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Consumer Cyclical - Apparel - Manufacturers - NYSE - US
$ 9.94
0.914 %
$ 4.08 B
Market Cap
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P/E
EARNINGS CALL TRANSCRIPT
EARNINGS CALL TRANSCRIPT 2017 - Q3
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Executives

Lance Allega - Vice President, Investor Relations Kevin Plank - Chief Executive Officer and Chairman of the Board Patrik Frisk - President and Chief Operating Officer David Bergman - Chief Financial Officer.

Analysts

Jonathan Komp - Robert W. Baird & Co. Randy Konik - Jefferies Edward Yruma - KeyBanc Capital Markets Inc. John Kernan - Cowen and Company Matthew McClintock - Barclays Capital Robert Drbul - Guggenheim Partners Jay Sole - Morgan Stanley Omar Saad - Evercore ISI.

Operator

Good day, ladies and gentlemen, and welcome to the Under Armour Third Quarter Earnings Conference Call. At this time, all participants are in a listen-only mode. Later, we will conduct a question-and-answer session and instructions will follow at that time. [Operator Instructions] As a reminder, this conference call is being recorded.

I would now like to turn the conference over to Lance Allega, Investor Relations. Sir, you may begin..

Lance Allega Senior Vice President of Investor Relations & Corporate Development

Thank you, and good morning to everyone. Thank you for joining us on today’s call to discuss Under Armour’s third quarter 2017 results. Participants on the call will make forward-looking statements. These statements are based on current expectations and are subject to certain uncertainties that could cause actual results to differ materially.

These uncertainties are detailed in this morning’s press release and documents filed regularly with the SEC, all of which can be found on our website at uabiz.com. During our call, we may reference certain non-GAAP financial information, including adjusted and currency-neutral terms, which are defined in this morning’s release.

We use non-GAAP amounts to lead into some of our discussions because we feel they more accurately represent the true operational performance and underlying results of our business. You may also hear us refer to amounts in accordance with U.S.

GAAP, reconciliations of GAAP to non-GAAP measures can be found in the supplemental financial tables including the press release, which identify and quantify all excluded items and provide management’s view of why this information is useful to investors.

Joining us on today’s call will be Under Armour Chairman and CEO, Kevin Plank; President and COO, Patrik Frisk; and Chief Financial Officer, Dave Bergman. Following our prepared remarks, we’ll open the call for questions. And with that, I’ll turn it over to Kevin..

Kevin Plank Founder, President, Chief Executive Officer & Director

operate, fuel and innovate. As we define the issue in our business right now, we see two contributing factors, tough conditions in our largest market and complexities as a result of rapid growth.

To address this issue, we must operate a better company, from design, sourcing, process and planning, the speed-to-market, consumer connectivity and innovation, we already have multiple strategies in play to right-size and amplify the business throughout our portfolio.

Walking hand-in-hand with this is the need to address our cost infrastructure, which is built for a much larger company than we currently are. In light of this, we have a restructuring plan in place and continue to dig deep into all areas of our business with an eye toward creating underlying operational leverage.

The difficult aspect is that, a large part of our cost structure is committed from our asset build over the last few years. So lower top line expectations will moderate short-term leverage.

That said, we are working to engineer multiple levers across our P&L by optimizing our supply chain, employing pricing volume strategies, prioritizing and deemphasizing investments based on ROI and utilizing more efficient global operating models to create better flexibility for the long-term.

Flexibility is critical to driving and funding the virtuous cycle of invest to grow and grow to invest and ultimately, what will fuel this brand. Essential to fueling the brand is innovation, making the best product possible and storytelling through demand creation, amplifying our message of making you better, it’s the reason that we exist.

Every product deserving of a UA logo should perform for the athlete for our consumers.

It should make them better whether it makes them faster and stronger through efficient cushioning, temperature management or architecture, or the style, design and finish that powers a creative expression of one’s unique personality, Under Armor must make you better.

With products like Threadborne Fleece, seamless and ColdGear Reactor, along with footwear like Curry 4, the Patriot and a brand-new cushioning platform known as HOVR, which Patrik will detail in just a bit. We’re fulfilling that promise and look forward to amplifying it even greater in 2018 and beyond.

Of course, innovation is about much more than product, it’s native through our DNA, and what we believe to be the reason we’ll become a better company. We will run a better business by innovating our way through this, innovative product, storytelling, speed-to-market, supply chain, merchandising, customer relationships, all becoming sharper.

This means, putting the consumer at the center of everything we do and what Patrik is driving with our new go-to-market strategy. And with that, I’ll turn it over to Patrik, a leader that in short order has bought an incredible amount of perspective, process and professionalism to this transformation.

He, Dave and I are partying together with full transparency and result to impact both short and long-term strategies to increase our ability to drive more profitable long-term growth.

Patrik?.

Patrik Frisk

Thanks, Kevin. In the past four months, I have traveled to Europe, Central America, Canada and all around the United States, meeting with many of our top retail accounts, manufacturing partners and the Under Armor team, and even working the floor in our own stores engaging with consumers.

Following strategic deep dives in the areas I have direct responsibility for strategy, supply chain, product, marketing and sales, we have absolute clarity around the challenging impacting the company. The related root causes and the steps necessary to address them. It’s a new time and a new time requires a new playbook.

And that’s one of the reasons I’m here. And what I see here is an incredible team, a team that’s used to winning. And I also see an incredible brand, a brand that is winning, but one that is not fully optimizing its strength or potential. Today, I’ll detail some initial observations and put context around our strengths and opportunities.

As Kevin mentioned, we have numerous work streams in place to address our current challenges and structural complexities. Our year-end call in mid-February will provide even more detail on our plans and we’re working toward a comprehensive Investor Day next year.

To build on the operate fuel innovate construct, let’s start with innovation and the importance of making great product, because our success must start and end with making great product that lights consumers, distinct, authentic, and unbelievably high-quality product, it’s our reason for existing.

Blending high-performance innovation with function and style has been and will continue to be at the core of who we are. Under Armor is a performance brand. Looking back over the last few years, we’ve been inconsistent with this promise, that inconsistency stops now.

Going forward, you’ll see us accelerate our purpose as a performance brand by doubling down on innovation and creating even deeper connections with our consumers, underscoring how Under Armour makes you better. That’s not to say, there’s a pause in our current pipeline though.

So now I’d like to take a few moments to review some highlights for the rest of this year and into early 2018. Starting with apparel, our focus on investment around staying lighter longer has resulted in a more diversified, less key item focused assortment.

