Fashion
China releases details of outcomes of talks with US in Malaysia
Both sides agreed to continue extending certain tariff exclusion measures, a ministry spokesperson said.
Outcomes of the recent China-US talks in Kuala Lumpur include US cancellation of the 10-per cent ‘fentanyl tariffs’ and suspension, for another year, the 24-per cent reciprocal tariffs on goods from China, Hong Kong and Macau.
China will make similar adjustments to its countermeasures.
Both sides will continue extending certain tariff exclusion measures.
China will resolve TikTok issues with the US.
The United States will suspend for one year the implementation of a new rule announced on September 29 that expands its ‘entity-list’ export restrictions to any entity that is at least 50 per cent owned by one or more entities on the list.
China will suspend the implementation of relevant export control measures announced on October 9 for a year and will study and refine specific plans, the spokesperson was cited as saying by a state-controlled news agency.
The US side will suspend the implementation of measures under its Section 301 investigation targeting China’s maritime, logistics and shipbuilding industries for a year. China will follow by suspending the implementation of its countermeasures for a year.
In addition, the two sides also reached consensus on issues including anti-drug cooperation on fentanyl, expanding agricultural product trade and the handling of individual cases involving relevant enterprises, the spokesperson said.
China will properly resolve issues related to TikTok with the US side.
Chinese President Xi Jinping said in Busan, South Korea, yesterday that he is ready to continue working with President Donald Trump to build a solid foundation for bilateral ties, and create a sound atmosphere for the development of both countries.
“China and the United States should be partners and friends. That is what history has taught us and what reality needs,” he said.
It is normal for the two leading economies of the world to have frictions now and then, Xi noted.
He called on teams from both sides to work out and finalise the follow-up steps as soon as possible, and ensure that the common understandings are effectively upheld and implemented, to inject confidence into the two countries as well as the global economy through solid deliverables.
Fibre2Fashion News Desk (DS)
Fashion
US brand Vera Bradley posts net revenue of $62.3 million in Q3
Vera Bradley reported Q3 net revenues of $62.3 million, down from $70.5 million year over year.
Direct revenues fell 5.3 per cent, with comparable sales down 5.8 per cent, while indirect revenues dropped 30.2 per cent.
Gross margin declined to 42.1 per cent, impacted by inventory write-downs and higher duties, despite early progress from its Project Sunshine transformation.
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Canada’s Roots posts 6.8% sales growth in Q3 FY25 on strong DTC demand
The direct-to-consumer (DTC) sales increased 4.8 per cent to $56.8 million, driven by comparable sales growth of 6.3 per cent, reflecting enhancements to the omnichannel customer experience and stronger engagement with curated product assortments.
Canadian outdoor lifestyle brand Roots has reported solid Q3 FY25 results, with sales rising 6.8 per cent to $71.5 million, driven by DTC growth and stronger wholesale demand.
Gross margin improved to 60.8 per cent, while Adjusted EBITDA increased 5.3 per cent to $7.5 million.
Net income stood at $2.3 million, and net debt declined 5.9 per cent, reflecting disciplined execution.
The gross profit of the company increased 8.1 per cent to $43.4 million, while gross margin improved by 80 basis points (bps) to 60.8 per cent. DTC gross margin rose 140 bps to 65.4 per cent, benefiting from improved product costing and lower discounting, which offset unfavourable foreign exchange impacts on US dollar purchases, Roots said in a press release.
Partners & Other (P&O) sales grew 15.3 per cent to $14.6 million, supported by earlier wholesale orders from Roots’ operating partner in Taiwan for upcoming holiday and spring seasons, along with higher domestic wholesale sales of custom Roots-branded products.
Selling, general and administrative (SG&A) expenses increased 10.6 per cent to $38.2 million, largely due to higher variable costs linked to sales growth, strategic investments in marketing and personnel, incremental US duties on e-commerce sales, and higher share-based compensation expenses.
The net income stood at $2.3 million, or $0.06 per share during the period under review, compared with $2.4 million a year earlier. Excluding the impact of revaluation of cash-settled instruments under the share-based compensation plan, net income would have been $2.4 million, representing a 1.5 per cent improvement YoY. Adjusted EBITDA rose 5.3 per cent to $7.5 million, or 7.3 per cent on an adjusted basis excluding revaluation impacts.
“Roots delivered strong third-quarter results, with growth driven by consumers’ positive response to our products, enhanced marketing efforts, and improved in-store execution,” said Meghan Roach, president and chief executive officer (CEO) of Roots Corporation. “Even in a dynamic retail environment, our heritage, quality, and focus on comfort continued to differentiate the brand and drive engagement across our omnichannel platform. We remain disciplined in execution and committed to strengthening the foundations of the brand to support long-term value creation. While early in the fourth quarter, we continue to experience positive trends.”
“Our disciplined approach to investing in strategic growth continues to deliver results,” said Leon Wu, chief financial officer (CFO) at Roots. “We have sustained positive sales momentum and maintained the underlying margins of those sales, supporting a stronger balance sheet with year-over-year reductions in net debt.”
Net debt declined 5.9 per cent YoY to $44.1 million, while the company also repurchased 415,200 common shares for $1.3 million under its normal course issuer bid.
For the first nine months of FY25, total sales increased 6.6 per cent to $162.2 million, with DTC sales rising 8.6 per cent and comparable sales growth reaching 11.5 per cent. The gross margin expanded to 60.9 per cent, while net loss narrowed to $10 million from $11.7 million a year earlier. Adjusted EBITDA improved to a loss of $1.7 million, reflecting continued progress towards profitability.
At the end of Q3 FY25, inventory stood at $66.6 million, reflecting preparations for peak holiday demand and higher in-transit stock. Free cash flow improved to a loss of $4.6 million, while total liquidity amounted to $34.5 million, providing financial flexibility heading into the final quarter.
Fibre2Fashion News Desk (SG)
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