Levi’s CFO: ‘Our direct-to-consumer business can get to 45%’

In This Article:

Levi Strauss & Co. CFO Harmit Singh joins Yahoo Finance Live to discuss company earnings, inflation, consumer spending, the state of retail, and the outlook for growth.

Video Transcript

BRIAN SOZZI: Retailers are doubling down on cost saving measures as inflation spikes, but also doing what they can to keep merchandise compelling for shoppers. Joining us exclusively following the company's investor day on Wednesday afternoon is Levi Strauss CFO Harmit Singh. Harmit, good to see you. Clearly, you mean business today.

You have the leather jacket on instead of the traditional Harmit jean jacket. Let me ask you this-- so your five-year outlook was pretty interesting. You plan to add, I would say, a little more than $3 billion in sales over the next five years. How do you get there?

HARMIT SINGH: Yeah, sure, Brian. Thanks for having me. And what I'm wearing is the [INAUDIBLE] Korsett classic jacket by Levi's that Albert Einstein wore for a long time in the 1930s. And we picked it up and a collection team-- vintage clothing team came up with a replica that has sold really well.

So to your question about what gives us confidence about accelerating growth-- we went public a couple of years ago. We run the company for the long-term. The Levi's brand is the strongest it's ever been, as demonstrated by record gross margins and our market leadership position that we continue to grow. Structurally, we're a very different company today.

We're more diversified. Direct-to-consumer is 40% of our businesses. It used to be half that. Women's is a third of our business and accretive to gross margins. And wholesale is healthier and a lot more profitable. And financially, we just reported the strongest year in '21 in decades.

Our balance sheet is really strong. Our EBIT margins are up 12%. So it's time to accelerate growth, accelerate profitability, and commit to a higher return of capital. What is going to drive the growth? A couple of things.

First, we have five brands. We acquired Beyond Yoga. Dockers was declining til a couple of years ago. So all our five brands, as we reported in quarter one, are growing. Casualization trend is here to stay. That is a great tailwind.

We believe we can double women's. We can double our tops business. We still sell three bottoms to one top. The ratio is 1 to 1. And our thinking is we can get to 2 to 1 by 2027. We believe our direct to consumer business, which is 40%, can get to 55%.

We think we can open 400 new doors across all our brands over the next five years and continue to drive same-store sales. We also-- e-commerce is fairly under-penetrated for the company. It's only 8% of our total business. It used to be 2% a decade ago, has grown during the pandemic. And we believe we can triple that.