Coach Sales Rise with Help from Lower-Priced Line
By wchung | 07 Apr, 2026
Coach salesperson Pamela Li, left, shows a Madison patent leather Sabrina bag in camel to Yuji Matsumoto, of Japan, at a Coach store in San Francisco. (AP Photo/Jeff Chiu)
Coach Inc.‘s fiscal first-quarter profit fell slightly, but revenue rose as new, lower-priced handbag lines helped juice sales.
The company blamed heavy promotions spurred by the recession-fueled consumer pullback for its thinner profit margins. But the sales increase was an encouraging sign for a luxury-goods market that has suffered.
The New York maker of luxury accessories on Tuesday said first-quarter profit fell 3 percent to $140.8 million, or 44 cents per share from $145.8 million, a year earlier. Per-share results were the same in both periods.
Revenue rose 1 percent to $761.4 million, helped by an 8 percent rise in sales at North American stores and growing business in China.
Analysts expected profit of 39 cents per share on revenue of $753.8 million.
Many luxury goods makers have had to cut prices or introduce new, lower-priced products to keep buyers interested, as the recession has led even the wealthy to cut spending.
About 50 percent of Coach’s handbags are now priced under $300, compared with 30 percent a year ago.
Coach cited the success of its Poppy collection, a lower-priced line of handbags, shoes and other accessories targeted at younger customers. It launched the line in July.
“For over a year we have been addressing the very weak retail climate in the U.S. and abroad,” Chairman and CEO Lew Frankfort said in a statement. “We have adapted our pricing and product strategies to be successful in what will become the ‘new normal.’ “
Coach’s direct-to-consumer business, which includes sales in China, rose 10 percent to $654 million. Sales at Chinese stores open at least a year rose at a double-digit rate, the company said.
Coach shares rose 49 cents to $35 in premarket trading.
10/20/2009 8:23 AM NEW YORK (AP)
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