Foot Locker said Wednesday it expects another year of deep discounts in the sneaker industry as its largest brand partner Nike continues its reset and relies on markdowns to clear through stale inventory.
The footwear giant delivered mix results for its holiday quarter, beating Wall Street’s expectations on earnings but falling short on sales. In the year ahead, it anticipates that trend will reverse. For fiscal 2025, Foot Locker is expecting profits to be lower than Wall Street estimated, while the high end of its comparable sales guidance is better than analysts had forecast, according to LSEG and StreetAccount.
Shares rose more than 4% in early trading.
Here’s how Foot Locker performed in its fiscal fourth quarter compared with what Wall Street was anticipating, based on a survey of analysts by LSEG:
- Earnings per share: 86 cents adjusted vs. 72 cents expected
- Revenue: $2.25 billion vs. $2.32 billion expected
The company’s reported net income for the three-month period that ended Feb. 1 was $49 million, or 51 cents per share, compared with a loss of $389 million, or $4.13 per share, a year earlier. Excluding one-time items related to impairment charges and net losses from discontinued operations, Foot Locker reported adjusted earnings per share of $82 million, or 86 cents per share.
Sales dropped to $2.25 billion, down nearly 6% from $2.38 billion a year earlier. In the year-ago period, Foot Locker – like other retailers — benefited from an extra week, which has skewed comparison results.
While Foot Locker improved profits by more than 100% compared with the prior quarter, it’s not expecting that trend to continue in its current fiscal year, thanks to deep promotional activity across the sneaker marketplace. It’s expecting adjusted earnings per share to be between $1.35 and $1.65, well behind Wall Street estimates of $1.77, according to LSEG.
Meanwhile, it’s projecting comparable sales to rise between 1% and 2.5%, which at the high end beats expectations of up 1.9%, according to StreetAccount.
“While we expect consumer and category promotional pressures to remain uncertain into 2025, especially within the first half, our Lace Up Plan strategies continue to resonate with our customers and brand partners,” CEO Mary Dillon said in a statement. “Our return to positive comparable sales growth, gross margin expansion, and positive free cash flow in fiscal 2024 serve as proof points that our Lace Up Plan is working.”
Foot Locker’s expectations that promotional pressures will weigh on margins in the year ahead indicates that it’s still having issues with Nike, its largest brand partner. The sneaker giant is in the midst of a turnaround under its new CEO Elliott Hill, and said previously it’s relying on deep discounts to clear out inventory. When Nike is promotional, it impacts Foot Locker’s business because the brand still represents about 60% of sales.
In December, Hill outlined his strategy to return Nike to growth and said deep discounting was to blame for declining revenue and profit. The company is aiming to drive full-price sales on its website, but first, it said it needs to aggressively liquidate old inventory through “less profitable channels,” executives said.
Plus, just because Nike shoes are selling for a discount on its own website doesn’t mean that Foot Locker’s website will run those same promotions. For example, a Nike Air Force 1 ’07 model – the type of legacy style that Nike is trying to clear out of in favor of new, more innovative sneakers – is selling for as much as 39% off on Nike’s website.
Meanwhile, the same silhouette, albeit in different colors, is selling for full price on Foot Locker’s website for $115. That’s a problem for Foot Locker because it makes it more likely that a customer will just buy from Nike directly, which is part of the challenge of running a multi-brand company in the age of direct-to-consumer sales.
During a call with analysts, Dillon offered a rosy take on the situation with Nike, saying the companies’ relationship is “strong and fully reset,” and Foot Locker believes in the work Hill is doing to revitalize the brand. Still, executives acknowledged the impact Nike’s rough point is having on the business.
“As Nike rebalances their product portfolio and inventory levels in the short term in an effort to make way for future innovation, we are continuing to navigate some impacts on our business,” said Chief Commercial Officer Frank Bracken. “Throughout this process, we continue to align closely with them to optimize our merchandise mix and inventory levels to support full price sales and partner with them to bring health back to critical consumer franchises like Air Force 1, Dunk and the AJ1.”
Under Dillon’s direction, Foot Locker has worked to diversify its brand mix and is now doing a lot more business with buzzy companies like On Running and Hoka and legacy stalwarts like Ugg. During the quarter, sales of Adidas, New Balance, On, Hoka, ASICS, Saucony, Crocs, Ugg and Timberland were up a combined double digits. Those strides help protect Foot Locker from the whims of any one brand, such as Nike, which infamously pulled back on wholesale partners like Foot Locker only to reverse course when it saw the impact it was having on sales and profits.
Foot Locker is also doing a better job of keeping brands happy now that it’s working to refresh and remodel its aging store fleet, which is still responsible for more than 80% of sales. It now has eight “reimagined” locations across North America, Europe and Asia, which are top to bottom remodels of the company’s store layout and approach. It’s expecting to open or convert an additional 80 reimagined locations by the end of 2025 after seeing how well the new formats performed.
With more than 2,400 locations across 26 countries, Foot Locker cannot bring its new concept to every store, so the company instead has focused on smaller refreshes, which update existing stores with new signage and a segmentation across brands. It completed about 400 of those makeovers in 2024 and plans to do about 300 more in 2025. By the end of 2026, it aims to have 65% of its fleet refreshed with the new brand standard.
Fixing those stores, and moving them to better locations outside of malls, is a critical component of Dillon’s strategy, and the company expects to spend another $270 million on “customer-facing” capital expenditures in the year ahead.
Still, Foot Locker is shrinking. It’s expecting the number of stores to decline by 4% in fiscal 2025 and square footage to fall 2%.
During the quarter, Foot Locker’s comparable sales climbed 2.6%, beating an expected rise of 2.3%, according to StreetAccount. It’s also seeing more signs of life from its Champs Sports banner, which has been dragging down Foot Locker’s overall performance. During the quarter, comparable sales at Champs grew 1.8%. At Foot Locker’s namesake chain, comparable sales rose 5.5% but the metric overall was dragged down by its WSS banner, where comparable sales declined 3.3%.
Foot Locker’s biggest weak spot was its Asia-Pacific region, where sales dropped 14.1% during the quarter, driven by a 24% decline at its atmos banner.
In August, Foot Locker said it was closing its stores and e-commerce operations in South Korea, Denmark, Norway and Sweden, and will rely on a third party for operations in Greece and Romania, where it plans to expand its reach. In all, 30 of Foot Locker’s 140 stores in the Asia-Pacific region and 629 in Europe were slated to close or go under a new operator as part of the changes.
Read More: Foot Locker results show the sneaker industry — and Nike — still have more pain ahead