Urban Outfitters Stock Is Worth A Try

 | Mar 24, 2022 06:53AM ET

Specialty apparel retailer Urban Outfitters (NASDAQ:URBN) stock has been selling off with the retail sector during the post-holiday hangover period. Its Free People brand suffered logistics constraints as air and ocean cargo rates hit unprecedented levels, which ate into margins.

However, management expects costs to recede by summer 2022. The company is implementing higher pricing to mitigate some of the effects of freight and inflationary pressures. The company sees strong sales momentum continuing through spring 2022, as evidenced by 20% growth in the first four weeks of 2022. Prudent investors seeking exposure into niche retail apparel ahead of the clearing of headwinds can watch for opportunistic pullbacks in shares of Urban Outfitters.

h2 Q4 Fiscal 2021 Earnings Release /h2

On Mar. 1, Urban Outfitters released its fourth-quarter fiscal 2021 results for the quarter ending December 2021. The company reported earnings-per-share (EPS) of $0.41 excluding non-recurring items versus consensus analyst estimates for a profit of $0.52, a (-$0.11) per share miss. Revenues rose 22.3% year-over-year (YoY) to $1.33 billion, meeting consensus analyst estimates of $1.33 billion.

Comparable retail net sales increased by 14%, driven by digital channel sales and by weakening retail sales stemming from reduced traffic. Comparable retail sales rose 49% for its Free People Group brand, 14% at its Anthropologie Group brand, and 3% at its Urban Outfitters brand. Total inventory rose by $160.2 million or 39.1%. Urban Outfitters CEO Richard Hayne commented,

“Record fourth-quarter sales were driven by positive ‘comps’ at all brands. Strong customer response to our early spring offerings bode well for continued sales growth in the first quarter,”

h2 Conference Call Takeaways /h2

CEO Hayne stated each brand posted positive retail comps, making up 14% of total retail segment comp growth for 2021. He specified that Free People had a challenging environment due to logistics constraints to get products into the U.S. to meet holiday season demand. Logistics costs hurt margins. He feels the elevated shipping costs should recede by summertime. In the meantime, the company is taking measures to mitigate some freight costs ranging from higher retail pricing to ordering hot items months ahead of time to use the cheaper ocean freight costs over the expensive air freight costs. The Q4 2021 demand was very strong, and he is confident this momentum will continue through spring 2022.

This is evidenced by retail sales jumping 20% in the first four weeks of the new year. He noted,

“We've been pleasantly surprised by the resilience of the consumer, given the headwinds of surging inflation, the remnants of COVID-related restrictions and a stock market correction. These optics have pushed consumer sentiment to decade lows, but we see continued strength in our customer spending happens. Our customers are anxious for a return to normal life and they're shopping to support that goal. They want to be out and about with family and friends traveling dining out and going to entertainment venues.”

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CEO Hayne stated that fashion and newness take precedent overpricing among consumers. This is supported by strong sales of full-priced shoes, dresses, blouses, heels, and pants. He expects to see total company comp sales increase in the mid-teens for its fiscal first quarter of 2022.