Ivica Krolo
Analyst · Laurent Vasilescu with BNP
Thanks, Oliver. I'm happy to share with you Birkenstock's performance for the fourth quarter and the fiscal year 2025, which exceeded our targets. We achieved this in the face of significant headwind from FX on our reported numbers. We closed the year with a strong fourth quarter with revenues of EUR 526 million, growth of 20% in constant currency. Reported revenue growth was over 15% due to the historically strong depreciation of the U.S. dollar compared to the fourth quarter of '24, which caused a 420 basis points drag to revenue growth in the quarter. This brought the full year revenues to EUR 2.1 billion, up 18% in constant currency, exceeding the high end of our guidance of 15% to 17%. We saw strong growth across all segments in fiscal 2025. The Americas segment was up 18% in constant currency. EMEA was up 14%, and APAC up 34% in constant currency. By channel for the year, B2B was up 21% and D2C up 12% in constant currency. As Oliver mentioned, we see sustained strength in our B2B channel. Share of business in the B2B channel was about 62%, up from 60% in fiscal 2024. Gross profit margin for the fourth quarter was 58.1%, down 90 basis points year-over-year. Like-for-like margins, excluding 120 basis points of pressure from FX and 100 basis points of pressure from incremental U.S. tariffs were up 130 basis points to 60.3%. For the fiscal year, gross margin improved 30 basis points to 59.1%. Like-for-like margin, excluding FX and tariff impacts, was up 90 basis points to 59.7%, close to our long-term target of 60%. Selling and distribution expenses were EUR 156 million in the fourth quarter, representing 29.7% of revenue. This was down 130 basis points from the prior year. For the full year, selling and distribution expenses totaled EUR 564 million or 26.9% of revenue, down from 28% in fiscal 2024, mainly due to a higher B2B share year-over-year and the reclassification of some expenses into G&A previously recorded in S&D. Adjusted general and administration expenses were EUR 35 million or 6.7% of revenue in the quarter, down 30 basis points versus prior year. Full year adjusted G&A totaled EUR 123 million or 5.9% of revenue, up 30 basis points from fiscal 2024, mainly due to reclassification. Adjusted EBITDA in the fourth quarter of EUR 147 million was up 17% year-over-year. Adjusted EBITDA margin of 27.8% was up 40 basis points year-over-year. Excluding FX and tariff impacts, adjusted EBITDA margin was up 280 basis points to 30.2%. For the full year 2025, adjusted EBITDA was EUR 667 million, up 20% year-over-year. Full year margin of 31.8% was up 100 basis points year-over-year and hit the high end of our targeted range, which we increased after the second quarter. Adjusted EBITDA margin for fiscal '25, excluding FX and tariff impacts, was 32.5%, up 170 basis points. Adjusted net profit of EUR 94 million in the fourth quarter was up 71% year-over-year. Adjusted EPS for the fourth quarter was EUR 0.51, up 76% from EUR 0.29 a year ago. For the fiscal year, adjusted net profit of EUR 346 million was up 44% and EPS of EUR 1.85 were up 45% from fiscal '24, driven by strong operational performance, lower interest payments and a lower effective tax rate. Cash flows from operating activities remained strong at EUR 384 million for the fiscal year, down 12% from fiscal 2024, mainly due to the timing of tax payments. We ended the year with cash and cash equivalents of EUR 329 million after the repurchase of 3.9 million shares totaling EUR 176 million and the partial early repayment of the U.S. dollar term loan of USD 50 million in September. Our inventory to sales ratio declined to 34% for the year from 35% in the fiscal year 2024. Our DSO for the year were healthy 28 days, up from 23 days in 2024, primarily due to the higher B2B mix. During the fiscal year, we spent approximately EUR 85 million in CapEx, adding to our production capacity in Arouca, Goerlitz and Pasewalk and continuing our investments in retail and IT. Even with the share buyback we executed in May, our net leverage was 1.5x at the end of fiscal 2025, down from 1.8x at the end of fiscal 2024. Without the buyback, the net leverage would have been at 1.2x. Our capital allocation priorities continue to be: number one, invest in our business; number two, reduce debt; and number three, opportunistic share buybacks. Now turning to our outlook for fiscal 2026. We are expecting significant headwinds from FX and tariffs in fiscal year 2026. Regarding FX, we will see an especially strong headwind in the first half of the year, impacting the quarter-over-quarter comparison. At today's euro-U.S. dollar exchange rate of 1.17, we expect approximately 600 to 650 basis points of headwind to revenue growth in both the first and the second quarter and around 300 to 350 basis points for the full year. The margin impact to gross profit and adjusted EBITDA will be 150 to 200 basis points in each of the first 2 quarters and about 100 basis points for the full year. As a reminder, nearly all of our COGS are in euro and the majority of SG&A is as well. As such, the absolute euro impact of movements in FX to revenue flows through about 90% to gross profit and about 67% to adjusted EBITDA. Our guidance for fiscal 2026 assumes today exchange rates will remain the same throughout the remainder of the year. Regarding tariffs, we were able to offset most of the 2025 impact with targeted price increases, including the July U.S. price increase. We also benefited from the fact that the majority of our goods for 2025 were already shipped prior to the increase in tariffs. This will not be the case in 2026, where we expect to see more impact from tariffs in COGS than we did in 2025. This will result in about a 100 basis point decline in both gross margin and EBITDA margin for 2026. With that explanation behind us, now on to the guidance. For 2026, we are targeting constant currency revenue growth of 13% to 15%, which, as Oliver mentioned, is a slower pace than we saw in 2025. The FX headwind should be about 300 to 350 basis points for the full year, resulting in reported revenue growth of 10% to 12% to EUR 2.3 billion to EUR 2.35 billion. This goal is based on our capacity constraints and the demand in our B2B channel, especially in the emerging youth segment. We target unit growth of approximately 10% per year, a manageable pace of growth when we consider our supply chain, access to specialized labor and equipment and our desire to maintain scarcity. We expect adjusted gross margin of 57% to 57.5%, inclusive of the 100 basis points of pressure from FX and 100 basis points from incremental U.S. tariffs. We expect adjusted EBITDA of at least EUR 700 million for the year, implying an adjusted EBITDA margin of 30% to 30.5%, inclusive of the pressure from FX and tariffs totaling 200 basis points. Excluding the impact of these external factors, forecasted adjusted EBITDA margin would be at 32% to 32.5%. Our expected tax rate should be in the range of 26% to 28%. Adjusted EPS is expected to be EUR 1.90 to EUR 2.05, including approximately EUR 0.15 to EUR 0.20 of pressure from FX. This is not including the impact of any additional share repurchases. We intend to repurchase share for a total consideration of $200 million during fiscal 2026, subject to market conditions. Capital expenditures should be in the range of EUR 110 million to EUR 130 million. Net leverage target for the end of fiscal 2026 of 1.3 to 1.4x, excluding the impact of any additional share repurchases. Finally, we expect to open about 40 new retail doors globally over the course of the year. Before I turn back to Oliver to close, I'm excited to announce our plans for a Capital Markets Day at the end of January in New York City. Details on venue and timing will be forthcoming and will be posted on our Investor Relations website. We are now in year 3 of our life as a public company, and we are looking forward to providing you a detailed look into the world of Birkenstock and our vision for growth for the next 3 years. We hope you can join us for a deep dive into all areas of our unique and dynamic business model.