Andrew Page
Analyst · Ike Boruchow from Wells Fargo
Thanks, James. The headline is that our strategy is working. Our brands are firing on all cylinders, allowing us to exit Q3 with momentum and setting us up to enter 2026 with confidence. Before I get into Q3 results, I want to personally thank our more than 13,000 employees around the globe for their obsessive focus on the consumer and continued push toward operational excellence. These results are only possible through their efforts. Now to our results. Salomon footwear continues to add a strong second leg of profitable growth to Arc'teryx' already exceptional trajectory, significantly elevating the financial profile and long-term value creation potential of the Amer Sports portfolio. All 3 operating segments delivered both sales and margin ahead of expectations in the third quarter. And given our strong third quarter results and continued momentum, we are raising our full year revenue, margin and EPS expectations. Amer Sports grew sales 30% in Q3 on a reported basis or 28% ex-currency. The strong group sales performance was led by Outdoor Performance, followed by Technical Apparel. Ball & Racquet sales also accelerated and delivered double-digit growth. By channel, the group continues to be driven by direct-to-consumer, which grew 51% led by Salomon in Greater China and APAC. Wholesale grew 18% at the group level, also led by Salomon. Growth accelerated across all regions. Regional growth was led by Asia Pacific, which increased 54% and China, which grew 47%. EMEA accelerated to 23% and the Americas accelerated to 18% in Q3. Turning to profitability. Adjusted gross margin increased 240 basis points to 57.9% in Q3, primarily driven by favorable channel, geographic, product and brand mix. Gross margin also benefited by approximately 50 basis points from onetime inventory reserve adjustments. Adjusted SG&A expenses as a percentage of revenues was flat year-over-year and represented 42.3% of revenues in Q3. The Technical Apparel SG&A leverage on strong growth was offset by slight deleverage at Outdoor Performance and Ball & Racquet due to ongoing investments in Salomon Softgoods and Wilson Tennis 360. Led by strong gross margin expansion, we generated 130 basis points increase in our adjusted operating margin from 14.4% last year to 15.7% in Q3. Corporate expenses were $38 million, up from $23 million in Q3 of last year. D&A was $119 million, which includes $43 million of ROU depreciation. Adjusted net finance cost in the quarter was $18 million, which comprised primarily of $26 million of interest expense, partially offset by $7 million of FX gains on the remeasurement of certain monetary assets. In the quarter, our adjusted income tax expense was $68 million, which equates to an adjusted effective tax rate of 26%. Adjusted net income in Q3 was $185 million compared to $71 million in the prior year period. Adjusted diluted earnings per share was $0.33 compared to adjusted diluted earnings per share of $0.14 last year. Now turning to segment results. Technical Apparel revenues increased 31% to $683 million, led by Arc'teryx. Growth was fueled by 46% direct-to-consumer expansion, including a reacceleration in our omni-comp to 27% from 15% in Q2 of 2025. Technical Apparel wholesale revenues grew 11% Regionally, the Technical Apparel growth rate was led by Asia Pacific, followed by the Americas, Greater China and then EMEA. All regions grew strong double digits. Arc'teryx stores are critical to the brand's growth, especially how we engage with local consumers and community. Our stores include a mix of different formats ranging from multilevel large-scale Alpha flagship stores to small format very distinct mountain town shops. In Q3, excluding the recently acquired stores in Korea, which I will discuss shortly, Arc'teryx opened 4 net new stores with 10 openings offset by closures of 6 legacy locations as part of our ongoing strategy to optimize the quality and productivity of our store fleet. New store openings included the Arc'teryx flagship in Vancouver at Robson Street. Arc'teryx also opened brand stores in Manchester, U.K.; Canberra, Australia and Takanawa, Tokyo. We have opened 12 net new stores year-to-date, and we continue to plan to open approximately 25 net new Arc'teryx stores for the full year, with the largest number coming in North America. Our store opening plan incorporates a similar level of gross new stores as in 2024, partially offset by the closure of certain outlets and suboptimal locations. In Greater China, we continue to focus on optimizing Arc'teryx' retail footprint. This year, we will have slight net store closures, including some legacy partner doors. However, we will still grow our owned store count and our overall square footage in China with larger format, higher quality and more productive locations. A good example of this is our upgrade of the original Arc'teryx flagship in Shanghai at the Alpha Center, which will reopen this month after expansion and renovation. Looking ahead to 2026, we are planning for Arc'teryx to have net store openings in China after years of rationalizing the store fleet in the region. In North America, I would highlight our second New York City Alpha store, which recently opened on Fifth Avenue at Rockefeller Center. This store is the most pinnacle expression of the brand in the U.S., and we are encouraged by the strong sales in the first few weeks. With nearly 12,000 square feet, it's one of the largest stores in North America and a bold step forward in Arc'teryx' retail expression, designed to educate, inspire and connect more people to the mountain through immersive storytelling and product innovation. In Q3, we also closed our asset purchase agreement with Nelson Sports, Arc'teryx' distributor in Korea since 2001. This deal effectively converted 46 partner stores into our own fleet, which include a number