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Famous Footwear Owner Takes a Beating on Tariff Troubles and Weitzman Woes

MarketDash Editorial Team
15 hours ago
Caleres saw sales climb 6.6% to $790.1 million in Q3, but earnings cratered as tariffs and Stuart Weitzman integration challenges sent shares tumbling over 15%.

Sometimes you can do most things right and still get punished. That's the story at Caleres, Inc. (CAL), the company behind Famous Footwear and a portfolio of other shoe brands, which saw its stock crater 15.27% to $11.43 on Tuesday after reporting third-quarter results that were both good and terrible, depending on where you looked.

The good part: consolidated sales jumped 6.6% year over year to $790.1 million, sailing past the $759.1 million analysts had expected. The company also saw double-digit growth in eCommerce across its brands and sequential improvement at Famous Footwear stores.

The terrible part: GAAP earnings crashed to just $0.07 per share from $1.19 a year earlier, while adjusted earnings came in at $0.38 per share—nowhere near where Wall Street wanted it. For context, if you strip out the Stuart Weitzman acquisition drag, adjusted EPS would have been $0.67, which tells you a lot about what's causing the pain here.

"Caleres delivered third quarter sales results that were ahead of our internal expectations, highlighted by organic sales growth in our Brand Portfolio segment, strong Lead Brands performance, sequential improvement in trends at Famous Footwear, and accelerated eCommerce momentum in both segments of our business," said Jay Schmidt, president and CEO.

Schmidt acknowledged the twin headwinds hitting profitability: "As we expected, we experienced pressure on our earnings from tariffs and near-term acquisition dilution; however, the fundamentals of our business are improving." The Stuart Weitzman addition, which closed in August for a preliminary purchase price of $108.9 million net of cash, now means the Brand Portfolio drives nearly half of total sales and more than half of operating earnings.

The Numbers Behind the Squeeze

Direct-to-consumer sales represented roughly 71% of total net sales for the quarter. Gross profit came in at $329.9 million with a gross margin of 41.8%, down 230 basis points from last year. On an adjusted basis, gross margin was 42.7%, down 140 basis points—a clear sign that tariffs are biting hard.

The Brand Portfolio segment saw net sales surge 18.8% to $383.7 million from $322.9 million, with Stuart Weitzman contributing $45.8 million. But adjusted operating earnings dropped to $20.0 million from $35.1 million a year earlier.

Over at Famous Footwear, the picture was tougher. Net sales dipped 2.2% to $418.8 million from $428.3 million, with comparable sales down 1.2%. Adjusted operating earnings fell to $20.9 million versus $29.8 million in the prior year.

On the bright side, owned eCommerce sales across both Famous Footwear and the Brand Portfolio climbed by double digits, with Lead Brands also posting double-digit gains.

Stuart Weitzman: Short-Term Pain for Long-Term Gain?

Schmidt laid out the integration roadmap for Stuart Weitzman: "For the balance of the year, we will be working to transition the Stuart Weitzman business to Caleres systems and clean up aged and excess inventory as we hone our strategies for long-term growth and profitability of the brand. In fiscal 2026, we will begin to unlock synergistic cost savings."

Translation: expect more near-term mess before things get better.

Balance Sheet Snapshot

At quarter-end, Caleres had $34.0 million in cash and cash equivalents, essentially flat compared to $33.7 million a year earlier. Inventory ballooned to $678.2 million from $585.9 million, reflecting both the Weitzman acquisition and the inventory cleanup challenges ahead.

For the first 39 weeks of fiscal 2025, net cash from operating activities was $40.5 million, down from $75.9 million in the prior year period.

Guidance Gets Ugly

Here's where things get really rough. Caleres slashed its full-year fiscal 2025 GAAP EPS guidance from a range of $2.80 to $3.20 down to a loss of 18 cents to 13 cents per share. The analyst estimate had been $1.88.

The company also cut its adjusted EPS forecast to just 55 cents to 60 cents, versus the $1.73 consensus estimate. Management cited "continued tariff pressure on gross margin and earnings dilution from Stuart Weitzman" as the main culprits, along with an expected full-year tax rate of 27% to 28%. They're even expecting a loss per share for the fourth quarter on both a GAAP and adjusted basis.

So yeah, investors weren't thrilled. But if you're a believer in the long-term story—that eCommerce momentum, brand strength, and eventual Weitzman synergies will pay off—this might be more of a painful transition than a terminal problem. The market, however, is making it clear it wants to see results before it believes the turnaround tale.

