Earnings call transcript: Abercrombie & Fitch’s Q1 2025 beats EPS expectations, stock surges

Published 28/05/2025, 14:28
 Earnings call transcript: Abercrombie & Fitch’s Q1 2025 beats EPS expectations, stock surges

Abercrombie & Fitch (ANF) reported strong financial results for the first quarter of 2025, surpassing earnings expectations with an EPS of $1.59 compared to the forecasted $1.33. Despite a slight revenue miss, with actual revenue at $1.06 billion against a forecast of $1.08 billion, the company’s stock surged in premarket trading by 32.79%, reaching $102.45. The positive market reaction reflects investor confidence in Abercrombie & Fitch’s strategic initiatives and robust performance across key regions.

Key Takeaways

  • Abercrombie & Fitch’s EPS exceeded expectations by 19.5%.
  • Premarket stock price increased significantly by 32.79%.
  • Record Q1 net sales of $1.1 billion, up 8% year-over-year.
  • Strong performance in the Americas, EMEA, and APAC regions.
  • Hollister brand achieved a 22% increase in net sales.

Company Performance

Abercrombie & Fitch demonstrated strong performance in Q1 2025, with record net sales of $1.1 billion, marking an 8% increase from the previous year. The company’s strategic focus on product innovation and market expansion contributed to robust growth, particularly in the Americas, EMEA, and APAC regions. The Hollister brand, in particular, delivered impressive results with a 22% rise in net sales, driven by popular product categories such as fleece, jeans, and skirts.

Financial Highlights

  • Revenue: $1.1 billion, up 8% year-over-year
  • Earnings per share: $1.59, exceeding the forecast of $1.33
  • Operating margin: 9.3%
  • Share repurchase: $200 million, accounting for 5% of shares outstanding

Earnings vs. Forecast

Abercrombie & Fitch’s Q1 2025 earnings per share of $1.59 surpassed the forecasted $1.33 by 19.5%, highlighting the company’s effective cost management and strategic initiatives. However, revenue fell slightly short of expectations at $1.06 billion versus the anticipated $1.08 billion, a minor miss that did not detract from the overall positive market sentiment.

Market Reaction

The company’s stock experienced a significant increase in premarket trading, rising by 32.79% to $102.45. This surge comes after closing at $77.15 the previous day, showcasing strong investor confidence in Abercrombie & Fitch’s future prospects. The stock’s movement aligns with positive trends in the broader retail sector, reflecting the company’s competitive positioning and growth potential.

Outlook & Guidance

Looking ahead, Abercrombie & Fitch anticipates full-year net sales growth between 3-6% and an operating margin of 12.5% to 13.5%. The company plans to continue its expansion with 60 new store openings in 2025 and aims for around $400 million in share repurchases. Despite potential tariff impacts estimated at $50 million, the company remains optimistic about its strategic initiatives and market positioning.

Executive Commentary

"Our playbook and model both work, and we will continue to leverage them moving forward," stated CEO Fran Horowitz, emphasizing the company’s robust strategy and operational flexibility. CFO Robert Ball highlighted the strength of Abercrombie & Fitch’s brands, noting, "We have two strong profitable brands," underscoring the company’s solid market presence.

Risks and Challenges

  • Potential tariff impacts of approximately $50 million could affect profitability.
  • Carryover inventory challenges may require strategic management to avoid excess stock.
  • Macroeconomic pressures, including inflation and consumer spending shifts, could influence future performance.

Q&A

During the earnings call, analysts inquired about Abercrombie & Fitch’s inventory management strategies and plans for mitigating tariff impacts. The company confirmed continued investment in brand growth and highlighted its agile approach to inventory and marketing, which is expected to support its competitive edge in the evolving retail landscape.

Full transcript - Abercrombie & Fitch Co A (ANF) Q1 2026:

Conference Operator: Good day, and welcome to the Abercrombie and Finch First Quarter Fiscal Year twenty twenty five Earnings Call. At this time, all participants are in a listen only mode. After the speakers’ presentation, there will be a question and answer session. Today’s conference is being recorded. At this time, I would like to turn the conference over to Mo Gupta.

Please go ahead.

Mo Gupta, Investor Relations, Abercrombie & Fitch: Thank you. Good morning, and welcome to our first quarter twenty twenty five earnings call. Joining me today on the call are Fran Horowitz, Chief Executive Officer Scott Lopebski, Chief Operating Officer and Robert Ball, Chief Financial Officer. Earlier this morning, we issued our first quarter earnings release, which is available on our website at corporate.abercrombie.com under the Investors section. Also available on our website is an investor presentation.

Please keep in mind that we will make certain forward looking statements on the call. These statements are subject to the Safe Harbor provisions of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995 and are subject to risks and uncertainties that could cause actual results to differ materially from the expectations and assumptions we mention today. These factors and uncertainties are discussed in our reports and filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission. In addition, we will be referring to certain non GAAP financial measures during the call. Additional details and reconciliations of GAAP to adjusted non GAAP financial measures are included in the release and the investor presentation issued earlier this morning.

