Posted on 03/30/2009 6:31:28 PM PDT by 2ndDivisionVet
MILANOn the heels of a 17.6 percent drop in net income in 2008, Luxottica Group is enacting a number of cost-cutting measures, including store closings, manufacturing reductions and cuts in advertising.
The company announced in mid-March it is closing 117 stores in North America, and will franchise 56 additional Pearle Vision locations by year-end. Another 110 retail units are also under review, according to Andrea Guerra, Luxotticas chief executive officer. Overall, the company plans a 2 percent to 3 percent reduction in its global store count.
On the wholesale side, Luxottica will reduce its eyewear manufacturing volume by 15 percentproduction in Italy alone was down 20 percent in 2009s first quarterand will eliminate three low-performing brands while reducing its number of frame styles, Guerra said. In addition, the company is reducing wholesale advertising expenditures by 10 percent, to be replaced by more in-store support including an enhanced emphasis on store displays.
Due to the global recession, Luxotticas income fell to 395 million in fiscal 2008, down 17.6 percent. The fourth quarter was particularly hard-hit, with income falling 44.2 percent to 54.1 million. As previously reported, Luxottica had net sales of 5,201.6 million in 2008, up 4.7 percent (up 10.7 percent at constant currency rates). Sales in the fourth quarter rose 4 percent (but were flat at constant currency rates) to 1,236.5 million.
We have already implemented a series of measures that will enable us to rapidly and flexibly adapt to the new environment, and that will both contribute to boosting sales and streamline our cost structure across all divisions and geographic regions, Guerra noted. He added that Luxottica is rapidly adapting our manufacturing, distribution and sales capacity to the new needs of the market.
Guerra said the company is aiming for total spending cuts of more than 30 percent this year. Plans include creating a more unified supply chain for the group, and boosting shared services among its divisions. Overall, he projects a 10 percent to 15 percent inventory reduction, along with new centralized inventory management, excluding Oakley.
Despite the cost-cutting measures, Guerra stressed that Luxottica still sees opportunities ahead in the luxury and fashion eyewear and sunwear market. The market is more difficult above 200, but nothing is changing in our long-term strategy for luxury and fashion brands, he said.
Within Luxottica Retail, the company is revising the merchandise mix of its Sunglass Hut stores in North America, with more emphasis on the popular retail selling points between $50 and $150. Further expansion of its upscale Ilori sunwear boutiques is also slowing, with only six or seven more Ilori locations set to open this year, Guerra said.
According to Kerry Bradley, president of Luxottica Retail N.A., other changes within that division include a shift in LensCrafters lens mix to attract more entry-level customers.
Luxottica Retail is also adjusting its marketing message and product offering to address the new economy consumer. For example, its Sears Optical locations are reintroducing warranty sales, a value for Sears customers. And Ray-Ban prescription lenses will be launched soon in all Luxottica Retail stores, while LensCrafters stores will offer in-store one-hour capability on Transitions lenses.
In addition, Bradley said Luxotticas stores are moving toward selective participation in additional insurance programs beyond its own EyeMed Vision Care managed vision operation, such as government-sponsored health plans we havent been a party to before.
Once the depth of the recession became apparent, our organization moved into action immediately, with results to be realized over the coming quarters, a Luxottica announcement said. In that announcement, the company acknowledged, In recent years we experienced a mix of real growth and market euphoria, and our business thrived, with consolidated sales up by more than 80 percent over a six-year period.
Today, however, what Luxottica is seeing in the industry is not a temporary crisis, not a drastic and definitive change, but a global structural reset of the relevant market, resulting in [an industry] resizing by approximately 10 percent.
I just can’t see it.
Yeah? Well, say what you want but I say this is a company with real vision.
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