New silhouettes, styles and expanded offerings in key technology platforms like Threadborne and Reactor combined with our growing sportstyle product continues to show solid demand.

With our Threadborne platform from lightweight highly breathable T-shirts in warmer conditions to our fleece, seamless, and ColdGear Reactor collections for cold weather, our execution has never been sharper.

This is an early, but good example of becoming consumer led, listening to their needs and delivering a layering solution that doesn’t sacrifice function for style. While we remain focused on continuing to lead with our performance positioning, another category showing strong traction is our sportstyle product.

And although not yet approaching meaningful scale, these products along with early reads in our Unstoppable collection gives us confidence that we’re taking the right steps towards creating balance and our performance sportstyle offering to better align with ongoing trends.

Switching to footwear, our year-to-date performance has fallen short of our expectations with results being negatively impacted due to lower demand in our North American business, especially the sports specialty channel and the continued overhang in basketball.

Accordingly, we are working diligently to proactively fine tune our footwear playbook and ensure we deliver the right innovation, style and price to value equation at the right place and at the right time.

To touch on a few highlights, we launched the Curry 4 Basketball shoe earlier this month, first in China and then around the world versus its predecessor, the Curry 4, used a much more direct design process taking steps to vision and ideas and bring them to life through elevated design and functionality.

We’ve also revamped our flow and scarcity model in a very different approach than past versions. Less than a month in, the response has been incredibly positive from consumers, retailers, influencers and media.

Moving to our largest footwear category and biggest long-term growth opportunity running, we remain focused on delivering innovation, innovation in manufacturing and innovation in functionality and performance. Starting with manufacturing, we’re excited to announce our limited release, UA Charge Patriot footwear in November.

The Patriot is the first footwear to come to market from investments in our advanced manufacturing Lighthouse center right here in Baltimore. Available in men’s and women’s styles, it’s an important step in driving design and innovation closer to market with every shoe assembled here in the United States.

And very exciting for us is the spring 2018 launch of our new cushioning platform called HOVR, that’s HOVR. The new HOVR cushioning system features the rare combination of superior energy return and impact absorption. They wrapped the HOVR cushioning in Under Armour’s energy web technology to control and direct energy right back to the runner stride.

The goal here was to give runners a zero gravity feel and that’s exactly what HOVR accomplishes. This new platform becomes our third distinct cushioning technology along with Micro G and Charged and further demonstrates our commitment to running as one of our largest growth opportunities.

And the technology in these shoes is not only limited to cushioning. Our first shoe using HOVR also features our next generation embedded connected sensor that tracks distance, cadence, pace and shoe life. This ties into our overall Connected Fitness strategy connecting runners to our global community through our run apps.

The HOVR launch demonstrates the first true manifestation of digital, meaning physical, providing runners with advantages that make them better, smarter and capable of more than they ever knew possible. Our Connected Fitness strategy stretches beyond connected shoes with an ecosystem of nutrition, sleep, activity and fitness.

With more than 220 million registered users and growing, we continue to lead in digital health and fitness from athlete performance to athletes recovery, driving brand awareness and ultimately selling more shirts and shoes. Moving to operate, an area where I’ve been spending the majority of my time.

This is where I believe I can have the largest impact to establish more consistency and our ability to delight the consumer, strengthen our brand and deliver sustainable profitable growth. In order to drive stronger operational discipline, I’ll break it out into three key areas, structure, process and go-to-market.

From a structure and process perspective strategically and mechanically, I see a company that has in many ways willed itself to get to where we are today. Our approach has certainly been successful in many fronts, but inefficient in others.

While we stand up our category management structure, we’re making real-time course corrections to improve our speed, efficiency and quite frankly, our profitability.

In this effort, we’re in the weeds, working to create dramatically better synergy between how design, supply chain and our segmentation approach is supported by our merchandising, demand creation and distribution structure. Within our quickly evolving matrix organization, it’s just about that organization.

From standardizing everyday procedures like planning, business reviews and the use of data and analytics to establishing a team, capable of making business and brand right decisions quickly, we’re optimizing our ability to commercialize and make our business stronger and faster.

We’re also executing on our restructuring plan to narrow our focus and shift our privatization into areas with the highest opportunity for growth and profitable returns. And we have implemented systems upgrades, including the July 1st launch of our integrated ERP Business Solution.

This includes our point-of-sale, warehouse management, inventory control, merchandising and product allocation systems in both North America and Europe.

And while these enhancements are designed to enable us to more effectively and efficiently operate our business and ultimately enhance productivity for the long-term, the implementation caused disruption in our supply chain operations during the quarter.

This led to delayed shipments and loss of productivity, which negatively impacted our third quarter results. During this system migration, we have encountered a number of change management issues impacting our workforce and manufacturing partners as they adapt to the new platform and processes.

That said, while this is a key factor impacting our fourth quarter and full-year outlook, we’re seeing improvements to our service levels and expect them to begin to normalize through the balance of the year.

And finally, we’re managing our brand to the marketplace by adjusting our inventory strategy to work toward a position, where we can better protect the brand and drive healthy growth in our direct-to-consumer and wholesale channels.

In total, once the structure is set and the processes in place, that becomes the core of our go-to-market and GTM strategy. This end-to-end approach then becomes repeatable ensuring a more consistent and predictable outcome.

Crucial to a successful GTM strategy is consumer insights, an area that we see as a tremendous opportunity to both strengthen and elevate. In this respect, we’ve begun to work on a consumer segmentation study, targeting more than 20,000 people from around the world, coupled with tens of millions of active users in our Connected Fitness community.

The combination of this rich data set will help to more clearly define our global consumer target. Defining our consumer will further enhance our ability to maximize our GTM strategy from product design, development and manufacturing to marketing, segmentation and merchandising.

At the end of the day, addressing our structure process and go-to-market opportunities is an engineering undertaking that becomes an incredibly powerful tool as we look to reduce the friction in our current 18 to 20-month product calendar down to about 12 months.

When well done efficiently and repeatedly, it yields flexibility, flexibility for choices and strategies to fuel this brand and to – and our ability to engage, maintain and grow our consumer base.

And on the macro level, what’s happening right now is a change in the consumer, how the consumer chooses to engage with our brand and how they choose to shop our brand. Achieving our growth potential means, we need to continue to fuel the brand to maximize our connection with consumers.

We have one of the most unique brand communities on the planet, the relationship we cherish and never take for granted. As consumer behavior shifts, we must ensure that we are delivering compelling, creative and inspiring content as quickly as they are moving.