With that, I will turn the call over to Fran.

Fran Horowitz, Chief Executive Officer, Abercrombie & Fitch: Thanks, Mo, and thanks, everyone, for joining. I’m pleased to report first quarter results came in ahead of the expectations we provided in March on both the top and bottom lines. I am proud of how the team is applying our playbook to execute for our customer and our business. As we’ve mentioned before, our playbook and read and react model are an important part of the strong foundation we’ve built over years of transformation. This foundation allows us to manage and adapt to the environment while maintaining focus on strengthening our brands and company for the long term.

We are ’1 quarter into 2025, and our team is doing an excellent job balancing both of these priorities. For the first quarter, we delivered record net sales of $1,100,000,000 on growth of 8% to last year, above our expected range of 4% to 6%. Operating expense leverage partially offset lower gross margin and marketing investment, resulting in an operating margin of 9.3% and earnings per share of $1.59 for the quarter, both above the ranges we provided in March. We also used our strong balance sheet to return $200,000,000 to shareholders through share repurchases, totaling 5% of shares outstanding as of the beginning of the year. We saw net sales growth across all regions in the first quarter.

The Americas grew 7% on good traffic levels in both stores and digital, building on a terrific first quarter in 2024 where we grew 23%. In EMEA, we grew 12% on top of 19% growth last year. We saw continued strength in The UK and Germany, with digital demand complementing the positive reception we’ve seen to the six stores we opened in the region last year. In APAC, we grew 5% on top of 10% growth last year, with nice comparable sales performance in China. From a brand perspective, Hollister led the way, delivering record first quarter results with 22% net sales growth last year on top of 12% growth in the first quarter of twenty twenty four.

We had strong comparable sales as well, up 23%. I am so proud of the Hollister team as they delivered the brand’s eighth consecutive quarter of growth. Both AUR and units were up in the quarter, and growth was balanced across genders and categories with strength in fleece, jeans, and skirts. Cross channel traffic was strong in the quarter, and we continue to ramp marketing investment year over year to support growth. We’re excited about the balance we are seeing in the assortment, and we look forward to the summer season officially kicking off.

At Abercrombie Brands, results fell short of expectations. We saw a 4% net sales decline against stellar 31% growth and record net sales achieved in Q1 twenty twenty four. Comparable sales were down 10% versus 29% comp growth last year, as we expected entering the quarter. Sales performance was primarily driven by AUR decline as we moved through winter carryover inventory. We also saw softer results in some of the spring categories that produced standout growth in Q1 last year.

We built our business to rapidly respond to customer feedback, and the team acted quickly, leveraging our agile operating model to shift inventory receipts based on summer product test reads. The brand continues to see good traffic trends, and on the store side, we continue to see productivity and surrounding digital sales growth from new stores. We have 13 openings planned for the second quarter in some great locations, building on April’s successful opening in Williamsburg, Brooklyn. I have confidence in the team and the playbook, and our goal is to deliver sequential improvement on the top line in the second quarter, putting Abercrombie brands on a path to growth later this year. From a total company perspective, we expect to deliver year over year second quarter sales growth on top of a record 2024 with balanced growth across regions.

As we navigate through the evolving trade environment, we remain open and agile with our inventory receipts and marketing spend to ensure we can best align our product investments with selling trends. Our playbook was built to effectively respond to circumstances like these, just as our team successfully managed the freight and cotton spikes from a couple of years ago. Our global supply chain and sourcing teams are working hard to drive efficiency across the supply chain base excuse me, across the supply base through discussions with our sourcing partners and by making strategic geographic changes to our buys and supply footprint. Throughout our business, we are looking for expense efficiencies while remaining on offense in key investment areas. All of this work will have clear impact, and based on our current assumptions on tariffs, we are not planning broad based ticket increases.

As we’ve done season after season, our goal is to deliver high quality product and align inventory and promotions with our customers’ value perception. This will give us the best opportunity to produce healthy sell throughs, AURs, and gross margins that underpin our track record of net sales, earnings, and cash flow growth. Our playbook and model both work, and we will continue to leverage them moving forward. Thinking further about what we’ve built over the years, we also have a history of capitalizing on moments like these to further strengthen the business, and we remain focused on the long term opportunity ahead. We strongly believe in the global power of our brands, and we are continuing to further their reach by investing in marketing, technology, new channel partnerships, and company owned stores.

On the store side, we expect to add around 100 new physical experiences this year in total with additional localized products and advertising to build lasting market presence and growth. The first quarter was another example of where we set a goal and delivered on that goal. As we move through the second quarter, we expect to add to our track record of controlling what we can control and doing what we say we’re going to do. Global growth remains our highest priority for 2025, so we look at to our first quarter progress while investing for the long term. And with that, I’ll hand it over to Robert to expand more on our results and key outlook drivers.

