunwear’s shares fell 31% today to just above $5. . . . Four firms downgraded PSUN today: Robert W. Baird, Friedman Billings, Roth Capital and BB&T Capital. The most significant cause of the ratings revisions was that the company dropped guidance for the third and fourth quarters.

Yet, as they point out: Kasaks salary remained the same.

[Link: 24/7 Wall St.]

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PacSun Gets The Downgrade

by The Editors on August 22, 2008

PacsunPacSun shares opened down this morning after the company announced yesterday a “weak outlook that resulted in a series of investment downgrades,” according to Forbes.com. Not surprising, it also pulled down shares of Volcom down more than $2 by mid-morning.

Pacific Sunwear reported after the regular markets closed Thursday that it swung to a fiscal second-quarter loss from discontinued operations but offered downbeat profit projections for the third and fourth quarters amid a weakening economy. . . “The retail environment is extremely difficult and the primary root of (Pacific Sunwear’s) poor performance,” Mitch Kummetz, an analyst at Robert W. Baird & Co., wrote in a note released early Friday. “However, given the company’s revised back-half outlook, its strategy of refreshing stores and refining its merchandise mix isn’t making enough of a difference to warrant an Outperform rating anymore.”

We thinking we prefer the Zumiez strategy.

[Link: Forbes.com]

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Billabong Buys Dakine, Bra For $99 Million

by The Editors on August 21, 2008

BillabongIn Billabong’s financial report today they announced the following: net profit of AUS$176.4 million, up from AUS$167.3 million a year ago.

Mr O’Neill said Billabong’s second half was a “highlight” as sales revenue in North America grew by 18.6 per cent, earnings in Europe rose by 20.8 per cent and Australasia recorded 19.8 per cent growth, in constant currency terms. . . . The Billabong CEO remained confident about fiscal 2009 and said good growth was evident in early forward orders in the US and Europe amid more moderate Australasian growth.

But the really big news was that Billabong announced that they were paying $99.9 million dollars for DaKine Hawaii.

Mr O’Neill said: “DaKine has built a strong sales base in North America and a growing sales base in several international territories, making it a powerful addition to the group.” . . . DaKine is expected to contribute approximately 4 per cent of group sales in fiscal 2009 and be earnings per share positive in year one.

Billabong really is dakine now, gobble, gobble, gobble. Kind of makes us wish we had something to sell them.

[Link: The Australian]

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Zumiez 2008 Q2 Conference Call Notes

by The Editors on August 21, 2008

Zumiez1Teen retailers and especially mall retailers have had a tough year this year and Zumiez has has not escaped, however in the second quarter conference call held at 2 PM PST on August 21, 2008 CEO Rick Brooks and CFO Trevor Lang believe the company is doing very well compared to competitors.

Total net sales for the second quarter (13 weeks) ended August 2, 2008 increased by 12.5% to $92.3 million from $82.0 million reported in the second quarter ended August 4, 2007 (13 weeks). The company posted net income for the quarter of $2.7 million or $0.09 per diluted share versus $3.1 million or $0.11 per diluted share in the second quarter of the prior fiscal year. Comparable store sales decreased 1.7% for the second quarter of fiscal 2008 compared to an 11.6% increase in the second quarter of fiscal 2007.

Rick Brooks, President and Chief Executive Officer of Zumiez Inc., stated: “We continue to make positive strides in our ongoing efforts to give our customers a unique specialty retail experience, while controlling costs and effectively managing inventories during this very difficult operating environment. Due to this focus, we exceeded our earnings projection for the first six months of this year. We have opened 39 stores this year and continue to make the investments necessary to build the Zumiez chain to our goal of 800 stores.”

And here are some of the notes we pulled from the call:

  • The thing thing that surprised us most is not news to anyone who follows the Zumiez stock. The company has no debt. None.
  • Zumiez is focused on remaining true to the brand. “Our business model has the strength of being a branded business model,” Rick Brooks said. “We work with our brands to leverage inventories. We work very closely with the brands . . . we have a very dynamic process of moving product to where it is selling strongest.”
  • “This is a very promotional environment,” Rick continued. “This macro economic climate is tough. That is making it much more price point. While I’m not going to comment on specific brand performance, this is how we see it: Those brands that we are carrying that are focusing on distribution in core shop are doing very well.. . . On the other hand there are other brands that have wider distribution outside the core retailers, brands that we’re finding are being price promoted by our competitors in the mall outside the core, and on those we’re having to be price promotional. The places we have to be promotional are with the brands that are in our non-core competitors.”
  • The company believes that opening more stores is still the best use of its cash. They are completely focused on the 800 stores target and will open 57 new stores in the fiscal year.
  • Performance in the stores was broken up regionally. “California, Nevada, Arizona, was rough. Texas, Illinois, Wisconsin performed nicely for us.”
  • “I just want to be clear with the investment community that we feel very good with the returns that we are getting on our stores,” CFO Trevor Lang said.
  • eCommerce was up 75 percent in the second quarter and 65 percent year to date. “Our ecommerce business is very strong, yet it is still a very small part of our business,” Brooks said. “We believe that there is a big opportunity to build that business over the next five years. We’re starting to do a number of things along that front.”
  • Snowboard business still plays a major roll in quarter four. In October it is about 11 percent of sales and goes to 18 percent by the end of the quarter: “We’ve been doing the snowboard business for a long time,” Brooks said. “Over the last number of years we have taken the strategy that we buy well below what we think we’re going to sell. We chase the weather. Where it snows is where we move the product. Based on the results last year. We are going after the technology driven products at the high end. And at the other end we have shipped more pricepoint driven packages as we get into the season were we can move on some in the price issue.”
  • There are no plans to de-emphasize snowboarding.
  • Zumiez sales percentages breakdown: footwear 18%, accessory 18%, hardgoods (skate and snow) 14%, men’s apparel 33%, junior 15%, boys 2% percent.
  • Investing in information technology organization, is high on the list. Zumiez thinks there are some strategic investments we will make there.
  • The company is working to get better deals on real estate on a landlord-by-landlord basis. “We are one of the few growing retailers,” Brooks said. “I think we are a very attractive tenant for the landlords and we try to look at our landlords are partners. We are doing deals with the landlords that value our position and ability to generate sales.
  • Sales per square foot is currently running at about $470 versus $500 last year. “We look at total flow through on the business,” Lang said. “We’ll look at our high-volume stores that do more than 800 spsf and we expand them so the sales per square foot may go down but the profitability goes up.
  • Regarding the tough economic retail climate: “What we need is for the consumer to feel better,” Brook said. “And when that happens we’ll be doing better.”

And just as Brooks and Lang were about to answer a question regarding employee retention and turnover the Internet broadcast crashed mid response. The operator apologized and we disconnected.

[Link: Zumiez]

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Radiator Rides The Wild Surf

by The Editors on August 21, 2008

Radiators

Radiator, and Australian wetsuit company, was trying to come up with some way to show that their wetsuits are like wearing nothing at all.

Anyone who enjoys the water has dreamed of something which would be better than a wetsuit. Something which would be super warm and comfortable and yet still so light that it would be totally unrestrictive – well it’s here and it’s called RADIATOR

So. . . well. . . their agency (because who else?) apparently came up with these.

[Links: Sex Happy via Fleshbot]

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