Gap to separate Old Navy brand, close stores; shares
soar 25 percent
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[March 01, 2019]
By Uday Sampath Kumar
(Reuters) - Gap Inc will separate its
better-performing Old Navy brand and shutter about 230 stores of its
struggling namesake apparel business, in one of its biggest
restructuring efforts to energize sales, sending shares surging 25
percent on Thursday.
The company has struggled with contrasting performances of its brands.
Old Navy has been a bright spot as its wide range of budget apparel made
it more attractive to a broader base of customers, while its specialty
Gap brand struggled in the face of competition from fast-fashion
retailers and changing trends.
"It's clear that Old Navy's business model and customers have
increasingly diverged from our specialty brands over time," Gap's
Chairman Robert Fisher said in a statement.
The 230 Gap specialty stores the company planned to close over the next
two years, along with the 68 already shut, represents nearly half of its
stores, the company said.
The company also said it would boost spending on marketing and
developing new products for the Gap brand, but Chief Executive Officer
Art Peck stopped short of saying that the brand was in a turnaround.
"I've called the turn before. And I've eaten my words. I'm not calling a
turn again. What I'm looking forward is period-over-period improvement,
and I'm quite confident and comfortable with what I'm seeing."
Gap, Athleta, Banana Republic and the remaining brands will be part of a
yet-to-be-named company. The separation of Old Navy into a publicly
listed company, which Gap said will be tax free to investors, is likely
to be completed by 2020.
Peck will hold the same position in the new company, while Old Navy CEO
Sonia Syngal will stay on as head of the standalone firm.
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Customers arrive to shop at an Old Navy store in the Brooklyn
borough of New York June 15, 2015. REUTERS/Brendan McDermid
Old Navy has annual sales of about $8 billion, while the other brands have a
combined revenue of $9 billion.
"Although the proposed spin at Old Navy will enable a sharpened strategic focus
on its business priorities, it reduces the diversification the brand provides to
the overall entity," said Moody's analyst Christina Boni.
The company's shares were up 24.8 percent at $31.70 in extended trading.
POOR HOLIDAY PERFORMANCE
Separately, Gap reported a surprise drop in overall same-store sales for the
holiday quarter, down 1 percent compared with analysts' average estimate of a
0.3 percent rise, according to IBES data from Refinitiv.
Ironically, lack of same-store sales growth at Old Navy hurt fourth-quarter
overall sales. The company blamed an absence of new products and macro-economic
issues for a drop in traffic to the Old Navy stores during the crucial December
shopping season.
Gap also warned that it expects the first half of 2019 to be more challenging
than last year, due to a cold start to the year that weighed on all its
businesses, particularly Old Navy.
(Reporting by Uday Sampath in Bengaluru; Editing by Sriraj Kalluvila)
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