Luxury eyewear manufacturer and distributor Luxottica Group (NYSE: LUX) certainly has turned its eye towards profits. Despite the continuing erosion of the U.S. dollar against the Euro, Luxottica's July 26 2Q earnings report looks good. The only blind spot is Luxottica's inability to capitalize on its retail sector, particularly in the U.S. market. That is not to say Luxottica is not trying. The company has recently acquired 870 additional retail locations globally, and is aggressively establishing a retail presence in China and South Africa. In order to strengthen its brands in the U.S., Luxottica is unveiling a new line of eyewear products under a licensing agreement with Polo Ralph Lauren. Within the next several quarters, Luxottica intends to launch an ultra-luxury (obscenely overpriced?) eyewear brand named ILORI as part of a full luxury line. Perhaps the problem in its retail sector stems from Luxottica's inability to define precisely what type of eyewear distributor it is. While going after the vanity eyewear market of the uber-wealthy, Luxottica also owns LensCrafters and Sunglass Hut, the epitome of value-driven suburban mall retail demographics.
Despite problems in its retail sector, and being repreatedly hammered by exchange rate fluctuations, Luxottica continues to post good numbers. The company posted its ninth consecutive quarter of double-digit growth in its wholesale sector. In the most recent quarter, wholesale sales were up 17.5%. This gain follows 1Q 2007 wholesale gains of 20.4%. For the first half of 2007, wholesale sector operating income has increased 24.5%, which certainly helps to offset a 12% decline in retail operating income for the same period. Wholesale sales in emerging markets have increased by 50% during the previous quarter with so sign of a slowdown. On the basis of recent wholesale figures, Luxottica CEO Andrea Guerra raised FY guidance for growth in consolidated EPS to the 26-29% range, excluding the impact of exchange rate fluctuations, always a major concern to potential and current shareholders. For the first half of 2007, consolidated EPS stands at $0.83.
Luxottica stock is up over 15% from the beginning of the year, closing on 9 August at $35.50. Investors with a tolerance for currency volatility may wish to look into Luxottica.











Reader Comments (Page 1 of 1)
9-06-2007 @ 9:55AM
Margaret Kreimier said...
I don’t see LUX as staying current to build their long term value.
The upper management has been asleep at the wheel IN TWO AREAS: TECHNOLOGY AND SALARIES.
1) WE STILL HAVE DIAL UP AND
ONE store COMPUTER! PLEEEEEEEASE!
WE ARE ALWAYS IN THE TOP TEN STORES OF OUR REGION.
Do you have any idea how inefficient it is to wait for the screens to come up to: check someone’s policy, authorize insurance, input the order, bill their insurance, answer phone inquiries about previous sales, ALL while waiting for ONE COMPUTER WITH A DIAL UP CONNECTION?
And WHEN SOMEONE “BUMPS” YOU BEFORE YOU’VE GOTTEN TO THE LAST PAGE, YOU MUST START ALL OVER! (We have no way to save what’s been done so BACK TO SCREEN ONE!
WHY SO MANY SCREENS ANYWAY? (So much more can be done on just one screen)
This is so frustrating to the patients and the three others who need to use the computer, one of those people being the doctor!
2) SALARIES!
Starting pay is 7.50 per hour, YES 7.50 AN HOUR; that’s not even 16K! Where can you find housing today, let alone afford a car payment?
Why was it so similar 25 years ago? Have the car costs or rent prices stayed the same?
I bet the upper management percentage increases from 25 years ago have gone through the roof! There are too many multiples of difference between what the least paid makes and what the highest paid makes.