
Image above: Musician Ava Max
promoting the brand.
Skechers has done it again, posting record sales and nabbing high industry honors for its performance. And while it cites high-impact celebrity marketing with
its sales gains, it missed earnings expectations. The comfy-sneaker kingpin is now forecasting a relatively subdued quarter.
Sales at the Los Angeles company jumped 21% to a record $1.88
billion in its third quarter, with growth in every geographic region. Wholesale revenues climbed 26.2%, and direct-to-consumer purchases advanced 12%.
The company credited the gains to both
innovations, including its hands-free slip-ons, and smart marketing with a diverse team of brand ambassadors.
It’s got all the celebrity athletes you’d expect from a sneaker
company, including NFL greats Tony Romo and Howie Long, boxer Sugar Ray Leonard, golfers Brooke Henderson and Matt Fitzpatrick, and Dodgers pitcher Clayton Kershaw.
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But it gets just as much
endorsement oomph from ads with non-jock celebs, including TV personalities Martha Stewart, Amanda Kloots and Brooke Burke, and musicians like Ava Max, Willie Nelson and Chesca.
Footwear
News named it the Company of the Year, the third time it has won that honor. And earlier this fall, the Footwear Industry Awards named it the top Outdoor Footwear Brand of the Year.
But
net earnings fell 17% to $85.9 million, from $103.1 million in the comparable period last year, partly due to increased marketing spending and supply-chain woes.
And it’s now predicting
sales of between $1.725 billion and $1.775 billion in the current quarter, somewhat below expectations.
Gabriella Carbone, who follows the company for Deutsche Bank, continues to rate Skechers
as a buy, noting that its lower-than-expected earnings stemmed from logistics costs and strong demand.
“Significant improvements in transit times along with strong demand led to capacity
challenges and ultimately higher costs, as Skechers worked to mitigate the impact to customers,” she writes. “This involved adding more labor and capacity to fulfill orders.”