The speed and relevancy at which we can promote our brand ethos through our storytelling is critical to our success and ensures a seat at the table and consumer’s intent to buy.

Category management, digital and obsessing the details of product will enable Under Armour to continue to deepen and strengthen our connection with the consumer, while we continue to delight and inspire them in new ways they have never experienced before.

Before handing it over to Dave, I will close by saying that in 2017 and 2018, we are slowing down to speed up.

What does that mean? It means that independent of the macro factors compounding the outlook for our North American wholesale business, we are simultaneously reengineering our foundation, sharpening the organization and learning what it means to operate as a big company.

Based on my 30 years in this industry, I’m resolute and optimistic about the opportunity for Under Armour. Within use we’re delivering today, it might sound a little bit out of sync. But I assure you, we are clear headed and well aware of the issues at hand and a tremendous amount of work ahead of us.

Nearly a year into what we believe will be a two-year journey, the strength of this global team are accelerating global scale and share willingness to evolve and become a better company is undeniably confidence inspiring.

Dave?.

David Bergman

Thanks, Patrik. Before we get into our results and updated outlook for 2017, I’d like to provide some more context around the restructuring plan and the one-time items that impacted our quarter.

In the restructuring plan announced on August 1, the company detailed expectations that we’d incur total estimated pre-tax restructuring and related charges of approximately $110 million to $130 million.

In the third quarter, we recognized $89 million of these charges, which includes $29 million of goodwill impairment related to our Connected Fitness business.

The goodwill impairment, which was not included in the originally estimated range was a result of the reduction of expected future cash flows for the Connected Fitness business due to a decision to deemphasize certain ancillary revenue streams, including connected hardware and related web and mobile app development.

Including this goodwill impairment charge, we now expect to incur approximately $140 million to $150 million of total charges, with substantially all occurring in fiscal 2017. However, we are continuing to dig in and we may uncover additional opportunities that could be realized in 2018.

With respect to anticipated savings and what that means for run rates moving forward, because we are executing real-time against this plan, we are not currently prepared to share that information. We anticipate providing greater color on our year-end call in mid-February. Moving to our third quarter, revenue was down 5% to $1.4 billion.

As noted in our call today, the operational challenges we faced from our ERP system implementation and related service levels, along with lower North American demand negatively impacted our third quarter results. Clicking down further into revenue, let’s start with product type.

Apparel revenue decreased 8% to $940 million as growth in Golf and sportstyle products was more than offset by declines in our outdoor women’s training and youth categories. Revenue for our footwear business was up 2% to $285 million as strength in running and outdoor was tempered by declines in basketball and youth.

Accessories revenue was up 1% to $123 million in the quarter, driven by strength in golf and men’s training tempered by a decline in outdoor.

Looking at revenue by channel, our wholesale business was down 13% to $880 million, reflecting operational challenges in the quarter, as well as lower demand in our North American business, particularly within the sports specialty channel.

Direct-to-consumer revenue grew 15% to $468 million with growth in both our retail and e-commerce businesses around the world. DTC in total was 33% of global revenue in the quarter. Our licensing business grew 16% to $34 million, primarily driven by new and expanded licensing relationships within North America.

By region, revenue in our largest market North America was down 12% to $1.1 billion as continued promotional conditions lower overall demand and operational challenges meaningfully impacted results.

Outside North America, our international business continued to deliver strong results posted a 35% increase in revenue to reach $305 million or 22% of total revenue in the third quarter. On a currency neutral basis international revenue was up 34%.

Clicking down into the international regions, EMEA revenue was up 22%, driven by balanced growth across our wholesale and DTC channels. We continue to expand our global presence through new market entries like Russia, while also driving increased presence in key markets like the UK and Germany.

Revenue in Asia-Pacific increased 52%, driven by continued strength in China, Australia and Korea as we see the UA brand resonate well with consumers across key categories like running, training and basketball.

Our Latin American business was up 33% led by balanced growth in our DTC and wholesale channels across the key markets of Mexico, Brazil and Chile. And finally, our Connected Fitness business was up 16%, driven primarily by new partner relationships. Turning to gross margin, we saw 160 basis point decline 45.9% in the third quarter.

Excluding the restructuring, which contained about 30 basis points of inventory impact, adjusted gross margin was down 130 basis points to 46.2%.

Clicking down into the components of the decline, the negative drivers included approximately 100 basis points from continued actions to manage our North American inventory, including pricing and higher composition of third-party off-price sales, 50 basis points from higher airfreight expenses and 50 basis points of regional mix headwinds due to challenged results in our North American business in contrast to the continued strong growth of our international business.

These pressures were partially offset by approximately 50 basis points of product costing improvements and 20 basis points of tailwind from changes in foreign currency.

SG&A expense was flat compared to the prior year, it was better than planned due primarily to expense management efforts, lower incentive compensation expense, and timing shifts in demand creation in other expenses to the fourth quarter. Third quarter operating income was $62 million.

Excluding the restructuring, adjusted operating income was $151 million. Interest and other expense was $11 million.

Our tax rate was negative 5% in the quarter, compared to 33% last year, primarily due to challenge results in the North American business resulting in a higher mix of international pre-tax income, as well as impacts from the restructuring. Excluding the restructuring, our adjusted tax rate for the quarter was 29%.

Taking all of this to the bottom line, net income was $54 million, or $0.12 in diluted earnings per share for the quarter. Excluding restructuring, adjusted net income and adjusted diluted EPS were $100 million and $0.22, respectively. Turning to our balance sheet. Cash and cash equivalents were up 43% to $258 million.

Inventory was up 22% to $1.2 billion, partially resulting from operational challenges from our ERP system implementation and related service levels, which delayed some shipments into the fourth quarter. Total debt was down 1% to $1.1 billion, and finally, capital expenditures were down 28% to $52 million.

As we look to close out the year, we now expect full-year 2017 revenue to be up at a low single-digit percentage rate, reflecting lower demand in our North American business along with residual impacts from the operational challenges experienced in the third quarter.

Clearly, this is a much different profile from the fourth quarter and full-year than we discussed 90 days ago. On that call, we outlined several key factors we thought would come to fruition. And while still relevant, demand and operational challenges in North America significantly altered the terrain.

To reconcile these factors, I’ll walk through them again. From a distribution perspective, although new North American distribution is exceeding our original expectations, it’s not enough to offset lower than planned wholesale demand, particularly in the sports specialty channel.

Internationally, we continue to execute against our strategy seeing strong growth in all regions and channels.