Robert Ball, Chief Financial Officer, Abercrombie & Fitch: Thanks, Fran, and good morning, everyone. Recapping the quarter, we delivered record Q1 net sales of $1,100,000,000 up 8% to last year on a reported basis, above the range we provided in early March. Comparable sales for the quarter were up 4%, and we did not see meaningful impact from foreign currency. By region, net sales increased 7% in The Americas, 12 Percent in EMEA, and 5% in APAC. On a comparable sales basis, Americas was up 4%, EMEA was up 6%, and APAC was up 2%.

For EMEA and APAC, the spread between reported and comp sales was due to net store openings, third party channels, with EMEA also benefiting from foreign currency. On the brands, Abercrombie brands net sales declined 4%, with comparable sales down 10%. Consistent with our first quarter outlook, the sales decline was primarily due to lower AUR as we worked to clear seasonal carryover inventory. Hollister brands net sales grew 22% on comparable sales of 23%, with both unit increases and AUR growth on lower promotions. Operating margin of 9.3% of sales was above the outlook range we provided in early March, delivering operating income of $102,000,000 compared to $130,000,000 or 12.7% of sales last year.

Lower gross margin was partially offset by around 140 basis points of operating expense leverage, led by general and administrative expenses on lower payroll and incentive compensation. Consistent with expectations, marketing, which as a reminder is fully included in selling expense, was 5.3% of sales for the quarter and was the primary driver of the 110 basis points deleverage in selling expense. We ended the first quarter with inventory at cost up 21%. Within that, inventory units are up 6%, so we’re positioned to support future growth, along with four percentage points from freight and inventory actions related to tariffs, with year over year changes in product category mix driving the remaining cost increase. The tax rate for the quarter was in line with our outlook at 25%, and net income per diluted share was above our outlook at $1.59 compared to $2.14 last year.

Moving to the balance sheet. We exited the quarter with cash and cash equivalents of $511,000,000 and liquidity of approximately $940,000,000 We also ended the quarter with marketable securities of $97,000,000 For the quarter, we repurchased $200,000,000 worth of shares, consistent with our commentary from early March, ending the quarter with $1,100,000,000 remaining on our current share repurchase authorization. Shifting to the outlook, global growth remains our highest priority. On the cost side, our 2025 outlook assumes a 10 tariff on all global imports into The US as well as a 30% tariff on imports from China. For China specifically, we’ve worked for some time now to relocate resources of supply, and this year’s sourcing volume from China will be in the low single digits.

Globally, we remain nicely diversified across 16 countries. We’ve been leveraging our agile playbook to build a list of mitigation strategies with our primary focus on the combination of supply chain footprint changes, vendor negotiations, and operating expense efficiencies. For AUR specifically, we are currently assuming no AUR mitigation in our outlook as we do not anticipate broad based ticket price increases. As always, we will pursue higher AURs through the combination of lean inventory and strong product acceptance. Net of expected mitigation efforts, the assumed tariffs carry a cost impact of around $50,000,000 for 2025, impacting our full year operating margin outlook by 100 basis points.

For the full year, we now expect net sales growth in the range of 3% to 6% from $4,950,000,000 in 2024, with full year growth expected across regions. We increased the high end of our prior outlook by flowing through our first quarter outperformance, with the second half of the year largely unchanged on net sales. We now expect full year operating margin in the range of 12.5% to 13.5%. The reduction from our prior outlook range is primarily due to the estimated 100 basis point impact from tariffs, net of mitigation efforts, with the remainder driven by the flow through of the Q2 operating margin outlook. We are forecasting a tax rate around 27%.

For earnings per share, we expect diluted weighted average shares of around $49,000,000 which incorporates the anticipated impact of twenty twenty five share repurchases. Combined with the tax rate, we expect net income per diluted share in the range of $9.5 to $10.5 For capital allocation, we expect capital expenditures of approximately $200,000,000 On stores, we expect to deliver around 100 new experiences, including 60 new stores and 40 rightsizes or remodels. We also expect to be net store openers, with our 60 new stores outpacing around 20 anticipated closures. At the current sales and operating margin outlook, we continue to target around $400,000,000 in share repurchases for the year, subject to business performance, share price, and market conditions. For the second quarter of twenty twenty five, we expect net sales to be up 3% to 5% to the Q2 twenty twenty four level of $1,130,000,000 We expect operating margin to be in the range of 12% to 13%.

We continue to expect slightly higher costs from freight as well as around $5,000,000 of tariff impact, net of mitigation efforts. We expect no leverage or deleverage on expense at the midpoint of our outlook. We expect a Q2 tax rate around 28%. We expect net income per diluted share in the range of $2.1 to $2.3 with diluted weighted average shares expected to be around 49,000,000, including the anticipated impact of around $50,000,000 in share repurchases for the quarter. To close things out, our agile operating model has supported transformative growth and continues to be a catalyst for growth for driving consistent gains across sales, earnings, and cash flow.

One quarter into 2025, we’re executing with discipline to deliver against our near term goals while keeping our sights firmly set on the significant long term opportunities ahead. And with that, operator, we are ready for questions.