of small format shop-in-shop locations. The revenue and margin impact in Q3 was negligible. Bringing Korea in-house will benefit our top line and operating profit dollars, as we convert from wholesale partner revenues to DTC revenues. Bringing Korea in-house will have an immaterial impact on both the segment and group operating margin. This acquisition will contribute approximately $25 million of incremental sales in Q4. On an annualized basis, Korea is expected to generate approximately $120 million of total sales at retail in 2025. Beyond 2025, we believe Korea is a large, high potential market for Arc'teryx, given its strong consumer affinity for the Sports & Outdoor category and premium global brands. Technical Apparel adjusted operating margin declined 100 basis points to 19.0% as SG&A leverage was offset by approximately 125 basis point headwind from a timing shift related to government grants. Moving to our Outdoor Performance segment, which saw revenues increase 36% to $724 million, driven by very strong performance in Salomon footwear, apparel and bags and socks. By channel, Outdoor Performance DTC grew 67%, led by new doors and higher productivity across markets, especially Greater China and APAC. Outdoor Performance achieved an impressive 33% omni-comp with strength in both stores and e-commerce. E-com is growing across regions, driven by higher traffic. Wholesale grew 26%, driven by strong sell-through and reorders in softgoods. Regionally, the Outdoor Performance growth rate was led by Greater China and APAC, followed by accelerating growth in both EMEA and the Americas. The popularity of Salomon footwear is inflecting globally, and we are well positioned to fully develop this unique opportunity over time. We believe we have very significant growth opportunities in all 3 major consumer regions and have the right talent and team structures in place to take a meaningful share of the global sneaker market. In Asia, direct-to-consumer continues to be the critical growth channel for Salomon, led by our highly productive Salomon compact shop format. We opened 19 net new Salomon shops in Greater China this quarter, including both owned stores and partner stores, bringing our total count to 253 doors. We are on track to reach approximately 290 Salomon shops in Greater China by year-end, including owned and partnered doors. We recently opened our second Salomon flagship in Shanghai, a 7,300 square foot pinnacle expression of the brand located in the French Concession district known for its boutique shopping. The 3-level store offers a more immersive experience for consumers and has performed very well in its first few months. In APAC, we opened 12 new Salomon stores in Q3, 6 in Korea, 4 in Japan and 2 in Australia. Our overall brand awareness and demand for Salomon footwear is rapidly growing across Asia. In Americas, Salomon softgoods grew strong double digits in Q3, and we continue to lay the groundwork to support significant future growth. Our first U.S. store in New York City continues to show incredible traction with consumers, and we are on track to operate 4 stores in Greater New York by the end of Q1 as well as continue to expand our presence in key wholesale accounts. New locations in Q3 include Woodbury Commons in New York, the trendy Bucktown neighborhood of Chicago. And later this week, we're opening our second New York store in Williamsburg, Brooklyn. And I also want to mention our first Los Angeles store on Melrose Avenue in West Hollywood, which opened at the beginning of Q4. The opening has been a huge success with very strong brand buzz in the area, high traffic and long lines outside the store. We were thrilled to welcome many first-time Salomon buyers, especially so many young female consumers. We will continue to focus on epicenters in 2026 and beyond, including New York, Los Angeles, Miami and San Francisco, and we are planning to open 7 to 10 new stores next year in the U.S. Looking at U.S. wholesale, Salomon is seeing growing demand across a variety of high-quality retail partners, including REI, Nordstrom and run specialty shops. In EMEA, we continue to expand our store fleets in key epicenters, including Milan and London. We recently opened our second brand store in Milan and will open a third one in Q4, and we will open a fourth store in London in Q4. In 2026, we will further develop our epicenters into Spain, Germany and other key U.K. cities. For our Winter Sports Equipment brands, Q3 was a strong quarter with double-digit growth across brands and regions. Sales also benefited from approximately $20 million of shipments that were planned in Q4 but went out in Q3. Order books for the season are solid, and our brands continue to take meaningful market share globally. In addition to strong market share in our core ski, boot and binding categories, we see incremental growth opportunities in areas such as snowboarding and protective equipment. Outdoor Performance adjusted operating profit margin expanded 420 basis points from last year to 21.7% in Q3. Margin expansion was led by gross margin, thanks to positive channel, region and product mix as well as favorable product cost driven by our footwear cost optimization initiatives. Gross margin expansion offset the very slight SG&A deleverage due to continued investments in growth. Moving to Ball & Racquet, where revenue increased 16% to $350 million, driven by softgoods and racquet sports. We continue to see very strong momentum in Tennis 360 globally. By category, the growth was led by softgoods, which more than doubled in the quarter with strong momentum in all regions. Softgoods now represents approximately 15% of segment revenue. Racquet sports also grew strong double digits, driven especially by very strong growth in EMEA and China. Regionally, the Ball & Racquet growth rate was led by China, followed by APAC, EMEA and slight growth