Stefan Larsson
Analyst · BTIG
Thank you, Sheryl, and good morning, everyone, and thank you for joining us today. I want to start by thanking our Calvin Klein, Tommy Hilfiger and PVH teams around the world for your hard work this quarter as we continue to make important progress on our multiyear journey to build Calvin and Tommy into 2 of the most desirable lifestyle brands in the world. For the third quarter, we exceeded our guidance across reported revenue, operating profit and EPS, and we delivered constant currency revenues in line with our guidance. Total revenue for the company was $2.3 billion, down less than 1% in constant currency and in line with our expectations. Third quarter direct-to-consumer revenue was also down 1% in constant currency, partially offset by 1% growth in our wholesale revenue. For the full year, we are reaffirming our constant currency revenue and operating margin outlook and narrowing our reported revenue and non-GAAP EPS outlook to the high end of our previous ranges, reflecting our confidence in our brands and execution despite the continued uneven global consumer backdrop and the impact of tariffs in North America, which Zac will share more details about. We remain disciplined in our execution of the PVH+ Plan, where we lean into the iconic global power of Calvin and Tommy, and focus on the key growth categories where each brand has the right to play to win with the consumer. We continue to expand innovation and newness across our core product franchises and amplify that in both brands with cut-through full funnel marketing that connects with culture and our target consumer. In Europe, revenues declined low single digits in constant currency. And coming into the fourth quarter in Europe, we had an unplanned start to Black Friday and the important holiday period. In the Americas in Q3, our digital channels continued to outperform, driven by strong customer engagement. And also here, the Black Friday and holiday start was on plan. And in APAC, we exceeded expectations again this quarter with strong D2C performance and a notable improvement in China. We continue to build our data and demand-driven supply chain, reflected in healthy inventory levels, which are up 3% versus last year, including the impact of tariffs. We are also investing in key growth initiatives, especially in marketing, and we have freed up over 200 basis points in SG&A efficiencies over the past 18 months. As we lean into the holiday season, I just came back from visiting 7 of our biggest markets across Europe, U.S. and Mexico. I visited over 100 Calvin and Tommy shop-in-shops, met with key partners and walked our owned and operated stores. What's clear from these visits are the underlying strength of the consumer love for our brands and the power and potential of our teams and partners. A common thread you will hear me talking a lot about today is that when we lean into the iconic strength of our brands and combine that with innovation and newness in product, marketing and the shopping experience, we win. I look forward to sharing how we did this in Q3 and how we will expand our impact quarter-by-quarter. Let me start with Calvin Klein, where we continue to build relevance and desirability by connecting Calvin's core DNA to the consumer and cultural conversation. This quarter, we again drove momentum with high-impact full funnel execution in underwear and denim, 2 of Calvin's biggest categories. Building on the strong launch of our new men's Icon Cotton Stretch product franchise, which we amplified through global mega talent, Bad Bunny. This quarter, we brought the same level of product innovation and newness to our largest and most successful women's underwear program. Together with global music superstar, Rosalia, we introduced our new Icon Cotton Modal franchise, driving double-digit growth in these styles globally. Repeating this model, we launched new campaigns with NBA star, Jalen Green, and Real Madrid footballer Trent Alexander-Arnold, driving 20% growth in Icon Cotton Stretch underwear, making our third consecutive quarter of strong growth, and growing total men's underwear mid-single digits. In denim, we continue to infuse innovation in fashion denim and make it easier for consumers to shop their favorite looks, and we delivered strong growth this quarter, continuing the momentum from Q2. Last month, global brand ambassador and K-pop mega talent, Jung Kook, launched our newest campaign featuring Calvin's iconic denim lifestyle. The campaign went viral globally, driving deeper consumer engagement in one of our most important pillars of the brand. In September, we continued to build the brand's aspirational halo through Calvin Klein runway with our Spring 2026 fashion show in Calvin's hometown of New York City. The show drove record social media engagement, earning the #1 spot among all participating brands, and Calvin alone had a 75% share of voice for the entire New York Fashion Week. As we look ahead to holiday, we're engaging the consumer with seasonal Calvin fashion essentials from social and e-commerce to our stores. In the marketplace, when we last spoke, we were just opening our Tokyo flagship in Harajuku, representing the ultimate Calvin brand expression and further strengthening our premium positioning. The opening went very well, and we have seen high-quality traffic and conversion. Next