The Business of Fashion
Agenda-setting intelligence, analysis and advice for the global fashion community.
Agenda-setting intelligence, analysis and advice for the global fashion community.
HERZOGENAURACH, Germany — German sportswear brand Puma on Wednesday said that uncertainty around the coronavirus made forecasts for the full-year impossible after the pandemic hit second quarter sales and profitability.
"The uncertainty surrounding the virus and the fact that the number of infected people globally is still increasing makes it impossible to determine an accurate financial outlook for the full year," said Chief Executive Bjoern Gulden.
Second-quarter sales fell a currency-adjusted 30.7 percent to €831 million ($975.34 million) and earnings before interest and taxes slumped to a loss of €114.8 million from a €80.3 million euros a year earlier in what Gulden called "the most difficult quarter I have ever experienced."
Sales lagged an average analyst forecast for €815 million and the EBIT loss was steeper than the analyst forecast of minus €113 million.
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Coronavirus lockdowns meant that 85 percent of global sports and fashion retail businesses were closed in the second quarter, Gulden said.
The company focused on ensuring financing and liquidity to survive the crisis and banked on more e-commerce although that was not sufficient to compensate for losses elsewhere.
In May, it secured a revolving credit facility of €900 million, including €625 million from state-owned German bank KfW.
The second quarter started with a 55 percent decline in sales in April and those in May were down 38 percent.
The sporting goods industry is benefiting from more people having taken up exercising.
Markets may recover by the end of the year 2020, and 2021 could show growth again but the risk of a second wave of infections remained very high, he said.
By Vera Eckert; editor: Louise Heavens
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