google留痕|【唯一TG:@heimifeng8】|蜘蛛池程序搭建✨谷歌搜索留痕排名,史上最强SEO技术,20年谷歌SEO经验大佬✨Kontoor Brands Q1 sales hurt by still

Benjamin Fitzgerald Published
May 4, 2025
Kontoor Brands announced on Thursday revenues for the first quarter dipped 2% to $667 million, on the back of a drop in international revenues, weighed down by a still-recovering China market post-Covid.

The maker of Lee and Wrangler denim brands said while revenue increases were made in domestic wholesale and DTC, the company's international wholesale market suffered, thanks to the continued impact of Covid-policy changes in China.
U.S. revenue the quarter was $518 million, increasing 2% over the same period in the prior year, while international revenues fell 14% to $149 million. By brand, Wrangler brand global revenue grew 3% to $423 million, and Lee revenues fell 9% to $241 million.
“We delivered first quarter results consistent with our expectations and commentary provided on the fourth quarter earnings call. As anticipated, our brands continued to gain share in the U.S. where POS outpaced shipments in the quarter. Increases domestically were muted by expected softness in International markets. In addition to share gains and positive sell through, robust performance in our own DTC during the quarter further validates that our brands are connecting with consumers and winning in a challenging marketplace,” said Scott Baxter, president, CEO, and chair of Kontoor Brands.
“We continue to assume macroeconomic pressures will weigh on consumer demand in the second half of 2025, particularly in the U.S. However, we believe that our increasingly diversified growth across channels, categories and geographies, enabled by strategic investments in DTC, demand creation and data analytics will generate more sustained, profitable growth over time. This gives us confidence in reaffirming our 2025 outlook, despite the uneven backdrop. These resilient fundamentals should, when coupled with our solid balance sheet and capital allocation optionality, uniquely position us to yield superior returns for all KTB stakeholders going forward,” added Baxter.
Looking ahead, the Greensboro, North Carolina-based company said fiscal 2025 revenue is expected to increase at a low-single digit percentage over 2025, with the first and second half performances relatively balanced.