By Emma Thomasson
BERLIN (Reuters) – German sportswear company
Adidas <ADSGn.DE> turned around its sales in North America in the
first quarter, helped by a marketing campaign designed to win business
from dominant rival Nike<NKE.N>.
Adidas said group sales
rose 17 percent to 4.08 billion euros ($ 4.54 billion), or 9 percent
excluding the impact of currencies, beating an average analyst forecast
for 3.91 billion and lifting its shares more than 1 percent.
Despite
the hike in marketing spending, Adidas increased its operating margin
by 10 basis points to 8.9 percent, still well behind the 13 percent
achieved by Nike last year.
Long-serving Chief Executive Herbert
Hainer, who faced calls to quit last year as Adidas lost more ground to
Nike, said the sales improvement was broad-based, with particularly
strong growth in the running and fashion businesses.
While western
Europe and China grew fast, Hainer also highlighted a 7 percent
currency-neutral rise in North American sales in the first three months
of the year, which he said showed the initial success of splashy brand
campaigns.
“It is just the beginning. America is not a sprint for
us, it is more a marathon… We still have a lot of work ahead of us,”
Hainer told a conference call for journalists.
The figures should
help reassure investors ahead of the Adidas annual general meeting on
Thursday, when Hainer is likely to face calls for clarity on his
leadership after the board launched a formal search for a successor.
Hainer,
who has been CEO since 2001, said on Tuesday that turning the business
around was more important than whether he stays on until the end of his
contract in 2017.
Hainer launched a new five-year strategy last
month to lift sales by almost half to above 22 billion euros, focusing
on speeding up the supply chain and achieving success in the United
States and the world’s largest cities.
OUTLOOK TOO CONSERVATIVE?
Adidas
shares, which have already risen almost a third this year on signs of
improved performance, pared early gains to trade up 1.2 percent by 1105
GMT, outperforming a slightly weaker German blue-chip index
<.GDAXI>.
Adidas shares trade at 21 times forward earnings, still at a discount to Nike on almost 26 times.
“Good
start into 2015 as previously hinted. Full year sales growth forecast
looks somewhat conservative, we reckon, given the around 9 percent
growth in Q1 against a strong Q1 2014,” said Equinet analyst Ingbert
Faust, who rates the stock “buy”.
Adidas reiterated it expected
2015 sales to rise by a medium single-digit percentage rate on a
currency-neutral basis, after a 6 percent increase in 2014, while net
profit from continuing operations should climb 7-10 percent.
Hainer
said he was “very optimistic” about the outlook, but noted that Adidas
faced tougher comparisons for the second and third quarter due to last
year’s World Cup.
Adidas slipped to third place in the United
States last year behind Nike and fast-growing Under Armour <UA.N>,
while Nike advanced in the German firm’s home territory of western
Europe and in soccer, to take its global market share to 15.9 percent
compared to 10.5 for Adidas, according to data firm Euromonitor.
Adidas
has responded by increasing marketing spending by more than a quarter
and putting a new emphasis on the United States, the world’s top
sportswear market, important not only for sales but also for setting
global trends.
Hainer appointed a new head of the North American
business, poached key Nike designers and moved several executives to the
Adidas U.S. base in Portland, as well as spending more on sponsorship
in baseball, basketball and American football.
Hainer has seen the
group’s U.S. market share gradually decline despite buying American
brand Reebok in 2006, prompting some investors to suggest he should sell
it off again.
But Hainer has rejected such calls, noting that
Reebok, repositioned as a fitness brand, is now performing well,
benefiting from the booming popularity of training.
Reebok saw
sales rise a currency-neutral 9 percent in the first quarter – an eighth
consecutive quarter of growth – even though they fell 3 percent in
North America due to closures of factory outlet stores as the brand
seeks to shift more upmarket.
Fashion brand Originals grew 29
percent, benefiting from the catwalk success of its relaunched
“Superstar” sneakers supported by celebrities including pop star
Pharrell Williams as well as its “Yeezy” shoe developed with Kanye West.
Meanwhile,
the running business recorded a sales increase of 13 percent, helped by
the introduction of a new range of shoes with springy, lightweight
“Boost” soles – worn by the winners of 32 recent marathons, including
those in Berlin and New York.
(Reporting by Emma Thomasson; Editing by Keith Weir and Anna Willard)
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