[Vancouver] Lululemon Athletica’s rough year continued as the once fast-growing apparel chain slashed its outlook on weakening demand and the Trump administration’s tougher trade policies.
The retailer’s shares tumbled 20 per cent at the open of Friday (Sep 5) trading, deepening a decline this year that had already erased US$22 billion in market value.
The Vancouver-based company warned on Thursday that it will take a US$240 million hit from President Donald Trump’s decision to end the de minimis exemption. The policy had helped Lululemon ship many of its US e-commerce orders under US$800 duty-free from Canada.
The retailer now projects sales in the range of US$2.47 billion to US$2.5 billion for the third quarter, lower than Wall Street had anticipated. For the full year, Lululemon lowered both its revenue and earnings per share outlook.
The economy is complicating chief executive officer Calvin McDonald’s efforts to win back investors after the stock had fallen 46 per cent so far this year through Thursday’s close.
Those struggles erased gains made during the pandemic, when shoppers flocked to comfy clothes and the brand enjoyed years of rapid growth.
BT in your inbox
Start and end each day with the latest news stories and analyses delivered straight to your inbox.
Now Lululemon, which is known for its pricey leggings, also must win back value-driven shoppers who are spending less and are more willing to try newer brands.
Facing headwinds
Its results on Thursday underscore how many headwinds the retailer faces – and how impatient investors have become – as it tries to return to faster growth.
“Ultimately, this is now a 2026 show-me story when new product hits in the spring, and we see little in the way of catalysts in the interim,” Sharon Zackfia, an analyst at William Blair, said in a note to clients.
Under McDonald, Lululemon is raising some prices to deal with levies. He has also been working to streamline the retailer’s organisational structure. The company laid off 150 corporate employees in June, trimming staff at store support centers.
Comparable sales for the second quarter grew 1 per cent, missing Wall Street’s expectation of almost 3 per cent growth.
The robust growth during the Covid-19 pandemic that boosted Lululemon’s revenue 140 per cent in four years has dissipated. Younger rivals such as Alo Yoga and Vuori are grabbing market share.
Like the rest of the apparel industry, Lululemon is also trying to balance tariff costs and maintain its bottom line.
“We’re seeing fatigue with the consumer, particularly our high-value consumer who’s been with us longer,” McDonald said in a call with analysts. He said that the company has let product life cycles become too long while consumers are seeking newer options.
Big marketing shift
“The blunt truth is that Lululemon is no longer the challenger,” Neil Saunders, managing director of GlobalData, said. “It is now the brand that other, younger labels look to hunt and take share from.”
The company is embarking on a big marketing shift by betting on a roster of athletes can both revive the yogawear brand’s sales and help it grow beyond its downward-dog facing roots.
American tennis star Frances Tiafoe is wearing Lululemon apparel at the US Open, and golfer Max Homa dons the brand’s gear on the PGA Tour.
In the clearest sign of the company’s grander ambitions, it also signed seven-time Formula 1 champion Lewis Hamilton as a brand ambassador. BLOOMBERG