week, we'll further advance Calvin's global retail expansion with the opening of the Calvin Klein flagship store here in SoHo, New York, another iconic brand-building location and a true homecoming for the brand. We also continue to make progress as planned on the transitory operational challenges we previously discussed as we stood up the Calvin Klein global product capability in New York. The challenges created an expected headwind this quarter, but we continue to see the planned improvements in delivery timing and go-in margin we set out for spring 2026. Turning to Tommy. We continue to take Tommy's iconic DNA of classic American cool and connect it to today's consumer and culture. Every season, through our brand campaign, we invite the consumer into Tommy's aspirational world. We then lean into key growth categories and hero our best product franchises, which are both iconic and infused with newness. In the third quarter, we launched our Hilfiger Racing Club fall brand campaign with talent like Claudia Schiffer and Nicholas Hoult, which followed the success of Tommy's partnership with the global blockbuster film, F1 the Movie. Connected to the campaign, we executed high-impact full funnel activations, including global events across key cities. For the campaign, global brand ambassador, Jisoo, from Blackpink was featured by Vogue, igniting broad organic reach and engagement. This is a great example of how we convert influence into brand relevance and consumer excitement, both globally and regionally. This fall, Tommy opened its newest shop-in-shop concept at Galeries Lafayette in Paris, reflecting our multiyear elevation plan to evolve and invest in our shop-in-shops and stores. These investments bring a step change improvement in the consumer experience. And in our test store, we already see the positive impact of the elevated experience with a higher AUR sell-through. Tommy will close the year with this Hilfiger holiday campaign, reimagining iconic Tommy style for the holidays, and we are excited for Jisoo to lead the campaign. Lastly, I'm excited for the next step in our marketing execution. For spring 2026, we are taking Tommy's aspirational world to the next level, with Tommy himself inviting a strong group of global talent into his world, all wearing Tommy's powerful style icons in seasonally relevant growth categories across both men's and women's. I can't wait for you all to see it. Now let me turn to our regional performance, starting with Europe. Reported revenue increased 4%, but was down low single digits in constant currency. Wholesale was down less than 1% as positive fall order book growth was offset by lower in-season replenishment and D2C was down mid-single digits. A few factors drove this. First, after an unplanned start to the quarter and 2 consecutive quarters of D2C growth in Europe, in September, we observed a tougher backdrop with more muted activity from our European consumers. Secondly, the expected delays from the transitory Calvin global product challenges put extra strain on our European distribution center, impacting shipments for both Calvin and Tommy, which made us lose a few critical weeks of full price selling. Thirdly, we had an especially tough season for cold weather outerwear, a big fall category for both Tommy and Calvin. Importantly, we are directly addressing these factors with what's within our control. Independent of the consumer backdrop, where we have driven the most product innovation and newness for this fall in categories such as sweaters and pants for Tommy or underwear and fashion denim for Calvin, we drive positive growth. And season by season, you will see us expand iconic innovation and newness across bigger and bigger parts of the assortment. As I shared previously, we remain on plan to resolve the transitory challenges from the setup of the Calvin Klein global product capability. And for spring, we are on time from our suppliers, and we have captured the go-in margin improvements we targeted. And in cold weather outerwear, even without the delays, the full price selling window is becoming shorter as consumers every season lean more into lighter transitional outerwear that can be worn for a longer period of time. And even though our transitional outerwear across both brands performed well, and we have increased its share of total outerwear, going forward, we need to accelerate this shift even further. In regions where we have already done that, like in APAC this season, it has performed very well. As I mentioned earlier, in Europe, the holiday season and important Black Friday week is on plan. And in parallel to keeping this momentum up, we are preparing for our biggest Partner Day yet in January, where we will bring over 500 of our global partners to Amsterdam to show how we, for spring and fall 2026, are amplifying the increased innovation in product with marketing to cut through even more with the consumer. This includes the next level Tommy Lifestyle campaign, further strengthening of Europe-focused talent and increased shop-in-shop rebuilds. Next, turning to the Americas. We grew overall revenue by 2%, in line with our plan of low single-digit growth, driven by wholesale growth. In a continued choppy macro backdrop, D2C declined low single digits. Within D2C, we drove higher AURs and digital continued to outperform, delivering double-digit growth. This