Tiffany beats profit estimates on soaring China demand
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[November 24, 2020] By
Aishwarya Venugopal and Melissa Fares
(Reuters) - Tiffany & Co, which is being
bought by French luxury giant LVMH, beat Wall Street expectations for
quarterly profit on Tuesday as the U.S. jeweler benefited from an over
70% rise in sales in China and a recovery in demand at home.
The results bode well for the upcoming holiday season for the jeweler
and other luxury retailers in general, which have been hit hard by the
pandemic. They also underscore the growing importance of sales within
mainland China to offset dependence on tourism, especially on Chinese
tourists visiting fashion hubs like Milan and Paris.
"We had a strong third quarter .... which speaks volumes about the
enduring strength of the Tiffany brand and gives us confidence as we
enter the important holiday season," Chief Executive Officer Alessandro
Bogliolo said, nodding to "the successful completion of the merger
transaction with LVMH in early 2021."
Tiffany and LVMH ended a bitter legal battle last month and agreed to a
new deal that would see the French firm buy out the U.S. jeweler at a
slightly lower price of $15.8 billion, or at a discount of $425 million.
Tiffany said sales in the Asia-Pacific region rose 30%, while sales in
the Americas region declined 16% - much smaller than the 46% drop seen
in the preceding quarter.
Tiffany forecast a mid-single-digit percentage decline in holiday
quarter sales, while analyst had predicted a 3% drop. It also expects a
high-single-digit percentage increase in earnings for the current
quarter.
The health crisis also forced the New York-based retailer to invest in
its online business and to introduce curbside pick-up at certain stores.
This helped e-commerce sales surge 92% in the quarter.
Best known for its diamond engagement rings, Tiffany could face more
challenges ahead as COVID-19 cases are surging in much of the U.S. and
across the world, spurring Britain and other countries in Europe, and
many American states, to go into another lockdown.
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People walk past a Tiffany & Co. store in the Manhattan borough of
New York City, New York, U.S., September 10, 2020. REUTERS/Carlo
Allegri/File Photo GLOBAL BUSINESS WEEK AHEAD
As of Oct. 31, most of Tiffany's 320 retail stores worldwide were fully or
partially opened, in accordance with local government guidelines, it said. As of
Nov. 20 though, approximately 60% of Tiffany's retail stores in Europe were
temporarily closed.
But analysts remain optimistic.
"Q3 results also reiterate our confidence that the Tiffany brand will continue
to shine through the holidays," said CFRA analyst Camilla Yanushevsky.
According to a CFRA site traffic analysis of Alexa Internet's data, there is
"growing traffic momentum" to tiffany.com entering the all-important holiday
season, Yanushevsky added.
Shares of the company were up marginally on low volumes in premarket trading.
Excluding certain item, Tiffany earned $1.11 per share, surging past the average
expectation of 66 cents.
Tiffany's net sales fell about 1% to $1.01 billion in the third quarter ended
Oct.31, but beat expectations of $980.71 million, according to IBES data from
Refinitiv.
(Reporting by Aishwarya Venugopal in Bengaluru and Melissa Fares in New York;
Editing by Saumyadeb Chakrabarty and Chizu Nomiyama)
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