Hugo Boss Says It Won’t Reach 2025 Revenue, Profit Targets

Hugo Boss on Tuesday reported that its third-quarter operating profit slightly exceeded expectations, but said it wouldn’t reach its revenue and profit growth targets for 2025 amid tepid demand, sending shares lower in morning trading.

Hugo Boss had warned in March that it might need to delay its 2025 revenue target of 5 billion euros, but had still expected operating profit margin of at least 12 percent in the period.

While confirming the company still plans to reach its targets, it was not clear when this would happen, chief financial officer Yves Mueller said on a media call.

Shares fell 5 percent to 40.85 euros at 11:01 GMT.

Quarterly earnings before interest and tax were down 7 percent on the year at 95 million euros ($103.3 million), but above analysts’ estimate of 90 million euros in a company-provided poll, helped by cost management, Hugo Boss said.

“We think the beat is actually not the best of quality,” analysts at J.P. Morgan wrote in a note to clients, flagging a softer-than-expected gross margin.

Gross margin declined to 60.2 percent from 60.7 percent a year earlier, below analysts expectations of 61.4 percent, dragged by a rise in global freight rates and widespread discounts and promotions in the industry.

Despite reduced inventory, the company still needs to discount its products to lure cautious customers, Mueller said.

“Now it is more demand-induced. Consumers expect you to sell at a discount,” Mueller said.

After a 2022 brand revamp boosted its resilience last year, the upmarket fashion label has been grappling with weakening consumer demand despite higher investment in marketing and production capacity in recent months.

Currency-adjusted sales were up 1 percent at 1.029 billion euros during the three months, in line with market expectations of 1.023 billion euros.

“Particularly in China, the overall market environment was affected by persistent subdued consumer demand,” the company said in a statement.

Quarterly currency-adjusted sales in its third-biggest market, Asia-Pacific, fell 7 percent to 110 million euros, but increased 1 percent in the Europe, Middle East and Africa, and 4 percent in the Americas, helped by improvements in Germany and in the United States. Britain and France remained weak.

Hugo Boss said it continued to focus on cost control, especially around sourcing, to help profitability into the fourth quarter. It maintained its full-year sales and earnings forecasts after slashing them earlier this year.

By Linda Pasquini and Ozan Ergenay

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