By
Reuters
Published
Nov 24, 2015
Reading time
2 minutes
Download
Download the article
Print
Text size

Tiffany's profit forecast turns dimmer on strong dollar

By
Reuters
Published
Nov 24, 2015

Tiffany & Co reported a surprise drop in quarterly sales and forecast a bigger fall in full-year profit than it had expected earlier as a strong dollar hurt tourist spending in the United States and reduced the value of sales from other markets.

Shares of the upscale jeweler, which gets more than half of its sales from outside the Americas, fell 4.4 percent to $73.19 in premarket trading on Tuesday.

Tiffany


Tiffany's worldwide comparable sales fell 5 percent in the third quarter. Analysts had expected a much smaller decline of 0.8 percent, according to research firm Consensus Metrix.

The company, known for its Fifth Avenue flagship store in Manhattan and its signature blue boxes, has raised prices as it looks to offset the impact of a strong dollar.

The dollar rose about 12.5 percent against a basket of major currencies in the year ended Oct. 31, hurting companies that have big exposure to markets outside the United States.

Tiffany has been revamping its fine jewelry lines and expanding its silver jewelry offerings to attract shoppers, who are cutting back on discretionary purchases and spending more on electronics, cars and home goods.

The company's comparable sales rose 1 percent on a constant-currency basis, but the growth was much slower than the 3.3 percent analysts had expected.

"...Volatile, uncertain economic and market conditions in the U.S. and other regions are affecting consumer spending, causing us to maintain a cautious near-term outlook," Chief Executive Frederic Cumenal said in a statement.

Tiffany said it now expected earnings to fall by 5-10 percent in the year ending Jan. 31. The company had earlier forecast a 2-5 percent decline.

Its net income more than doubled to $91 million, or 70 cents per share, in the quarter ended Oct. 31, reflecting a loss related to debt extinguishment in the year-earlier period.

Analysts on average had estimate a profit of 75 cents per share, according to Thomson Reuters I/B/E/S.

Revenue fell 2.2 percent to $938.2 million against analysts' expectations of a 1.2 percent rise to $971 million.

Signet Jewelers Ltd also reported lower-than-expected quarterly profit and sales on Tuesday as a strong dollar hurt sales in its UK jewelry business and the company sold more lower-margin items.

 

© Thomson Reuters 2024 All rights reserved.