Caleres' Q2 2025 Earnings Call: Contradictions in Brand Performance, Tariff Strategies, and Acquisition Impact

Generated by AI AgentEarnings Decrypt
Thursday, Sep 4, 2025 1:35 pm ET2min read
Aime RobotAime Summary

- Caleres Q2 revenue fell 3.6% to $658.5M, with adjusted EPS dropping 59% to $0.35 amid $10M tariff-related sales losses.

- Tariff mitigation via pricing, sourcing shifts, and factory concessions expected to improve Q4 gross margins after 240 bps Q2-Q3 declines.

- Stuart Weitzman acquisition funded by $120M debt at 5.7-5.8% interest, with profitability targeted by January 2026 but no immediate sales/EBIT guidance.

- Brand Portfolio gained global market share despite 3.5% sales decline, while Famous Footwear's +1% August comps offset 3.4% comparable sales drop.

The above is the analysis of the conflicting points in this earnings call

Date of Call: September 4, 2025

Financials Results

  • Revenue: $658.5M, down 3.6% YOY
  • EPS: $0.35 per diluted share (adjusted), down 59% YOY (vs $0.85 prior year); includes $0.07 discrete tax benefit
  • Gross Margin: 43.4%, down 210 bps YOY
  • Operating Margin: 2.4%; segment operating margins: Brand Portfolio 3.1%, Famous Footwear 4.7%

Guidance:

  • Not providing annual guidance due to tariff uncertainty.
  • Famous Footwear: August comp +1%; expect Sept–Oct comps down low single digits.
  • Brand Portfolio (ex-Stuart Weitzman): August sales up low single digits; 3Q gross margin down similar to 2Q (~240 bps), improving in 4Q as mitigation takes hold.
  • SG&A (ex-SW): modest increase in 3Q; greater savings benefit in 4Q.
  • Expect continued 2H gross margin pressure from tariffs; mitigation actions underway (pricing, sourcing, factory concessions).
  • FLAIR stores to expand from 55 to 57 by year-end.
  • Borrowed ~$120M to fund Stuart Weitzman at ~5.7–5.8% rate.

Business Commentary:

  • Sales and Market Share Gains:
  • Caleres Inc. reported a decline in second-quarter sales by 3.6% year-over-year, with both segments showing negative sales trends.
  • Despite the decline, the company gained market share in women's fashion footwear and shoe chains.
  • The performance was driven by resilience in the company's lead brands and international sales, despite market uncertainties and tariff impacts.

  • Tariff Impact and Mitigation:

  • Tariffs negatively impacted second-quarter sales by $10 million due to order cancellations and delayed receipts.
  • The company is working on mitigating tariff impacts through strategies such as sourcing country mix, factory concessions, and price increases.
  • The lag in mitigating actions has led to continued pressure on gross margins, expected to improve by the fourth quarter.

  • Brand Portfolio Performance:

  • Brand Portfolio sales declined by 3.5%, with lead brands growing 1% in North America and 3.6% globally.
  • Growth was driven by brands like Sam Edelman and Allen Edmonds, while value-priced brands faced pressure due to cancellations related to China manufacturing.
  • International and direct-to-consumer businesses showed growth, benefiting from newness and strong product categories.

  • Famous Footwear Performance:

  • Famous Footwear saw a decline in total sales by 4.9%, with comparable sales down 3.4%.
  • The company gained market share in shoe chains and kids, with e-commerce sales up double digits, driven by the launch of Jordan as a top 10 brand.
  • The improvement in consumer behavior during peak shopping periods and strategic brand additions contributed to the performance.

Sentiment Analysis:

  • Sales were $658.5M, down 3.6% YOY; consolidated gross margin 43.4%, down 210 bps. Management is not providing annual guidance due to tariff uncertainty. However, Famous Footwear posted +1% comps in August (biggest month), and Brand Portfolio August sales ex-Stuart were up low single digits, with 4Q margin trends expected to improve as mitigation actions take effect.

Q&A:

  • Question from Ashley Owens (KeyBanc Capital Markets): What drove Famous Footwear’s positive August comp, and any change in women’s softness or FLAIR impacts?
    Response: August’s +1% comp was driven by better in-store traffic/conversion and web traffic/AUR, aided by assortment shifts and the Jordan launch.

  • Question from Ashley Owens (KeyBanc Capital Markets): How should we think about 3Q–4Q gross margin dynamics for Famous and Brand Portfolio amid promos, tariffs, and markdowns?
    Response: No change to promo cadence; markdown pressure should ease as inventory aligns, but tariffs pressure near term with improvement by 4Q; vendor cost increases at Famous will be passed through.

  • Question from Mitchel Kummetz (Seaport Research Partners): Any back-half impact detail from the Stuart Weitzman acquisition on sales/EBIT and interest expense?
    Response: No sales/EBIT guidance yet due to purchase accounting; interest on ~$120M acquisition debt is ~5.7–5.8%.

  • Question from Mitchel Kummetz (Seaport Research Partners): Will Stuart Weitzman be accretive next year?
    Response: Target is profitability post-transition by end of January and accretion thereafter, but no formal guide.

  • Question from Mitchel Kummetz (Seaport Research Partners): Quantify BP’s 2Q order cancellations/delays and 3Q tariff margin impact?
    Response: About $10M 2Q sales impact split evenly; ~$5M shifts to 3Q; BP gross margin down similar to 2Q (~240 bps) with improvement in 4Q as mitigation takes effect.

  • Question from Dana Telsey (Telsey Advisory Group): What are you seeing in consumer health and brand performance at Famous and BP?
    Response: Consumers are prioritizing top national and premium brands; back-to-school was strong (Jordan), and lead/premium contemporary brands outperformed with fashion/dress/boots gaining.

  • Question from Dana Telsey (Telsey Advisory Group): Status of tariff mitigation and additional cost savings?
    Response: Mitigation includes selective pricing, factory concessions, and sourcing mix; additional structural cost savings are being identified, largely benefiting 2026.

  • Question from Dana Telsey (Telsey Advisory Group): How are wholesale order trends shaping up into the holidays?
    Response: Sell-through is exceeding sell-in; BP DTC is up YoY; retailers are ordering closer to demand with cautious optimism.

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