With respect to product, while we believe our pricing, segmentation and assortment strategies have put us in a better position to compete in this highly promotional environment, demand and service level challenges are expected to negatively impact the balance of the year.

And finally, in DTC, continued traffic pressure and a greater promotional environment mostly in North America caused us to temper our expectations in this channel. Although we typically don’t provide further breakout to our revenue, given the magnitude of changes, we thought additional color would be helpful.

Thus, for the full-year, we now expect North America revenue to be down at a high single-digit rate and our International business to be up 350%. Apparel and footwear revenue are both expected to grow at a low single-digit rate.

DTC revenue should be up at a high single-digit rate, in contrast to our wholesale business, which we’re expecting to be down at a low single-digit rate globally.

Moving to gross margin, due to increased pricing and other actions to manage our inventory, including higher airfreight, along with the higher expected mix of sales coming from our International business, which carries lower margin than the overall company and the impact of our restructuring activities, we expect our gross margin to be down approximately 220 basis points in 2017.

Excluding the impacts of the restructuring plan, full-year adjusted gross margin is expected to be down approximately 190 basis points. Given our revised top line outlook, we now expect our reported full-year operating income to be approximately $0 million to $10 million in 2017.

Excluding the restructuring, adjusted operating income should reach $140 million to $150 million. Interest expense and other expense combined is now expected to approximate $35 million for the full-year. Excluding certain tax-related effects in the restructuring plan, we expect our full-year adjusted effective tax rate to be approximately 23%.

Our updated adjusted effective tax rate projection is lower than previously planned, due to our challenging North American results, coupled with continued strong profitability within our International businesses, thereby driving a favorable international mix to our pre-tax income.

Taking this to the bottom line, excluding the impacts of the restructuring, we expect full-year adjusted diluted earnings per share in the range of $0.18 to $0.20. And finally, we expect full-year CapEx to be approximately $300 million, down from the $350 million we cited in August, as we prioritized spend against the current environment.

To close, in the short-term, we are disappointed, we’re not delivering to the level we said we would. As we finish 2017 and continue to work through challenges in our North American business in 2018, the same result that got us this far is becoming even sharper, more efficient and more effective.

With a long-term goal of creating a more profitable and predictable trajectory, we’re confident in our ability to create the fuel necessary to emerge a stronger and better company for consumers, customers and shareholders. With that, I’ll turn it back to the operator for your questions.

Operator?.

Operator

Thank you. [Operator Instructions] Our first question comes from the line of Jonathan Komp of Baird. Your line is now open..

Jonathan Komp

Yes. Hi, thank you. Kevin, want to dig in a little bit more on the North America backdrop and especially wholesale, which has gotten progressively tougher. I know you highlighted three different areas, bankruptcies, declining productivity, shifting fashion preferences as the sources of pressure externally.

And I’m just curious, in the past, it seems like the brand has been strong enough to stand on its own and perform, while despite whatever is going on in the environment. Clearly, the pressures are more intense now.

But I’m just curious if you could kind of give more detail on why you think it’s more impactful now, and just broadly, the overall health of the brand as you see it today?.

Kevin Plank Founder, President, Chief Executive Officer & Director

Yes, let me begin with North America and I’ll get Patrik actually weigh on this, and so we’ll get full perspective. Let me just say, again, in my own words just how disappointed that we are in the 2017 results. And you’re right, I think, the brand has always been able to stand on its own two legs.

And hopefully, that still comes across today, we’re just doing it as a much larger organization that’s going through a shift. And I think, as we’ve demonstrated throughout our 12-year history as a public company what we’re telling you today is exactly how we ever expect to deliver for the market, our shareholders for our business.

So today that we are using 2017 as a bit of a to reset, it’s a reset for our business and our brand as we look to get and run and operate as a bigger company. We’ve been evolving our structure throughout 2017.

We’ve talked about the things we’ve done is that hopefully which you feel is that, we’ve been making decisions and being proactive throughout really the balance of this year from since the beginning of this year from standing up our new category management, which gets us closer to the consumer, the restructuring that we went through this year implementing our new system.

So we’ve placed a lot of pain sort of on to ourselves, and none of it was meant to be self-inflicted, it was all meant to be thinking about the business that we’re going to be. And so from a brand health standpoint, number one is that, we have great confidence.

I think in the company that we are and the consumer that has a relationship with our brand that we have a relationship as well. But there’s several things that are going on right now. So maybe just dig into the map, I can let Patrik talk about some of the contributing factors that led to that..

Patrik Frisk

Yes, I think – thanks, Jon. I think, Jonathan, we have a couple of different things going on. We look at it really from an internal and an external perspective. We certainly have seen some effects of the – what Dave talked about as well, the ERP implementation and how we dealt with that internally and how it actually affected our service levels.

We’ve also not been spending against the brand to the extent that we think we should have in 2017, as the environment has become more challenging. So there’s a couple of internal things that we believe has not helped drive the brand.

And that from an external perspective, we mentioned the bankruptcies before, but there’s also a lot of traffic pressure. The promotions in the environment currently are still ramp and we believe they’re going to continue throughout the remainder of this year.

And that creating a lower demand in general is, because we haven’t done as good of a job as we believe we could have, it’s also hurting the brand at this point in time.

So I would really, for us, look at this is kind of a perfect storm at the moment, both internal and external factors hitting us really hard in Q3, and it’s going to remain affecting us in Q4 unfortunately..

Kevin Plank Founder, President, Chief Executive Officer & Director

And if I can finish with that, too, as you know, we want to be clear that we’ve certainly got some places where we’ve got significant challenges, particularly in our North American wholesale business that represents about 50% of what we do with specialty sporting goods.

But we also have a lot of places – several places where we’re doing really well and we want to make sure that that is highlighted, that there is a consumer that is out there looking for our brand, but some of things we’ve seen from the shifting consumer preferences, performance which represents 90% of what we do as a business, you are obviously seeing that shift to lifestyle, so we’re answering that move and I think we’re there, but when you look at sort of the big movers, when we talk about opportunity for this company, it comes down to footwear, international and our women’s business.

And obviously our international business is kicking really well for us, but footwear and women’s is a place where we feel like we can be and do a much better job.

The last thing that I’ll say Jonathan is that, as difficult it is to give you the news on this call, we have a really clear line of sight, I think we have a really deep understanding of who our consumer is, with what we are doing with the leadership in place, the structure and the strategy that we’re putting forward as well.

We feel that we’re fortunate to be going through an instance like this as a $5 billion brand has the ability to absorb and more importantly drive forward and so we’re incredibly focused on the future and we’ve got a team that’s ready to run and march forward.

