Caleres' Q2 2025 Earnings Call: Contradictions in Brand Performance, Tariff Strategies, and Acquisition Impact
Generated by AI AgentAinvest Earnings Call Digest
Thursday, Sep 4, 2025 1:35 pm ET2min read
CAL--
Aime Summary 
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 salesby3.6%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 salesby$10 milliondue 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 growing1%in North America and3.6%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 salesby4.9%, with comparable sales down3.4%. - 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; BPBP-- 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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