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Abercrombie & Fitch Lifts Annual Sales Forecast After Upbeat Quarter

Abercrombie & Fitch store.
Updated inventories and trendy logo-less basics and jackets have allowed the company to rein in promotions and markdowns from a year earlier. (Shutterstock)

Abercrombie & Fitch Co. on Tuesday raised its annual net sales growth forecast, signalling strong demand for its lifestyle brands heading into the crucial holiday shopping season.

Updated inventories and trendy logoless basics and jackets have allowed the company to rein in promotions and markdowns from a year earlier, when it was dealing with softer consumer demand.

This reflected in an 11 percent rise in net sales at its Hollister brands, targeted at teen customers, as the company logged a strong back-to-school season, echoing results from footwear retailers Hibbet and Dick’s Sporting Goods.

“The retailer’s expansion into new categories like occasion wear and athleisure is helping it capture more spending and stay relevant,” said Rachel Wolff, senior analyst at Insider Intelligence.

Demand for the company’s “on-trend” selection should insulate Abercrombie from a broader decline in discretionary spending, she added.

Still, the company’s shares, which have climbed 220 percent so far this year, were down about 5 percent in pre-market trading.

Abercrombie expects holiday-quarter net sales growth to be up in the low double-digits, compared with analysts’ average estimate of a growth of 11.6 percent, as per LSEG data.

Net sales at Abercrombie namesake brand soared 30 percent in the quarter ended Oct. 28.

The company’s net sales for the third-quarter jumped 20 percent to $1.01 billion, topping market expectations of $980.9 million.

Abercrombie now expects net sales to rise between 12 percent and 14 percent for fiscal 2023, compared with its earlier forecast of about 10 percent growth.

By Juveria Tabassum

Learn more:

Abercrombie and Ex-CEO Sued Over Sex-Trafficking Accusations

Former model David Bradberry in the proposed class action filed in Manhattan federal court claims Michael Jeffries, who was CEO from 1992 to 2014, forced models to take drugs and engage in sexual acts with him and others for the chance to be featured in Abercrombie’s provocative catalogues.

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