So hopefully that gives you a little bit of color towards how the way we are thinking about North America right now..

Jonathan Komp

Yes, it does, thank you. And just a follow-up on the last point and really tying the broader outlook, partly relates to 2018, but more broadly. I know on this year you are on pace to be a low single-digit operating margin business.

As you think about that normalizing to something higher over time, I’m just curious are there enough levers in terms of the operating efficiencies you are starting to see, the more normalized pricing environment that you think you can get to a more normalized margin or is there a sense that you need to maybe shrink the revenue base that it is today and then grow from a more profitable base, I’m just curious to hear how you are thinking about that dynamic?.

David Bergman

Jonathan, this is Dave, it’s great, great question.

Obviously as we look across North America and look at the wholesale side, we’re going to continue to look at our distribution and prioritize how we work with our accounts, but relative to going forward in operating margins and efficiencies, we’re not at this point going to be sharing information on 2018, we love to do that in the February call, but obviously as I mentioned in my script, we are digging deep in the cost structure and we’re going to continue to look at opportunities everywhere we can.

So we’re going to keep driving forward to make sure that we can look for long-term sustainable profitable growth that’s my mission and we’ll give more color on that in the mid February call..

Operator

Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Randy Konik of Jefferies. Your line is now open..

Randy Konik

Yes, thanks a lot. I want to have a two-part question, first I want to just dig into apparel and after the response can I just go into footwear.

I guess Kevin, on apparel, if you think about your Golf business and then everything else ex-Golf, your Golf business has done very well on its own in terms of the product that’s out there, it doesn’t – there is – it’s immune to promotions by others, it just – really just performs very well.

So, when you think about how your Golf business is performing and then you kind of think about everything else, and you said the words, there’s two things going on there, so promotions going on in the environment and then there’s – it’s sounds fashion shifts more towards lifestyle.

If you were to assess what’s impacting more the business ex-Golf, do you think it’s more promotional related or is it really more shift in preference towards the lifestyle offerings and in that regard, do you believe that – how you think about changing pricing architecture or assortment architecture going into 2018 and 2019, that’s my first question..

Kevin Plank Founder, President, Chief Executive Officer & Director

Yes, thank you. I think there is a lot of things that come into play is, number one, you’re right, our Golf business is doing really well, maybe it starts to top with externally, you know we’ve got a representative like Jordan Spieth out there that makes it easy for people to see Under Armour as an authentic Golf brand.

And the trend line there is, it’s incredibly basic, look, it’s about pants, polo shirts and quarter-zips. And so I think what you can learn to expect from us is that, we’ll continue to be pushing the narrative of how we are going to be driving categories we’re already doing and having finding success like golf.

What we see though is that where our in-line product that we’ve seen across the brand and we just think about what’s the positioning of the consumer preference of the kids today. How do we speak to them? Because a generation of kids have grown up in love with this brand, seeing us as their authentic on-field, on-court, on-pitch brand.

And as we have watched them grow up, they actually – they’ve continued to evolve and so what we need to do and what you’ve seen us really take action beginning going back to the fourth quarter of last year as we started seeing some of the softness, especially with the heightened promotional environment is that shift of preference away from performance that really went to lifestyle.

The kids still wants performance, I mean they still want us on field, they’re designing additional wearing occasions and we believe that our authenticity and our credibility that we have as a performance brand, it gives us license to make categories in other places.

Meaning every owner of our product does something, that something is really special and important for us and that the consumer continues to come back to us for that reason.

But I believe that you’ll continue to see our lines move, Patrik talked about the speed at which we can move our supply chain and when you’re in a 18 to 22 months supply chain, it’s very difficult to be able to impact.

We’re 12 or 15 months in the decisions that we’ve made of moving with this market and we seem these things come, it just takes us a little bit more time, but I think you’re starting to see it in the fourth quarter for sets.

I think you are starting to see it in some of the layering that we’re putting out in the marketplace and the way that we’re addressing style across men’s, women’s and youth.

And so we’re certainly not standing still taking these blows and saying, we accept this at any level, this is a proactive move forward brand and that’s exactly what’s happening with our merchandizing right now, so Golf is a – it’s a great highlight for us, but it’s about us really winning in men’s and women’s training is where we’re really focused on having product that’s trend-right, style-right, fit-right, color-right et cetera and being there in the right place at the right time at the right price.

And so I feel that all those things reconciling, it’s a really promotional environment, it’s basically where we are right now which is why we’re giving you the sort of the look that we’re giving in the Q4 is just making sure that we’re contemplating everything, but we feel good about the plan we have in place and how we’re coming back strong through the balance of 2017 and through 2018 as well..

Randy Konik

And just to clarify, do you feel that from an apparel standpoint more changes are going to be made on the product architecture rather than the pricing architecture of that apparel? And then separately on footwear, you’ve done – you’ve gotten very high remarks on the Curry 4 from an aesthetic look perspective, so what are the learnings from that Curry 4 product line that we could potentially anticipate being put forth in the traditional running categories et cetera on the footwear side?.

Kevin Plank Founder, President, Chief Executive Officer & Director

Yes, when I look at 2017, I don’t think that we were frankly differentiated enough for our consumer and so in no way, shape or form do we anticipate changing the pricing model that makes Under Armour special and unique is that – we invented the $25 T-shirt, we’ve pressed the balance as to what consumers will pay for apparel of thinking about it as a piece of equipment and so that’ll continue as that no one is looking for Under Armour to have the $25 hooded fleece, they want Under Armour at the $75 and $100 price point.

And so we’ll continue to push and to drive there from an innovation standpoint, but you’ve seen us get caught and so we’ve been more promotional this year reacting to a broader market and so to ensure that we’ve got a differentiated product and again with a price-to-value relationship of that product is something which is – it just got to carry.

We catch and stick a logo on it and expect the consumer to buy it because they like the logo, so you won’t see that happen from us, it’s always been in the DNA of our brand and they’ll continue to be going forward. As far as footwear goes, we’ve got a tremendous opportunity with a franchise like Curry.

One thing I think it’s important to put in perspective is just the sheer scale of our footwear business which is over $1 billion.

And so when you have these marquee franchises like Curry, like what Patrik spoke to as well about our new HOVR midsole cushioning technology that’s coming out in the spring as well, how that connects into our Connected Fitness of truly driving differentiation.

You know you look for the spikes of these really high super aspirational products that will position to consume – to sell a lot of product that is more in the wheelhouse of where we can push. We’ve talked in the past about – I think we probably were a little braggish about things like the number of styles that we’re selling over $100.