Conference Operator: Thank you. Our first question comes from Dana Telsey with Telsey Advisory Group. Your line is open. Dana, if your telephone is muted, please unmute.

Dana Telsey, Analyst, Telsey Advisory Group: Hi, good morning everyone. Sorry about that. Great to see the updated guidance and would love to get some more color both on Hollisterfran and on Abercrombie. How do you see the outlook go forward on the different on men’s and women’s for Abercrombie, cycling the compares and the newness that you’re looking for? And also, what other initiatives do you see at Hollister that continue to drive this growth?

And then just on the real estate side, I noticed that the closures are being reduced this year in the guide to 20 from 40. What’s changing? What’s new there? And on the remodel to 40 from 60, any takeaways there and, thoughts? Thank you.

Fran Horowitz, Chief Executive Officer, Abercrombie & Fitch: Thanks, Dana. Good morning. Yes, so super excited about the record results that we just put up total company. Let’s break down your question. We’ll start with Abercrombie.

So Abercrombie, we talked about this during the last call. We came into the quarter with a bit of, carryover from last year, up against obviously a spectacular Q1 of last year where we were essentially clean of carryover. That put the pressure on the AUR as we had expected it to do so. But our model gives the team an opportunity to really stay flexible and chase goods. That’s what our playbook is built on.

A great example of that was as we got into the first quarter, we had a terrific response to our swim. We had a vacation shop set for second quarter. We were able to get back into that swim, really ramp it up, ramp up our assets and our marketing even stronger than we were planning to, and we’ve seen a nice reaction to that. So exciting to see progress, and we do expect to see an inflection in Abercrombie in the back half. Hollister, again, what a quarter, up 22%, incredibly proud of that team.

Lots of exciting things going on in that brand. I guess most recently to discuss would be the Grad Shop. So again, staying very culturally relevant to these teens, what’s important to them. The Grad Shop just launched, we’ve seen nice success to that. The first quarter was driven by fleece, by jeans, by skirts, lots of exciting categories.

So our expectation is obviously to continue to see Hollister grow throughout the year. With that, I will turn it over to Robert on your real estate questions.

Robert Ball, Chief Financial Officer, Abercrombie & Fitch: Yes. Hey, Dana. I’ll hit this real estate one. So again, we’re really thrilled here to be talking about being net store openers again here for another year. Adjustments here are pretty consistent.

Excited to see 100 new store experiences, 60 new stores, 40 refreshes in the model. We’re always opportunistic here as we move throughout the year. From a store closure standpoint, we did close 40 stores last year, planning to close 20 stores this year. Teams have been working through landlord negotiations and packages and we just see opportunities to keep these stores rolling. So again, excited to be out there for the consumer and build this fleet, which as we talked about last year or last quarter is nicely contributory.

So as long as we continue to see these productivities up on these stores, we’re to keep these things rolling.

Dana Telsey, Analyst, Telsey Advisory Group: Thank you.

Conference Operator: Thank you. Our next question comes from Cory Tarlow with Jefferies. Your line is open.

Cory Tarlow, Analyst, Jefferies: Great. Thanks for taking my question. I guess, Robert and Scott, on the outlook for the full year, you obviously took down profit mainly as a result of tariffs. But on the sales outlook, the high end of the guide was actually revised up. So I’m just curious how you think about that, and what’s your confidence in sort of that the higher end of that range as we look to the remainder of the year?

And what informs that?

Robert Ball, Chief Financial Officer, Abercrombie & Fitch: Yes. So I’ll take this one, Corey. So for the full year, we are expecting growth across the regions in that 3% to 6% top line guide. We’re rolling through that Q1 beat on the top end of our guide and we’re holding the bottom, which again, when we think about the environment that we’re working in here, feel is reasonable and appropriate with just one quarter in the books for the year. On the margin front, you’re exactly right.

We’re rolling through that $50,000,000 of tariff impact net of the mitigation efforts to date and that expected margin pressure from Q2 to walk us from that 14,000,000 to 15,000,000 from March to that 12,500,000.0 to 13,500,000.0 guide today.

Scott Lopebski, Chief Operating Officer, Abercrombie & Fitch: Yes. Just to add on there at the end, Corey, I guess the confidence comes from being on offense. We have a strong balance sheet. Robert just mentioned a hundred new experiences this year. Let’s add in marketing, let’s add in digital and technology investments.

That’s what gives us the confidence. Fran mentioned, the brands are open, the brands are chasing. So we have the inventory, we have the investments and that’s what gives us the confidence.

Cory Tarlow, Analyst, Jefferies: That’s great. And then just on Abercrombie, is the expectation that we return to growth later in the year, that’s presumably both sales and comp, is there any expectation as to when or what the drivers might be, for that as well as we think about the really strong compares that we’re going to be cycling?

Fran Horowitz, Chief Executive Officer, Abercrombie & Fitch: Yeah. I think Scott just said it. The team is hard at work, Corey. That’s what our model lets them do, which is really drive that open to buy and stay flexible and agile with their receipts going forward, reacting to the things that are happening in the business. We do expect to see an inflection in the back half.

