Urban Outfitters (URBN) reports quarterly earnings after-hours. Analysts expect revenue of $1.08 billion and eps of $0.63. The $1.08 billion estimate likely reflects a very strong holiday season. Other retailers have also experienced strong holiday sales, which connotes consumer spending remains strong for now. In the previous quarter, Urban Outfitters blew the market away with $893 million in sales, beating estimates of $861 million.
After experiencing sales declines and a few fashion misses, URBN has been on a tear. The stock is up over 40% Y/Y versus a 14% increase for the S&P 500 (SPY). The big question is, “After reporting strong sales this quarter where does Urban Outfitters go from here? Below is what I expect this quarter.
Strong Digital Sales
Last quarter revenue from Urban Outfitters grew 4% Y/Y. Revenue from retail operations were up 3%, while wholesale grew 9% driven by strong growth in specialty accounts. Within retail the direct-to-consumer channel achieved double-digit growth. The company is offering a wider assortment of brands to choose from on its digital platform. Its Anthro Loyalty program, which offers free shipping, helped increase new sign-ups and grow digital accounts. Direct-to-consumer has helped other brands like Lululemon (LULU ) growth retail revenue and Urban Outfitters is now riding the wave. Direct-to-consumer is one of the biggest reasons the company has ended it sales slide from a few years ago. It now represents about 50% of total retail sales.
Revenue from the wholesale segment increased 9%, driven by direct-to-consumer and domestic and international store growth. The lion’s share of sales came from the Free People brand – a unique brand of bohemian, femininity, and eclectic patterns that is resonating well with customers.
EBITDA Margins Have Been Flat
Urban Outfitters’ gross margins ticked down to 33.4% from 34.8% in the year-earlier period. This is to be expected as more revenue comes via digital. The company cut SG&A expense to offset sliding gross margins. The other caveat is that wholesale has a much higher operating income margin (24%) than retail (8%). As wholesale’s revenue growth outstrips retail’s the companies operating income margins should improve. That said, EBITDA margins were 11.8%, down slightly from 12.0% on the year-earlier period. The company has been able to grow revenue with sacrificing much in EBITDA margin, which is commendable.