Duluth Holdings' Q2 2025: Contradictions Emerge on Promotional Strategy, Inventory Management, SG&A Savings, and Fulfillment Center Challenges
The above is the analysis of the conflicting points in this earnings call
Date of Call: September 4, 2025
Financials Results
- Revenue: $131.7M, down 7% YOY (down 9.8% ex wholesale shipment shift)
- EPS: $0.04 GAAP; $0.03 adjusted, up $0.05 YOY
- Gross Margin: 54.7%, up 240 bps YOY
Guidance:
- Maintains FY2025 adjusted EBITDA guidance of $20M–$25M.
- Tariff impact estimated at ~$15M for FY2025; average rate ~12%; largely H2-weighted.
- Targeted price increases (late July/early August) are meeting elasticity expectations.
- On track for >$10M in FY2025 cost reductions (headcount and controllable expenses).
- Year-end inventory expected to decline double digits YOY; peak borrowings are behind.
- Managing timing of inventory receipts and vendor negotiations to offset tariffs.
- Capital expenditures maintained at ~$17M for FY2025 (2 new stores, omni software, maintenance).
Business Commentary:
- Promotional Cadence and Gross Margin Improvement:
- Duluth Holdings reduced the depth of its promotional activity, which led to a
7%year-over-year decline in sales, but resulted in a$1.5 millionincrease in adjusted EBITDA and gross margin improvement of240 basis pointsto54.7%. This strategy was aimed at elevating full-price sales and driving improved profitability, despite operating in a dynamic consumer environment.
Cost Control and Tariff Mitigation:
- The company is on track to realize
$10 millionin cost savings in fiscal 2025, simplifying its cost structure and alleviating pressure from tariffs. Tariff mitigation efforts included negotiations with vendors, inventory receipt management, and strategic price increases in select categories to offset cost impacts.
Inventory Management and Operational Efficiency:
- Duluth Holdings achieved a
12%reduction in inventory, with ending inventory at$148.1 million, a decrease of$20.7 millionfrom the prior year. This was driven by enhanced enterprise planning, optimized inventory receipts, and a focus on rightsizing inventory levels to balance core product depth and reduced clearance goods.
Retail Sales and Marketing Effectiveness:
- Retail store sales increased by
5.3%year-on-year, driven by improved traffic trends, increased conversion rates, and higher average order values. Successful marketing efforts included geo-targeted ads, connected TV campaigns, and the Big Dam van mobile retail experience, which helped drive traffic and sales.
Focus on Core Products and Assortment Rationalization:
- The company reduced its SKU count by over
20%for spring/summer 2026, focusing on core products and innovative solutions to solve customer problems. - This approach is aimed at driving higher sell-throughs, improved margins, and enhanced customer engagement with the Duluth Trading brand.
Sentiment Analysis:
- Management highlighted gross margin expansion (+240 bps YOY), adjusted EBITDA improvement, and maintained FY2025 guidance. Price increases are meeting expectations; inventory down 12% YOY with $73M liquidity. Quote: “We are encouraged by our Q2 results… maintaining our fiscal year 2025 financial guidance.” Tariff headwinds are being mitigated via pricing, vendor negotiations, and receipt timing.
Q&A:
- Question from Jonathan Komp (Robert W. Baird & Co.): What metrics guide the promotion pullback, and can you maintain discipline into fall/holiday?
Response: Gross margin dollars are the key metric; they’re reducing discount depth (not frequency) to prioritize profitability and are confident this approach holds through Q3/Q4.
- Question from Jonathan Komp (Robert W. Baird & Co.): With tariffs ramping, can gross margin still expand in the back half, especially Q4?
Response: Yes—two waves of price increases, vendor cost sharing, and receipt timing should offset tariffs; expect bigger tariff impact in Q4 but still meet gross margin goals.
- Question from Jonathan Komp (Robert W. Baird & Co.): How will the $10M SG&A savings flow through the year?
Response: Savings are mainly from headcount and controllable costs; about one-third realized in Q2, and they remain on track for the full $10M in FY2025.
- Question from Jonathan Komp (Robert W. Baird & Co.): What’s needed before setting longer-term margin targets?
Response: Complete expense rationalization and restore price integrity, then execute inventory rightsizing and ~20% SKU reduction in 2026 to drive SKU productivity and a stronger margin profile.
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