And the fact is, when you look at some of our key distribution, from our mainline sporting goods is they are selling footwear at $90 and so we’ve done – I don’t think we’ve done the best job of being in position with the price-to-value of where we sell and how we sell and identifying that consumer, which goes back to understanding our consumer being consumer led at the center of everything we do.

At the same time you’re right, we have some incredibly bright spots. The Curry 4 is something we’ve applied the lessons from Curry 1, 2 and 3, and we put them in a Curry 4. And so we’re seeing incredible demand. You’re seeing sellout type of approach on the products. And frankly, we’ve applied that going forward in the Curry 4, the 5 and 6 upcoming 2.

So this is the long-term strategy one that positions really well in basketball, but more importantly, I think, it helps position our overall footwear franchise that we have as being and identifying ourselves as a footwear brand.

So with only 20% of our business being footwear today where it’s more than 50% for our chief competitors, we see a massive runway of opportunity for us there..

Randy Konik

Very helpful. Thank you..

Operator

Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Edward Yruma of KeyBanc. Your line is now open..

Edward Yruma

Hey, guys, thanks for taking my question. I guess, two parts. First, on U.S. wholesale, obviously, some challenges and made especially sport stores put some strength in your new doors.

I just set back how do you think about overall door count? Are there places where you think you could exit? And then on the direct front, from a store comp perspective, should we expect to see you slim that out? And then finally, on ERP, how long will it take to get mitigation kind of in place? Thanks..

David Bergman

Yes, this is Dave. I’ll just jump in a real quick. Relative to doors, as far as our own doors, we’ve really been adding more in China than anywhere else and a lot of those are going to be partnered doors. So we’re probably going to be adding about 300 doors this year in total globally, and we should be ending the year closer to 900.

And again, most of those are are going to be the partnered doors that we have in China.

But relative to the SAP implementation, what was your specific question around that?.

Edward Yruma

Well, just how long until you can kind of get service levels back to an acceptable level?.

David Bergman

Okay. So, the SAP implementation, I think, as we look at that, there’s a couple different pieces to it that we’ve been working through.

I think, one of the aspects was the change management, that’s been a little bit tougher than we expected, including working even with our inventory partners, our vendors, trying to get them up and trained on the system as well and just getting all the things in place. So right now that – the system is operating well, it’s stable.

But the change management in the learnings and the reporting is what we’re still working through here. So, we expect that in Q4, we won’t have the same level of impact that we had in Q3, but they won’t be completely gone yet. We’ll continue to work through it, and they continue to fine tune as we move into 2018..

Kevin Plank Founder, President, Chief Executive Officer & Director

Yes, and maybe I can add some color on the wholesale there as well in terms of number of doors in our distribution. We’re happy with where we’re at right now, and we will not be adding any additional distribution in our wholesale channels going forward the way we look at it at this point in time.

But again, as the environment continues to change out there, we’re going to continue, of course, to evaluate where the brand is going to show up in the future, but there are no plans at this point in time to expand any distribution further..

Edward Yruma

Great. Thanks so much..

Kevin Plank Founder, President, Chief Executive Officer & Director

Thank you..

Operator

Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of John Kernan of Cowen. Your line is now open..

John Kernan

Good morning, guy. Thanks for taking my question..

Kevin Plank Founder, President, Chief Executive Officer & Director

Thank you, John..

John Kernan

Kevin, could you talk about how comfortable you are with the inventory of 22%, given where the U.S. wholesale trends are running, and where that inventory is located by category and geography? Thank you..

David Bergman

Yes. John, this is Dave, I’ll take that one. I mean, relative to our inventory, it is a little bit larger than we would like it to be in Q3. Some of that was the impact of the service levels and the implementation challenges that shifted some things out to Q4, that was probably 2 to 4 percentage points of growth there.

And when you look at the inventory between North America and our international markets, the international inventory growth rates are significantly higher as we’re expecting a very large Q4 revenue for international. So the inventory growth rates in North America are definitely small. We’re continuing to manage that down.

I also want to just remind you that, 9 days back we talked about how we would be carrying over some core styles internally to be able to move through our factory house relative to keeping the wholesale floors and partners a little bit cleaner and bringing in returns a little bit more.

So we’re seeing that as well and not a carry through in the year-end as well. So you will continue to see a little bit elevated inventory levels probably in those low-20% range, as we get to the end of the year as well. And then we’ll be moving through more of that inventory in the front-half of 2018 and working that down as we move forward..

John Kernan

Okay. And then just one final up – follow-up. The direct-to-consumer guide for high single-digit for the year implies a pretty enormous deceleration in the fourth quarter. Is there anything going on there? Are you closing doors and how does domestic DTC in international DTC play into that guidance? Thank you..

David Bergman

Yes, John, I mean, when you look at Q4, it’s not necessarily around closing doors, it’s more around continuing to kind of watch the environment and wanting to make sure that we’re playing prudently relative to the traffic patterns that we’re seeing both on e-comm and within retail and also our factory house doors.

So, we’re tracking against that everyday, and we’re continuing to try to make the best calls and want to make sure that we’re protecting the brand in the right way and not going too far on discounting relative to the environment. So really it’s more just about the most prudent planning we think for Q4, it’s not really about closing doors..

John Kernan

Okay. And then just one final question. The international sustainability….

Kevin Plank Founder, President, Chief Executive Officer & Director

Coming in and out..

John Kernan

Sorry, guys. Just sustainability of international growth into next year, obviously, that highlighted the whole portfolio at this point. Can you just talk to the sustainability of 20%, 25%-plus top line growth into next year in international? Thank you..

Kevin Plank Founder, President, Chief Executive Officer & Director

Yes, I can take this one. So I’ve had the opportunity to travel around and I’ve been both in Europe and Latin America and also up in Canada over the last four months. And we’ve been digging into understanding the distribution that we currently have and what we’re looking at going forward.

And I think, the components of where the growth is going to come from differs a little bit depending on where you are. We believe we still have a big opportunity in Europe, for example, both in wholesale and direct-to-consumer.

As we continue to roll out our e-commerce platforms and opening up more wholesale in Europe, we see a continued opportunity in Asia Pacific to grow in partnership stores and some owned direct-to-consumer, as well as e-commerce as well.

And in Latin America, it’s a little bit of a mix, depending on whether you’re in Central America or in South America. But the fact is that, we only have about a $1 billion of our business in international.

