City Chic Collective (CCX.ASX) provided a better than feared 1H22 trading update highlighting strong sales outperformance against a challenging trading backdrop, plagued by rapidly rising COVID-19 infections and ongoing global supply chain disruptions. Management’s decision to invest in additional inventory ahead of the curve clearly paid off with first half sales growing 50 per cent to $178 million; further evidence of strong strategic execution which remains central to our investment thesis.
Interim margins were impacted by 1Q22 ANZ store closures, recent acquisitions and a normalisation of marketing expenditure, resulting in flat 1H22 earnings. CCX continues to anticipate stronger second half earnings due to the growing contribution from the northern hemisphere operations and assuming ANZ stores remain open. We think the medium-term growth profile looks robust as the company targets a large, underserved global market opportunity with its highly scalable online business model and a net cash balance sheet providing optionality.
Market expectations heading into the release had been rebased materially lower following an earnings downgrade delivered by offshore peer, Torrid Holdings Inc. (CURV.US), earlier in January (the company’s second miss in as many months). CURV, a US-based omni-channel plus-sized focused apparel retailer with around 600 stores and annual sales of c.US$1.3 billion (FY22f), cut 4Q21 sales guidance by 8 per cent to US$300-305 million with EBITDA lowered by 36 per cent to US$23-25 million (causing the stock to plunge 23 per cent). CURV Management attributed the miss to labour challenges at the company’s distribution centre and some stores due to the pandemic.
For the six months to December 2021, CCX’s Americas business grew sales by 62 per cent, significantly outpacing CURV which expects to grow sales by 8 per cent (for the six months to January 2022). We suspect this sales outperformance reflects CCX’s pure online model in the US, a broader customer demographic, a broader product range and better management execution, particularly around stock and supply chain.
There were also market concerns around CCX’s web traffic based on third party data analysis. These look to have been way overblown based on the solid website traffic growth of 22 per cent in 1H22 and strong frequency and basket size improvement implied by the 50 per cent top line growth.
Key details from the CCX trading update (14 January 2022) are as follows:
The Montgomery Small Companies Fund own shares in City Chic Collective . This article was prepared 19 January 2022 with the information we have today, and our view may change. It does not constitute formal advice or professional investment advice. If you wish to trade City Chic you should seek financial advice.