We’re not going give an exact date and time, but we do expect to see it in the back half. And the drivers are the categories that we’re starting to see some nice reaction to that the team’s getting back into.

Cory Tarlow, Analyst, Jefferies: Great, thank you very much and best of luck.

Fran Horowitz, Chief Executive Officer, Abercrombie & Fitch: Thanks.

Conference Operator: Thank you. Our next question comes from Matthew Boss with JPMorgan. Your line is open.

Matthew Boss, Analyst, JPMorgan: Great, thanks. So Fran, could you speak to the progression of traffic during the first quarter and into May at Abercrombie relative to Hollister? Just where Abercrombie stands also with end of season carryover inventory today?

Fran Horowitz, Chief Executive Officer, Abercrombie & Fitch: Yes, so we saw nice traffic actually throughout the quarter for Abercrombie. That’s why I had discussed a little while ago, Matt, that the opportunity was really in the carryover and the compression of the AUR based on that product, which our expectation is that we are selling through that and seeing ourselves in a better position on all of that. And traffic was strong as well for Hollister on both digital as well as stores.

Robert Ball, Chief Financial Officer, Abercrombie & Fitch: Yes, Matt, I’ll just add one thing on the A and F inventory side of the house. So we did work through a ton of that carryover inventory in Q1. We’ve still got some sitting on the books here, but we’re not concerned with where those levels are. So if you remember last year, we had abnormally levels low levels of carryover inventory throughout the spring season, and we’re just up against that year over year. Just for some perspective, we are below our carryover levels from this time in 2023.

So it really is just more of a normalized level of carryover and we’re up against the low levels from 2024.

Matthew Boss, Analyst, JPMorgan: And then maybe Robert, just as a follow-up, is there a way to break apart second quarter gross margin for thinking about promotions relative to tariffs and freight? How best to think about gross margin progression in the back half of the year? And maybe just higher level, as we’re thinking about operating margins multi year, is there any give back in the model or how best to think about operating margins on a multi year basis?

Robert Ball, Chief Financial Officer, Abercrombie & Fitch: Yes. So on the gross margin guide in terms of what’s baked into our Q2, we’re we talked about in March working through a lot of the freight and the carryover pressures. Again, that was what drove the gross margin declines in Q1. So we got through a ton of that. We’ll still see some pressure here in Q2 as we work through the balance of that freight.

We’ve got about $10,000,000 of excess freight sitting on the balance sheet that we’ll work through here in Q2 before that normalizes for the back half. And that’s been consistent with what we expected coming into the year. The carryover inventory, we’ll still see some AUR pressure here on the A and F side as we work through the balance of that carryover and right size the inventory, and that’s a bit of a factor for Q2 as well. And AUR was flat in Q1. Obviously, it had some pressure on the A and F side that was offset by nice gains on the Hollister side.

And so the way that we’re thinking about this year is the balance of this year, Q2 and beyond, we’re going to come in with flat AURs, and we’re going to work through and expect sequential improvement here as we move through the Q2 and moving forward. On the operating margin side of the house, no change here. Our focus is squarely on driving long term sales, operating profit dollars, EPS growth go forward. As Fran mentioned, we’ve got two incredible brands. We’ve got a proven operating model.

We’ve got amazing teams and we’ve got a pretty healthy financial framework. So cash productivity is strong. We’ll continue to invest back into this business to strengthen for the long term. We’ll talk more long term here as we get deeper into the year, but we’ve guided to this 12.5% to 13.5% operating margin, which is a strong place to be and leaves us with potential to expand if we see that top line outperform our guide.

Matthew Boss, Analyst, JPMorgan: Great color. Best of luck.

Robert Ball, Chief Financial Officer, Abercrombie & Fitch: Yes. Thanks, Matt.

Conference Operator: Thank you. Our next question comes from Paul Lejuez with Citi. Your line is open.

Kelly, Analyst, Citi: Hi. This is Kelly on for Paul. Thanks for taking our question. I guess, Fran, if we could just circle back on the A and F brand in 1Q, and you mentioned that it disappointed versus your expectations. So could you just dig into where in the assortment from a category product perspective, where you saw disappointment and what you were doing to course correct that?

And then just secondly, on the date I’m sorry, the 2Q guide three to five. Is that sort of embedding in what you’re seeing 2Q quarter date? Thanks.

Fran Horowitz, Chief Executive Officer, Abercrombie & Fitch: Sure. Hey, Kelly. So first for Abercrombie, as I mentioned earlier today, so we broke down, you have to really break down Q1. As we had set our expectation in the last call for Abercrombie adult, we did have this carryover that we have not, you know, we did not anniversary from 2024, and as Robert just said, from 2023, it’s basically more normalized. That put the pressure on the AUR and drove a significant part of the decline.

The other piece of it was up against, honestly, a spectacular launch of the wedding shop, which we just did not comp as well. So, we had dresses that were strong that sold, but they did not sell to the level of actually the launch of the shop. So the team, as I’ve said, is busy, hard at work. They’re very open in the back half, chasing into product that we are seeing selling, and we’re excited about seeing an inflection in the back half of the year.