was supported by another quarter of double-digit traffic growth and driven by product strength and elevated mid-funnel marketing. Our team continued to lean into the next level execution of the PVH+ Plan as we work to unlock the full growth potential of both brands in the region. A great example is the denim category, where we grew across both brands and included newness in product, stronger presentation, improved fit guide and enhanced associate training. Looking ahead, we continue to build brand desirability in the region through increasing our refits of our North America retail fleet. Moving to Asia Pacific. For the second consecutive quarter, we delivered better-than-expected performance. Revenue was flat in constant currency, a sequential improvement from Q2, driven by an improvement in both D2C and wholesale with gross margin up versus last year. Importantly, D2C turned to positive growth with notable improvements in China, Japan and Australia. Highly relevant global activations across both brands, amplified by regional talent, drove continued e-commerce growth up high single digits. Driven by our hero products, Tommy delivered double-digit growth in key categories with transitional outerwear and sweaters both up approximately 20% across men's and women's. Calvin saw sequentially stronger growth in fall product, driven by the newly launched underwear programs in both men's and women's. We generated strong results during key consumer moments such as Golden Week and Chinese Valentine's Day, and we just finished Double-11, the largest consumer moment of fiscal 2025, where we drove gross merchandise revenue 15% higher than last year, and Calvin and Tommy again ranked among the top international brands on Tmall. Through strong execution, we continue to deliver sequential improvements in performance. We have increased investments in marketing to activate the full funnel and continue to expand new stores across APAC, all reflecting the importance of the region as one of our key growth drivers. In addition, both Calvin and Tommy were proud to participate as first-time exhibitors at the China International Import Expo, building on our long-standing presence and commitment to the market. Turning to our licensing business. Revenues in licensing were lower versus last year, reflecting the transition of previously announced women's North America wholesale categories. As we have shared before, our large and diversified global licensing business is a key competitive advantage. When we ourselves lean into our core categories to turn the brand-building consumer flywheel, our long-term partners bring their expertise across multiple complementary categories. Consistent with the outerwear category classification business for the U.S. wholesale channel, we recently entered into a new licensing agreement for the women's dress classification with an expected launch in spring 2027. Both categories live outside of our brand-specific lifestyle pads. Additionally, in Q3, we held a Global Licensing Summit here in New York with all our partners, where each of our brands shared their key growth strategies and where our key partners showcased how they, from those brand strategies, drive consumer engagement and growth in the categories they are the experts in. Next, a quick moment on leadership. We are excited to welcome Patricia Gabriel, who joined us last month as Chief Supply Chain Officer and Global Head of Operations. She is succeeding David Savman, who earlier this year took over the Global Brand President role for Calvin Klein. Patricia is a consumer-centric leader with a strong proven track record, and she will help further accelerate our PVH+ Plan progress. And a few weeks ago, we announced that Zac Coughlin, our Chief Financial Officer, will be departing for a new opportunity outside of our industry. I want to thank Zac for his partnership and contributions to the business and to me personally. Over the past several years, Zac has played an integral role in advancing our PVH+ Plan progress and driving important efficiencies across the company. Thank you, Zac, and we wish you all the best in your next chapter. Zac will stay with us through the end of December, and we have already begun a global search for our next CFO. In the interim, Melissa Stone will serve as our CFO. Melissa has over 2 decades of PVH financial leadership experience across accounting, controlling and FP&A, giving her a deep understanding of our global business. And I would like to thank her and our full finance leadership team for stepping up during this time. In closing, we are fully geared up to deliver the rest of the holiday season and the full year as we continue to step-by-step and season-by-season build Calvin Klein and Tommy Hilfiger into their full potential. There are only a small handful of globally iconic brands like Tommy Hilfiger and Calvin Klein, and we have 2 of them. In any consumer backdrop, we remain relentlessly focused on the levers within our control to keep leaning into our iconic brands, and through our PVH+ Plan, continue to strengthen our product, marketing and marketplace experience in a systematic and repeatable way. Everywhere we do this, combining our iconic brand strength with innovation and newness, we're already driving increasingly profitable growth with the consumer today. And with that, I'll turn the call over to Zac.