Digg It |   Del.icio.us |   Printer Friendly |   PDF |   Email

Urban Outfitters Defying Odds

Tuesday, February 12, 2008 | Wall Street Strategies Is this Spam?

Rating:

On February 7, Urban Outfitters Inc. (ticker symbol: URBN) announced preliminary sales results for its 4Q`08 reporting period.  By far, the data put forth by the eclectic specially apparel retailer for the holiday quarter was simply unseen at competing chains.  We attribute the financial strength to the company’s highly differentiated breadth of merchandise offerings at its three business segments, Urban Outfitters, Anthropologie, and Free People, as well as limited exposure to mall shopping centers. 

 

For the three-months ended January 31, the company recorded an aggregate comparable store sales (comp) increase of 11.0%, stronger than the 9.0% reported for the November-December period on January 3.  Free People had a comp increase of 19.0%, followed by 18.0% at Anthropologie, and 6.0% at Urban Outfitters.  We found the 6.0% comp increase at the namesake Urban Outfitters division particularly encouraging as the brand remains in turnaround mode, and it provide us with confidence in more robust results for  the summer, per management’s previously stated expectations.  Net sales increased 29.0% to $465.4 million (consensus $451.0 million), above our $445.0 million projection.

 

Shares of Urban Outfitters are now trading at a 52-week high and at premium valuation multiples relative to the broader consumer discretionary sector.  While this may give investors pause due to the general unknowns associated with consumer spending trends in 2008, we continue to recommend Urban Outfitters shares as a buy.  New CEO Glen Senk is executing flawlessly on his game plan of returning the Urban Outfitters division to more normalized rates of growth, while continuing to deliver strong fashion at Anthropologie and Free People.  This, in conjunction with a strengthening operating margin trend and long-term square footage growth potential, leads us to believe the stock can maintain its upward bias.

Written by Brian Sozzi, a Research Analyst for Wall Street Strategies (www.wstreet.com) specializing in the apparel/hardline goods sectors of the retail industry.



Rate this article
Thank you for your vote!

Add Your Comments

Please keep your comments relevant to this blog entry. Email addresses are never displayed.

Please fill in the missing field(s).

Important: To comment on Tycoon Report articles, you must first log in. If you are a paying customer of Tycoon, you may use the same login and password that you use normally. If you do not yet have a login, please take a moment to register below. It’s free, and you only need to do it once.

Register

(email address and password information will NOT be displayed publicly)

Name *

Email *

Password *

Subscribe to The Tycoon Report
By registering, you agree to our terms of service.

Already a member? Log in!

(you will not be taken away from this page)

Email *

Password *

Remember?

Forgot Password?




Important Notice to all stock spammers, scammers and penny stock pump-and-dumpers: You will get no respect here. Don’t bother submitting fraudulent or misleading information in the guise of an article, because we will remove it. Any piece of content submitted on this site can be removed at the sole discretion of the Tycoon staff.