Robert Ball, Chief Financial Officer, Abercrombie & Fitch: Yes. Kelly, I’ll take the Q2 guide as we think about this. So we’re excited to be in a position to grow top line in Q2 off of that plus ’21 Q2 that we delivered last year. May month to date trends all incorporated into that outlook of 3% to 5% for the quarter. But as you know, volume will build from here, particularly for Hollister as we move into the back to school season here.

So ultimately, excited that we’re targeting growth on growth here and we feel good about the balance of the year from that perspective.

Fran Horowitz, Chief Executive Officer, Abercrombie & Fitch: Hey, I just wanted to add one thing on the first question. So just as far as Abercrombie goes, again, the traffic was positive, our customer file is growing, the brand is strong, and we’re really excited about future growth, one quarter, but we’re excited about the inflection in the back half and the opportunity globally for the brand.

Kelly, Analyst, Citi: Thank you.

Conference Operator: Thank you. Our next question comes from Marni Shapiro with The Retail Tracker. Your line is open.

Marni Shapiro, Analyst, The Retail Tracker: Hey guys, congrats. Stores have looked absolutely fabulous. Could you just talk a little bit, just give

Conference Operator: us a quick update on

Marni Shapiro, Analyst, The Retail Tracker: a few things. What was the actual store count ending for the quarter? What was the opening and closing for the first quarter? Then could you give us a little bit of an update just on YPB, where that stands? How has it been doing?

Also an update on your smaller footprint Abercrombie stores. I know you just opened this store in Williamsburg, but the smaller stores in cities and towns, you could just talk a little bit about those.

Robert Ball, Chief Financial Officer, Abercrombie & Fitch: Yes, so on the real estate side, just real quick, Marni, we opened, 17 new experiences, seven new stores in Q1, ’3 closures, so net four. We’ll see that accelerate here as we get into Q2. We’re expecting about 19 new stores about five closures here for the Q2. Then that’s what’s embedded in our guide.

Conference Operator: Yeah, I’ll take the question.

Fran Horowitz, Chief Executive Officer, Abercrombie & Fitch: For YPB, active was actually a strong category for us for the first quarter. We’re excited about what we continue to see, with the opportunity of YPB, and there’s some exciting things coming up for fall on that brand, that sub brand.

Matthew Boss, Analyst, JPMorgan: Thanks.

Scott Lopebski, Chief Operating Officer, Abercrombie & Fitch: On the smaller footprint, I’ll grab this one at the end. We’re really happy with Williamsburg. We talked about that opening. That was an exciting opening for us, one we’ve been waiting for for a while. There’s more coming here in Q2.

Just running these smaller stores, it’s been a muscle that we’ve had to build over the last year and a half and has been a focus for Abercrombie, the brand. And we’ve learned a lot. We’re tweaking these stores a little bit. Each neighborhood has its own vibe, whether it’s how we build or the product that’s in there. And so we’re learning a lot and remains an amazing opportunity for Abercrombie to go forward.

Conference Operator: Thank you, guys. Thank you. Our next question comes from Alex Stratton with Morgan Stanley. Your line is open.

Mo Gupta, Investor Relations, Abercrombie & Fitch0: Perfect. Thanks so much. Maybe for Fran, just on A and F. You mentioned the wedding shop was weaker, but were there any bright spots within A and F that are comping above the total banner level? And then for Robert, is the full year EPS reduction, I know it’s mostly a function of tariffs on gross margin, but can you just walk us through the other dynamics in gross margin and SG and A that have perhaps changed since three months ago?

Thanks a lot.

Fran Horowitz, Chief Executive Officer, Abercrombie & Fitch: Yeah, just reiterate, Alex, there are bright spots in A and F. That one particular category was not as strong, but we’re excited about what we are seeing. We saw nice active, we saw strong bottoms. I’ve already mentioned swim. And again, the flexibility of our models, letting the team read the business every single week, get back into what’s working.

They’re very open for the back half, and there’s some exciting things that they’re reacting to.

Robert Ball, Chief Financial Officer, Abercrombie & Fitch: Yeah, Alex, on the EPS reduction, it’s really two big pieces here. So as you think about where we were from March to where we are today, obviously some color around the tariffs. It’s about a $70,000,000 total impact on 2025. We’re kind of early days with our mitigation playbooks, so we’re working through some of those things. We think we can offset about $20,000,000 of that.

So that gets us to that $50,000,000 that we’ve baked into our guide and that 100 basis points. The balance of it really just comes from Q2 where, again, we’re working through some of the carryover. We’ll continue to see a little bit of gross margin pressure, so that brought down the Q2 operating margin a bit on a year over year basis. The tax rate’s also up a bit, but the primary drivers are really tariffs and that Q2 operating margin guide.

Mo Gupta, Investor Relations, Abercrombie & Fitch1: Thank you. Good luck.