in Americas. Globally, in Q3, we had 10 net new Wilson brand store openings, mostly in Greater China. Wilson continues to excel in China, and we are planning to open approximately 35 Wilson Tennis 360 shops in China this year, including both owned and partner doors, bringing the total to around 80. In Q3, Wilson celebrated the opening of its urban concept store, Brickhouse in Wuhan, which integrates American tennis club aesthetics with local Wuhan culture, a tribute to Olympic Champion Zheng Qinwen's hometown. In North America, our expansion into the warmer southern markets is continuing to drive strong results. Our Dallas North Park Mall location continues to perform very well, and we continue to expand our new Tennis 360 concept store into more southern and coastal locations, including our new shop in Beverly Hills and an upcoming shop in Miami. We also continue to expand our Tennis 360 test in new DICK'S Sporting Goods locations, including House of Sports locations. In APAC, we are excited to expand our retail format into 2 new markets, Japan with our first store in Tokyo's Marunouchi district and Australia with our first 2 stores in the Melbourne area. Ball & Racquet segment adjusted operating profit increased 70 basis points to 7.6%, thanks to strong gains in gross margin, driven by favorable product, region and channel mix and pricing. Ball & Racquet profitability also benefited from the above-mentioned onetime inventory reserve revaluations. These gains offset higher tariff costs and slight SG&A deleverage on continued softgoods investments. Turning to the group balance sheet. We ended the quarter with $800 million of net debt. Using the midpoint of our 2025 adjusted operating profit guidance, our net debt to adjusted EBITDA ratio was approximately 0.7x at the end of Q3. We exited the quarter with inventories up 28% year-over-year, slightly lower than our 30% sales growth. We are very comfortable with the level and quality of our inventory. This higher inventory growth is primarily related to 4 factors: number one, earlier receipt of seasonal Arc'teryx merchandise to prepare for better in-stock positions; number two, higher Arc'teryx goods-in-transit resulting from the greater use of ocean shipping versus air freight; three, FX translations due to the weaker U.S. dollar and four, the addition of Arc'teryx' Korea inventory following the recent acquisition. We expect inventory growth rates to normalize in the second half of 2026 when we start to cycle our improved in-stock positions and the higher use of ocean freight. Driven by strong profit growth and disciplined working capital management, we generated $104 million of operating cash flow in the first 9 months compared to $18 million last year. And for the full year of 2025, we expect to generate solid operating cash flow growth versus 2024 levels. Now moving to guidance. The updated guidance assumes the latest tariff rates on all countries will stay in place for the remainder of 2025 and beyond. We remain confident that we are well positioned to manage through a variety of tariff scenarios given our low exposure to the U.S., our pricing power and our clean balance sheet. We continue to expect negligible impact to our group P&L from higher tariffs in 2025 and beyond. Let's begin with our updated full year 2025 outlook. Given the upside in Q3 and our continued momentum, we are raising our full year revenue, operating margin and EPS expectations. We are raising 2025 revenue growth guidance from 20% to 21% to 23% to 24%, including an approximate 100 basis point benefit from favorable FX impact on current exchange rates. By segment, we are raising our Technical Apparel 2025 revenue growth guidance from approximately 22% to 25% to 26% to 27%, including continued strong omni-com growth. We are also increasing our outdoor performance sales growth expectations from 22% to 25% to 28% to 29% and Ball & Racquet from 7% to 9% to 10% to 11% growth. We are also raising our full year adjusted gross margin guidance from approximately 57.5% to approximately 58%, and we're also raising our adjusted operating margin guidance from approximately 11.8% to 12.2% to 12.5% to 12.7%. By segment, we continue to expect an adjusted operating margin of approximately 21% for Technical Apparel. For Outdoor Performance, we are raising adjusted operating margin guidance from 11% to 11.5% to 13% to 13.5%. For Ball & Racquet, we are maintaining our adjusted operating profit margin guidance of 3% to 4%. We are now assuming full year net finance costs of $85 million to $90 million and an effective tax rate of 27% to 28%. The lower effective tax rate is primarily driven by higher profit generation from lower tax jurisdictions. Other operating income will be approximately $20 million for the full year and net income attributable to noncontrolling interest will be approximately $15 million. We now expect adjusted diluted EPS of $0.88 to $0.92 versus our prior guidance of $0.77 to $0.82, which is based on 563 million of fully diluted shares. We are also assuming D&A of $350 million, including approximately $180 million of ROU depreciation. CapEx is expected to be approximately $300 million, primarily to support new store expansion, ERP optimization and distribution and logistics investments. As we have said before, should strong trends continue and better-than-anticipated demand materialize, we believe we will be well positioned to deliver financial performance ahead of our expectations. As we begin to look beyond 2025, we are also confident in our initial 2026 outlook. At the group level, we expect to deliver revenue towards the high end of our long-term algorithm of low double-digit to mid-teens annual sales growth. And we expect to deliver adjusted operating margin expansion within our long-term algorithm of 30 to 70-plus basis points. With that, I'll turn it back to the operator for questions.