And if you compare that to the opportunity that’s out there, we believe we have an enormous runway for international, and we’ll give you guys a lot more color on that as we go into the Investor Day next year, and a lot of work to be done to quantify all of that.

But in terms of my experience and what I’ve seen before, that’s currently an enormous opportunity for us, and it’s different depending on where you’re looking in the world. So, the great thing is, we have the capability and the capacity to expand into that either one of those different distribution channels.

And what we’re really spending a lot of time doing now is making sure that we’re also building our category management to be able to segment ourselves into that kind of a structure and also in international, not just here in North America..

John Kernan

Okay, thanks, guys. Best of luck..

Kevin Plank Founder, President, Chief Executive Officer & Director

Thank you..

Operator

Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Matt McClintock of Barclays. Your line is now open..

Matthew McClintock

Yes. Hi, good morning, everyone.

Kevin, just to follow-up on some of the comments just the magnitude of the inventory build, as well as the continued promotional environment in North America wholesale, how do you think about launching new innovation into that kind of dynamic? And I guess, more broadly thinking, it doesn’t seem like the North America wholesale environment is going to get much better anytime soon.

How are your thoughts of all being using the DTC channel to maybe shift more into where you can control the environment a little bit better? Thank you..

Kevin Plank Founder, President, Chief Executive Officer & Director

Yes, I’ll take that one. So, hi, Matt. I think, when we think about our ability to manage the brand across our distribution channels, Dave highlighted that how we’re going to think about our inventory positions differently thing going forward. We have a lot of different levers to still pull there.

One of the things that we’re, of course, also doing as we look into the future is thinking about how we actually plan our business, which I think we could do a little bit better in terms of where we’re building inventory and how we think about our go-to-market strategy.

Ultimately, we believe that by tuning our go-to-market strategy and dropping the innovation into the go-to-market in a commercially ready way at regular intervals, building actually our innovation funneled to be connected to the go-to-market for our commercial business is part of the key and unlock to us being consistent in delivery.

And at the same thinking about how we build our inventory through our planning. Those two things in combination, they’re working together. So when we think about our process here, we think about three components of that process.

We think about our innovation process, we think about our go-to-market process, and we think about our S&OP or Sales and Operations Planning Process.

They all three work together and we see opportunity in doing a better job with all three making sure that we’re dropping the right innovation into the commercial funnel at the right time and then planning our business, so that we don’t build as much inventory as we have previously and actually also supporting the innovation in a better way and then ultimately being able to deliver that product and innovation on time to the right place.

It’s going to be the job, of course, of our back-end. I see opportunity in all those three and putting it together is, what’s going to ultimately drive a more efficient machine for us..

Matthew McClintock

Thank you very much..

Kevin Plank Founder, President, Chief Executive Officer & Director

Thank you, Matt..

Operator

Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Bob Drbul of Guggenheim. Your line is now open..

Robert Drbul

Hi, good morning. Two quick questions, I think. The first one is, in the quarter, you called out declines in the youth business, I think, both in footwear and apparel.

So I was just wondering, the initiatives in place to recapture growth in that segment, I think, would be appreciated? The second question is, can you just give us an update on your Amazon business and how that’s been trending for you this year especially? Thanks..

Kevin Plank Founder, President, Chief Executive Officer & Director

Yes. Thanks, Bob. Let me maybe just jump at the top and sort of give an overarching, where we think we are right now from a consumer standpoint. So youth is always a great indication for us and one we’re really excited about the future of youth. We’ve had great indications and we’ve looked forward to some of our lines.

But really where we believe the brand is right now is that, we believe we have a bit of a pool problem. A pool problem for us is just what we’re doing to entice the consumer to ensure that they’re desiring the Under Armour brand. And there’s three ways that we’re thinking about doing that.

And first and foremost, it begins with product, delighting consumers with product that just exceeds our expectations and has them saying wow, 90%-plus of our service have been focused after – at performance.

And as we continue to move ourselves in a sportstyle that’s something that’s not exclusive to just men’s and women’s, but it does go all the way down in the kids. We’ve – we’re going to double down on our performance heritage is something we’re really proud.

And frankly, we think it’s what gives us the ability and the capability to sell to this kid and make sure that we remain incredibly compelling to them. Secondly, a segmentation, particular around something like youth.

With our new distribution, I think, that we could have done a better job from segmenting our product lines, but we believe that consumer is very much there for us. Our current composition is something that we feel good about. As Patrik mentioned about our distribution, we believe we’re in the right doors as we’re talking to this kid.

We just can do a much better job of how we show up and the way that we execute that play. Third and finally is around demand creation. As we said, we’re a pretty quiet brand in 2017, and we’re looking to continue to add that up.

As that relates to our youth business and this is much more of a holistic answer just across the brand is that, we’re looking at 2017 as a year that we use and focus on internal growth and deciding for ourselves what we’re going to do to truly be a – an externally focused company that is talking and telling the story of what this brand is, which is what makes us unique.

And the reason for us being is that, every product does something and makes you better. So we are going to make sure that comes true and comes out in every single product that we build.

Amazon Bob?.

Robert Drbul

Yes..

Kevin Plank Founder, President, Chief Executive Officer & Director

Yes, sorry, Patrik you want to go ahead?.

Patrik Frisk

Yes, I think, we continue to make good progress with Amazon, and I would actually include other pure players in that, too. I’m thinking now about Zalando in our International business, as well as ASOS in the UK and Zappos in North America.

So I think, in general, that’s where we see a lot of growth and continued opportunity going forward in our business, of course. As the consumer decides to move differently in their purchase journey, we want to make sure wherever they decide to shop with the right content and with the right tone of voice.

And as you guys know, we’ve been with Amazon for a while now and we believe that it’s part of our distribution footprint. And we continue to make progress in the same way that we’re also making progress in our own e-commerce.

And we’re also very excited about actually the work that we’re doing currently to roll more of our e-commerce out in Europe, where we see great traction for our direct-to-consumer e-commerce business. Hope that helps..

Robert Drbul

Thank you very much. Yes, thank you..

Kevin Plank Founder, President, Chief Executive Officer & Director

Thank you..

Operator

Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Jay Sole with Morgan Stanley. Your line is now open..

Jay Sole

Great. Thank you so much. Kevin, my question is this, yes, it’s been very promotional out there. And Under Armour had just kind of play a part in that. You’ve always talked about how Under Armour has the brand equity to endure.

But where do you draw the line, where you just have to say, we have to stop promoting, we can’t participate with what else is going on in the environment, because otherwise we risk doing the long-term damage to our brand that will be a very difficult to recover from.