Conference Operator: Thank you. Our next question comes from Mauricio Serna with UBS. Your line is open.

Mo Gupta, Investor Relations, Abercrombie & Fitch2: Great. Good morning and thanks for taking my questions. First, could you break down on the Q1 gross margin, the puts and takes between the carryover and freight cost pressures? And then on inventory, how are you thinking about inventory growth as the year progresses? Thank you.

Robert Ball, Chief Financial Officer, Abercrombie & Fitch: Yes, Mauricio. So no major surprises here on gross margin for Q1 based on what we shared in March. When you think about freight, it was more than half of that four forty basis point decline here in Q1 and then the balance of it was really the carryover pressure on the higher cost of the fall goods. AUR was roughly flat for the quarter. So A and F pressure with that sell through of the carryover inventory offset by improvement in Hollister.

So as we think about where that goes for the balance of the year, we’ll work through the balance of freights as we’ve been committing to all year. That should kind of work us through Q2. Carryover will be some pressure here as we work through the inventory mix for the business and again, get through most of that during Q2. But again, just a reminder, that carryover, it’s not really an abnormal place to be. So it’s not a major issue for us from a Q2 standpoint.

We generally don’t guide inventory on a cost basis. As we’ve done historically, we’re looking to make sure that our units are aligned with our sales growth on a go forward basis. So that’s what we’ll do here. We ended the quarter with plus six units for the quarter, Happy with where that sits, and we’ll continue to tightly manage those units as we move through the balance of the year.

Mo Gupta, Investor Relations, Abercrombie & Fitch2: Understood. And just a quick follow-up on inventory sorry, I just based off for a second. I meant, sorry, on Hollister. You talked about some success with the Bradshaw, like good customer response. I guess, how are you thinking about the second half growth for this brand as you’re gonna face a much tougher compare?

So how are you thinking about initiatives to sustain that growth? Thank you.

Fran Horowitz, Chief Executive Officer, Abercrombie & Fitch: Hey, Martijs, it’s Fran. So let’s just back up. Record performance, we saw balanced growth across regions, across genders. We are gaining share, which is incredibly exciting in the teen space. I would say the teen is doing a great job of really evolving from being a teen outfitter to being very culturally relevant.

That was exhibited during all the work we did with Collegiate, again, with the Grad Shop. We are there meeting this customer at their most important life moments, and so there are some exciting things. I’m not gonna share the go forward, but they have got some more exciting things coming up, ready for summer to start, and lots of exciting things happening for fall.

Robert Ball, Chief Financial Officer, Abercrombie & Fitch: Yes. I’d just say, Mauricio, our job is to grow the total, right? We have two strong profitable brands. We’ve got a fleet of highly productive profitable stores that complements a really profitable digital business. We’ve got three regions that are comping positive with line of sight to more growth ahead.

So we love this diversified portfolio. We love this diversified channel and regions that helps us to deliver against that goal here in Q2, and we’re excited about the balance of the year.

Mo Gupta, Investor Relations, Abercrombie & Fitch2: Got it. And if I may, just one quick follow-up. On gross margin, it was down $4.40 basis points in Q1. Is the expectation of Q2 just down but maybe not as much? Or how should we think about the Q2 gross margin evolution and particularly the drivers there?

Thank you.

Robert Ball, Chief Financial Officer, Abercrombie & Fitch: Yes, no specific guide for Q2, but you would expect sequential improvement from that down four forty in Q1 as we move into Q2. Again, freight won’t be as big of a headwind for us. The carryover inventory is not going to be as big of an impact for us in Q2. And again, we’re assuming flat AUR. So sequential improvement is the way that we’re thinking about it.

It’s all baked into that operating margin guide.

Mo Gupta, Investor Relations, Abercrombie & Fitch2: Got it. Thank you so much and congratulations.

Robert Ball, Chief Financial Officer, Abercrombie & Fitch: Thanks, Mauricio.

Conference Operator: Thank you. Our next question comes from Rick Patel with Raymond James. Your line is open.

Mo Gupta, Investor Relations, Abercrombie & Fitch3: Thanks. Good morning. I wanted to double click on your expectations for promotions going forward. So it sounds like you have some work to do for a carryover for the Abercrombie brand in the near term, but that the back half should be cleaner. Does that back half improvement reflect fewer units that you have planned?

Or does it reflect just more confidence in the assortment? And then as a follow-up, what are your assumptions for promotions for Hollister going forward? Given the strong momentum there, do you see opportunity to pull back?

Robert Ball, Chief Financial Officer, Abercrombie & Fitch: Yeah, so when you think about promotions on the A and F side of the house, yes, we’ll see some AUR pressure here as we work through the carryover inventory. Again, not as big of an issue in Q2 as it is in Q as it was in Q1, so we should see sequential improvement there. We’re always going to align our promotions with our inventory levels and customer demand. So we’ll see how that goes. We’re going to come in every day, and this goes for the Hollister your Hollister question as well.

