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Lululemon Rally Pauses on Results, Though Analysts Look Ahead

Lululemon Falls as Mixed Results Add to Bull-Non-Bull Tug of War

(Bloomberg) -- Lululemon Athletica Inc.’s nearly 140% rally since mid-March took a step back on Friday after the retailer’s mixed first-quarter results. Analysts mostly defended the strong brand and said it would bounce back in a post-pandemic world.

The company said second-quarter inventory levels may increase by even more than the 41% seen at the end of last quarter and that earnings won’t grow until the fourth quarter. Yet it posted better-than-expected gross margin in the first period and said there was strong online growth in April and so far this quarter.

“Lulu remained profitable even through the Covid pandemic,” said Dana Telsey at Telsey Advisory. “Outsized digital growth” speaks to the strong demand for the brand, while “showcasing the benefits of the company’s investments in its capabilities.” She rates the stock outperform, and has a price target of $360.

The shares fell 3.5% in New York Friday. Still, they are up about 29% this year, faring better than most apparel retailers, which have been among the hardest hit during the coronavirus pandemic.

Lululemon Rally Pauses on Results, Though Analysts Look Ahead

Here’s more of what analysts said following the report:

Susquehanna, Sam Poser

“Lulu’s best-in-class PEP (process, engagement, product) is alive and well, positioning the company to capitalize post pandemic.”

Poser called the second-quarter update a “base-case view,” and said “large category and geographic white-space opportunities provide a long runway for sustainable top- and bottom-line growth and support the stock’s premium valuation.”

Rates positive, price target raised to $360 from $240.

Telsey Advisory, Dana Telsey

Lulu didn’t take any writedowns or provisions during the first quarter or cancel any orders. It has “worked to reflow deliveries for the second half of the year with inventories on hand and its revised demand forecast.”

While the elevated inventory position is a concern, the company is planning for the long term, with pay protection for employees, honoring vendor commitments, paying rent and maintaining year-earlier capex levels. These efforts “should leave the company well-positioned to return to growth in relatively short order.”

Deutsche Bank, Paul Trussell

“Bulls will comment that the company’s best-in-class product continues to have strong momentum and channel mix is not an issue (unlike for others) as online margins are higher than in-store,” Trussell said. However, non-bulls “will point to a disappointing performance relative to expectations and a valuation that is quite stretched in a still volatile backdrop.”

Rates hold, price target lowered to $237 from $241.

RBC Capital Markets, Kate Fitzsimons

While store recovery on top of the inventory issues are likely to be “near-term overhangs, we are buyers of Lulu shares given category tailwinds, market share opportunities, strong digital infrastructure, and strong balance sheet.”

Lulu had its first revenue miss since 2016 in this “most unusual quarter against elevated expectations.” At the same time it had its biggest market share gains in the athletic category in years, which “affirm our view that structural tailwinds for Lulu will be at the brand’s back post-Covid-19.”

Productivity in the 60% of stores open is currently at 75%. “While we expect investors were maybe looking for more, we note the team is messaging to a slower stores productivity recovery into 2H20 given strong comparisons and capacity/traffic restrictions in a social-distancing world.

Rates outperform. Price target to $348 from $360.

See also: Innovation, Digital Aid Lululemon Amid Virus: Bloomberg Intelligence

DA Davidson, John Morris

Given the full valuation of the stock, its tough to commit new capital as Lululemon’s plan to markdown to clear through inventory could “temporarily erode price integrity.”

Rates neutral, price target to $300 from $190.

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