Gap Forecasts a Profit Decline
26 February 2016 - 8:45AM
Dow Jones News
By Maria Armental
Gap Inc. on Thursday said profit would fall in the current
fiscal year and that it would reduce capital spending and buy back
fewer shares as it sought to pay down debt.
The retailer said its board had approved an additional $1
billion to buy back shares--but said the buyback would fall short
of its historic average as it directed some of its cash to debt
payments. Gap ended the year with about $1.31 billion in long-term
debt.
In the year ended Jan. 30, it spent $1.4 billion on stock
buybacks and dividend payouts.
The retailer projects adjusted profit of $2.20 to $2.25 in the
current fiscal year, which would be a decline from $2.43 a share in
fiscal 2015. Analysts surveyed by Thomson Reuters projected $2.42 a
share.
Inventory is projected to decline in the low single digits.
Gap said it set aside about $650 million for capital projects,
down from the $726 million it spent in 2015.
Gap has been trying to revamp its namesake brand. The company
last year brought on new leadership--including former Banana
Republic veteran Wendi Goldman, who had led Victoria's Secret's
Pink line--and said it would layoff workers and close stores as
part of a broader cost-cutting move.
In the latest period, sales at its Gap stores fell 4%, or 6% on
a comparable basis.
Comparable sales, which Gap defines as stores open for at least
a year along with online sales, are a key metric for retailers,
stripping out the impact of recently opened or closed stores.
Banana Republic reported with a 10% comparable-sales decline
from the year earlier, while Old Navy continued to post strong
sales, up 5% in the latest period.
Over all, for the 13 weeks ended Jan. 30, Gap reported a profit
of $214 million, or 53 cents a share, down from $319 million, or 75
cents a share, a year earlier. Excluding charges related to the Gap
brand overhaul, profit was 57 cents a share.
Net sales fell 7% to $4.39 billion with online sales accounting
for $803 million. On a comparable sales basis, sales fell 7%. In
the year-ago period, the company reported a 2% increase in
comparable sales.
The stronger dollar, the company said, lowered sales by about
$100 million.
Analysts surveyed by Thomson Reuters had projected 57 cents a
share on $4.46 billion in sales.
Gross margin narrowed to 32.8% from 35.2% a year earlier.
Write to Maria Armental at maria.armental@wsj.com
(END) Dow Jones Newswires
February 25, 2016 16:30 ET (21:30 GMT)
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