We’ll come in every day. We’ll work to make sure that we’re pulling back on a day here or discount depth there. All of those things, given this financial model, are really beneficial for us, that’s our job. Sitting here today, we’re going to assume that we hold the gains, again, multi year double digit positive AURs across the brands. We like where we are.

We like the value proposition that we provide to that consumer. But again, we’re going come in every day and try to improve on that.

Mo Gupta, Investor Relations, Abercrombie & Fitch3: Can you also double click on your expectations for growth in Europe and Asia for the rest of the year? Some nice results in Q1, and you touched on positive global growth for the year. So just some additional color there would be great.

Robert Ball, Chief Financial Officer, Abercrombie & Fitch: Yes. No change to our thinking here. It was great to see all three regions post growth and positive comps in the first quarter. We’re expecting this full year for these regions to all deliver growth, which is something that we commit to every year and we still see that growth opportunity across The Americas, EMEA and APAC. So nice balance, healthy growth here that we’re seeing and a lot of opportunity ahead for us.

Scott Lopebski, Chief Operating Officer, Abercrombie & Fitch: Yes, Rick, just to add on there We’ve been very focused on The UK market and more recently moved into Germany. Our team has gotten their feet under them there in Europe, our team in London. They’ve done an amazing job. So it was kind of the same story here in the quarter.

Saw strong growth in UK, see Germany growing, and those are our biggest two countries in Europe. So great to see growth out of the two of them.

Mo Gupta, Investor Relations, Abercrombie & Fitch3: Thanks very much.

Conference Operator: Thank you. Our next question comes from Janet Kloppenburg with JJK Research Associates Inc. Your line is open.

Mo Gupta, Investor Relations, Abercrombie & Fitch1: Hi, everybody. Great job on the quarter. I had a couple of questions. When you talk about the improvement for Abercrombie for the second half, does that reflect some void that maybe you had in the spring or last year in the second half? And I just wondered about your confidence level there.

And then I wondered about the carryover product. My thoughts are that well, it’s really true. My question really is, could this just be markdown levels normalizing after you guys had four years of double digit growth there and sort of no markdowns to really speak of? So just would love to hear more on that. Thank you.

Robert Ball, Chief Financial Officer, Abercrombie & Fitch: Yes. Janet, let me jump in on that second one first. On the carryover you’re absolutely right. I mean, you think about what we were up against from twenty twenty four’s Q1, we delivered 6% gross margins and we had basically zero carryover all the way through the spring season. So that’s so we’re just lapping that today.

And again, that’s why we don’t expect the carryover impact on margins on a go forward basis to be as meaningful as we move into the back half?

Mo Gupta, Investor Relations, Abercrombie & Fitch1: Thank you.

Fran Horowitz, Chief Executive Officer, Abercrombie & Fitch: Sure. Hey, on the first question, I guess what I would say is that there were some products perhaps that we just didn’t see the same rate of sale as we saw last year against what was an incredible launch, right, of a shop. I would say that there weren’t voids. I think that there’s new trends that are emerging that the team is very excited about, and that’s what our model allows us to do. I mean, a great example of that would be, you know, what’s happening now in BOHO!

And Western. I mean, those are things that the customer is starting to respond to. Our model allows us to get back into that pretty aggressively. There’s some leg shapes that are changing on the bottom that we’re excited about for the second quarter actually, for the second half, excuse me. So there’s things that customer is starting to tell us that we’re responding to.

Mo Gupta, Investor Relations, Abercrombie & Fitch1: And you have time to get that done, Fran, with the lead times and everything?

Fran Horowitz, Chief Executive Officer, Abercrombie & Fitch: Yeah. With our model, I mean, that is what we do. Mean, the flexibility and agility, right, that we’ve built in, there’s absolutely I mean, we’re very open for the back half.

Mo Gupta, Investor Relations, Abercrombie & Fitch1: And are you feeling any competitive heat from some of the other brands out there? You know, that often happens after a brand having this many years of outperformance is this pressure as people admire what you’ve done and trying to get a piece of it.

Fran Horowitz, Chief Executive Officer, Abercrombie & Fitch: Listen, it’s certainly exciting that we have an incredibly successful playbook that we’re gonna continue to stay focused on. Lining up that product voice and experience is what this team does best and staying close to that customer. It’s a huge compliment, of course, that people are watching what we’re doing. But it’s our job to stay ahead of them and to stay faster. And I believe that the team has got some exciting things that they’re working on to do just that.

Mo Gupta, Investor Relations, Abercrombie & Fitch1: Okay. Congratulations and good luck.

Cory Tarlow, Analyst, Jefferies: Thanks, Janet. Thanks, Janet.

Conference Operator: Thank you. I’m not showing any further questions at this time. I’d like to turn the call back over to Fran for closing remarks.

Fran Horowitz, Chief Executive Officer, Abercrombie & Fitch: Thanks, everyone, and we just look forward to updating you after the second quarter.

Conference Operator: Thank you for your participation. This does conclude the program, and you may now disconnect. Everyone, have a great day.

This article was generated with the support of AI and reviewed by an editor. For more information see our T&C.

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