Pandora Raises Full-Year Growth Outlook as Q2 Profit in Line

Jewels are seen in a Pandora jewellery shop in downtown Rome, Italy, August 7, 2018. (Reuters)
Jewels are seen in a Pandora jewellery shop in downtown Rome, Italy, August 7, 2018. (Reuters)
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Pandora Raises Full-Year Growth Outlook as Q2 Profit in Line

Jewels are seen in a Pandora jewellery shop in downtown Rome, Italy, August 7, 2018. (Reuters)
Jewels are seen in a Pandora jewellery shop in downtown Rome, Italy, August 7, 2018. (Reuters)

Pandora, the world's biggest jewellery maker, reported second-quarter operating profit broadly in line with expectations on Monday and increased its growth outlook for the year.

Operating profit rose to 1.34 billion Danish crowns ($196.25 million) in the second quarter from 1.19 billion a year earlier compared with an average 1.3 billion forecast by 14 analysts in a poll compiled by the company.

Pandora increased its full-year organic growth guidance to between 9% and 12% compared to its previous guidance of 8-10%. It kept its operating margin guidance at around 25%.

"We are again raising revenue guidance for 2024 and look to the second half of the year with optimism," CEO Alexander Lacik said in a statement.



Puma Narrows FY Core Profit Outlook

The logo of German sports goods firm Puma is seen on a shoe after the company's annual news conference in Herzogenaurach February 20, 2014. (Reuters)
The logo of German sports goods firm Puma is seen on a shoe after the company's annual news conference in Herzogenaurach February 20, 2014. (Reuters)
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Puma Narrows FY Core Profit Outlook

The logo of German sports goods firm Puma is seen on a shoe after the company's annual news conference in Herzogenaurach February 20, 2014. (Reuters)
The logo of German sports goods firm Puma is seen on a shoe after the company's annual news conference in Herzogenaurach February 20, 2014. (Reuters)

German sportswear maker Puma on Wednesday narrowed its outlook for full-year core profit as it reported its second-quarter results, citing expected currency headwinds, higher freight costs and continued muted consumer sentiment.

Puma, which has recently launched new marketing initiatives in an effort to compete better with bigger rivals like Adidas and Nike, has been grappling with weaker consumer demand and excess stocks at the sportswear retailers through which it makes most of its sales.

It now expects operating profit (EBIT) to come in a range between 620 million and 670 million euros ($676-$731 million) compared to between 620 million to 700 million euros previously.

Puma's shares were down 3.5% in early Frankfurt trade.

It confirmed its full-year outlook for currency adjusted revenue in mid-single-digit percentage, based on a strong order book for the second half of the year.

The company said it expected net income to change in 2024 in line with the operating result. It reported a net income of 304.9 million euros in 2023.

Currency-adjusted sales rose 2.1% to 2.12 billion euros in the quarter, in line with the 2.15 billion expected by analysts, according to LSEG data, driven by 9% growth in the Americas region.

In the Europe/Middle East and Africa region, currency-adjusted sales dropped by 4.3% to 817.9 million euros. A return to growth in Europe was offset by a decline in Eastern Europe, the Middle East, and Africa after a strong quarter in the previous year.

The Asia/Pacific region recorded sales growth of 1.9%, Puma said, boosted by growth in Greater China.

Quarterly EBIT was up by 1.6% to 117 million euros despite negative currency effects.