Famous Footwear Owner Takes a Beating on Tariff Troubles and Weitzman Woes

MarketDash Editorial Team
15 hours ago
Caleres saw sales climb 6.6% to $790.1 million in Q3, but earnings cratered as tariffs and Stuart Weitzman integration challenges sent shares tumbling over 15%.

Sometimes you can do most things right and still get punished. That's the story at Caleres, Inc. (CAL), the company behind Famous Footwear and a portfolio of other shoe brands, which saw its stock crater 15.27% to $11.43 on Tuesday after reporting third-quarter results that were both good and terrible, depending on where you looked.

The good part: consolidated sales jumped 6.6% year over year to $790.1 million, sailing past the $759.1 million analysts had expected. The company also saw double-digit growth in eCommerce across its brands and sequential improvement at Famous Footwear stores.

The terrible part: GAAP earnings crashed to just $0.07 per share from $1.19 a year earlier, while adjusted earnings came in at $0.38 per share—nowhere near where Wall Street wanted it. For context, if you strip out the Stuart Weitzman acquisition drag, adjusted EPS would have been $0.67, which tells you a lot about what's causing the pain here.

"Caleres delivered third quarter sales results that were ahead of our internal expectations, highlighted by organic sales growth in our Brand Portfolio segment, strong Lead Brands performance, sequential improvement in trends at Famous Footwear, and accelerated eCommerce momentum in both segments of our business," said Jay Schmidt, president and CEO.

Schmidt acknowledged the twin headwinds hitting profitability: "As we expected, we experienced pressure on our earnings from tariffs and near-term acquisition dilution; however, the fundamentals of our business are improving." The Stuart Weitzman addition, which closed in August for a preliminary purchase price of $108.9 million net of cash, now means the Brand Portfolio drives nearly half of total sales and more than half of operating earnings.

The Numbers Behind the Squeeze

Direct-to-consumer sales represented roughly 71% of total net sales for the quarter. Gross profit came in at $329.9 million with a gross margin of 41.8%, down 230 basis points from last year. On an adjusted basis, gross margin was 42.7%, down 140 basis points—a clear sign that tariffs are biting hard.

The Brand Portfolio segment saw net sales surge 18.8% to $383.7 million from $322.9 million, with Stuart Weitzman contributing $45.8 million. But adjusted operating earnings dropped to $20.0 million from $35.1 million a year earlier.

Over at Famous Footwear, the picture was tougher. Net sales dipped 2.2% to $418.8 million from $428.3 million, with comparable sales down 1.2%. Adjusted operating earnings fell to $20.9 million versus $29.8 million in the prior year.

On the bright side, owned eCommerce sales across both Famous Footwear and the Brand Portfolio climbed by double digits, with Lead Brands also posting double-digit gains.

Stuart Weitzman: Short-Term Pain for Long-Term Gain?

Schmidt laid out the integration roadmap for Stuart Weitzman: "For the balance of the year, we will be working to transition the Stuart Weitzman business to Caleres systems and clean up aged and excess inventory as we hone our strategies for long-term growth and profitability of the brand. In fiscal 2026, we will begin to unlock synergistic cost savings."

Translation: expect more near-term mess before things get better.

Balance Sheet Snapshot

At quarter-end, Caleres had $34.0 million in cash and cash equivalents, essentially flat compared to $33.7 million a year earlier. Inventory ballooned to $678.2 million from $585.9 million, reflecting both the Weitzman acquisition and the inventory cleanup challenges ahead.

For the first 39 weeks of fiscal 2025, net cash from operating activities was $40.5 million, down from $75.9 million in the prior year period.

Guidance Gets Ugly

Here's where things get really rough. Caleres slashed its full-year fiscal 2025 GAAP EPS guidance from a range of $2.80 to $3.20 down to a loss of 18 cents to 13 cents per share. The analyst estimate had been $1.88.

The company also cut its adjusted EPS forecast to just 55 cents to 60 cents, versus the $1.73 consensus estimate. Management cited "continued tariff pressure on gross margin and earnings dilution from Stuart Weitzman" as the main culprits, along with an expected full-year tax rate of 27% to 28%. They're even expecting a loss per share for the fourth quarter on both a GAAP and adjusted basis.

So yeah, investors weren't thrilled. But if you're a believer in the long-term story—that eCommerce momentum, brand strength, and eventual Weitzman synergies will pay off—this might be more of a painful transition than a terminal problem. The market, however, is making it clear it wants to see results before it believes the turnaround tale.

    Famous Footwear Owner Takes a Beating on Tariff Troubles and Weitzman Woes - MarketDash News