And what we get into say stop, we’re just going to stop promoting and we’re going to start to think about the very long-term future of this brand of the 5 and 10-year long-term gain? Thank you..

Kevin Plank Founder, President, Chief Executive Officer & Director

Yes, thank you, Jay. I think, we’re really saying that right now. I think, that’s a lot about this call in this quarter. The way that we’re looking at our business and our brand thinking about it long-term.

You think about through the sort of the streak of growth that our company had, I hate ever thinking that we were sort of caught up or compelled by trying to manage something just for the sake of we did at the quarter before. We really are thinking long-term and globally.

The business is balanced between $1 billion women’s business, $1 billion footwear business, $1 billion International business, so all combined into business that’s still today though is 80% or close to 80% done here in North America. Balance is incredibly important for this business in this brand.

And hopefully, you always get that thought from this for us – from us about the way that we’re thinking it long-term with the brand.

I – as I said earlier, we’re not thrilled with things like what we’ve delivered from footwear, where we have product that will delight, incredibly excited about our new upcoming HOVR running launch that we’ll have this spring, incredibly excited about the demand driven around Curry.

We just see the ability for us to just be better to be better across the organization, to be better across the brand, and that’s what 2017 was really about us doing is focusing on the internal growth to put ourselves in a position for long-term scale, and to be able to exercise across those. So we’ve never had to pull the pricing lever.

You’ve seen with the promotional environment that began in the fourth quarter of last year, that has caught us by a bit of surprise and found us reactive and as that extended with not policies basically going away from the competition, made an incredibly promotional environment.

And so there’s places where we just frankly had to play, we believe that.

But long-term, particularly as we look at the relationship of what’s happening with wholesale versus what we’re doing with our own digital, and our ability to really be able to segment that product and differentiate that product as we become a brand that moves beyond A, cold-geared mock or A, heat-geared T-shirt where we have true diversity in our line.

I think, you’ll see us the ability to do that. And so we don’t want to claim – Under Armour was never intended just to be at a really expensive product that was sort of out of reach was meant to be affordable luxury. But it was also meant to be full price affordable luxury.

And so hopefully that comes across in everything that we do, and we don’t expect to see for sale signs on our brand. 2017 has definitely taught us that we need the capability of that stroke when we’re clearing product. But for the most part, we want to be smart, we want to be prudent, and we want to be product that’s been built to sell at full price..

David Bergman

I think it’s also a change in culture internally from being a sell-in to more of a sell-through mentality. In other words, being more of a direct-to-consumer mentality versus just a wholesale mentality.

And I think that’s important and Kevin and I both recognized the importance of staying closer to consumer in the current environment, so that means, planning your business. So, that’s one of the things that we’re really looking at to ensure that we plan into less promotions as we go into 2018 and beyond..

Jay Sole

Okay. Thanks so much..

Kevin Plank Founder, President, Chief Executive Officer & Director

Thank you, Jay..

Operator

Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Omar Saad of Evercore. Your line is now open..

Omar Saad

Thanks. Good morning. Thanks for taking my question. I just have one to ask. Kevin, you mentioned early in the prepared remarks about kind of reprioritizing and deemphasizing certain investments.

I was hoping maybe you could give us some insight into the internal management process for capital allocation and resource allocation, and how that’s evolving from kind of yesterday, today, tomorrow? How you think about making those investments? And maybe some anecdotes about where you’re shifting your investments from and to? Thanks..

Kevin Plank Founder, President, Chief Executive Officer & Director

Thanks, Omar. I’m going to let Dave jump on that one..

David Bergman

Yes, Omar, I mean, we are looking at it from a lot of different angles here. I mean, we’re prioritizing the new CapEx to ensure everything aligns with a long-term strategies. We’ve got a great capital committee that focuses on that. In that, we’re doing some things around.

We talked about flowing down North America Brand House builds and tempering some of the North America wholesale fixture buying just keeping really an eye on the market and investing where the best return is going to be.

Also looking at relative to our DTC and office and distribution center expansion space and trying to be as prudent as we can relative to when we need to do any of that, continuing to review our operational structure and how we can simplify and add it better there, continuing to address real estate, looking at store locations, looking at our office space and distribution center space and how we have tight and operational effective there as we possibly can be, continue to dig in on other SG&A, professional service fees, T&Es and all the customary areas there.

So we are kind of looking at that across the board and looking at it much more within ROI lens than we’ve done in the past. But at the same time, we’ve got to make sure that we’re protecting those areas of long-term growth.

So making sure, we’re protecting and prioritizing international expansion, e-commerce development, footwear design development, areas like that, while we continue to dig in deep and kind of right-size the cost structure. So, there’s a lot of different angles that we’re looking at it right now.

But again, trying to making sure that we’re looking at things from an ROI lens and really driving all the way down through to ROIC is what we’re trying to do..

Kevin Plank Founder, President, Chief Executive Officer & Director

And Omar, so we’ve always had, I think, that ROI approach, it’s obviously coming through a different lens, as Dave says.

But that’s what the addition of Patrik being here sort of the trinity of Dave and Patrik and myself of really making sure that they were partnered working together that we have a clearly articulated strategy that’s understood by the organization throughout the company and that we’re driving that through and putting money on the things that will get us to return.

So we’ve got a lot of low-hanging fruit. You hear me say sort of anecdotally women’s footwear international, the places that we’ve invested in, we’re there. We just put the right kind of smart spending we can win. So, I’ve used the saying is that, we can do anything. We just can’t do everything that’s ever been – ever more true.

We’re really focused and I think really thinking about through the things that will get us the biggest return. We don’t need anything else. We don’t need to buy anything else. We have plenty of real estate. We have plenty of assets. We have plenty of categories that we’re in, we just need to focus on becoming excellent everywhere that we do business.

And so that’s hopefully one message that comes across in this call is our commitment, our teamwork, the strategy that we have in place and the way that we’re looking at just go run the play in 2018 put this company in firm footing and allow us to storm and march forward and get us back in that growth pattern.

Right now, we’re going to be internally a great operationally excellent company..

Omar Saad

Thanks, guys. Thanks for all the detail today..

David Bergman

Thank you, Omar..

Kevin Plank Founder, President, Chief Executive Officer & Director

Thank you, Omar..

Kevin Plank Founder, President, Chief Executive Officer & Director

That will conclude our call today.

Operator?.

Operator

Ladies and gentlemen, this concludes today’s question-and-answer session. Thank you for your participation in today’s conference. This does conclude the program. You may now disconnect. Everyone have a great day..

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