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Canada Goose Trims Annual Profit Forecast on Dipping China Demand

Weak consumer spending in China, which is grappling with youth unemployment and a property crisis, has been a major concern for the luxury goods industry.
Canada Goose store with two large crest signs at the front of the black store windows.
Toronto, Ontario-based Canada Goose saw revenues in Greater China drop by 4.7 percent. (Shutterstock)

Canada Goose Holdings trimmed its annual profit forecast and missed quarterly revenue estimates on Thursday due to choppy sales in key luxury goods market China, sending its US-listed shares down 6 percent in premarket trading.

Weak consumer spending in China, which is grappling with youth unemployment and a property crisis, has been a major concern for the luxury goods industry and has slowed demand recovery in the region, significantly impacting brands such as Canada Goose.

US luxury retailer Estée Lauder which bet on China, expanded a restructuring plan on Tuesday that involves up to 7,000 job cuts as the cosmetics giant grapples with persistent demand weakness, especially in Asia.

Toronto, Ontario-based Canada Goose saw revenues in Greater China drop by 4.7 percent, compared to the previous quarter’s 5.7 percent jump.

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It expects fiscal 2025 adjusted profit of flat to low-single-digit percentage growth, compared to its previous forecast of a mid-single-digit rise.

The company’s third-quarter revenue fell to C$607.9 million ($423.59 million), from C$609.9 million a year earlier.

Analysts on average had expected revenue of C$620.9 million, according to data compiled by LSEG.

Excluding one-off items, Canada Goose posted a profit of C$1.51 per share, compared with an estimate of C$1.54 per share.

By Aatrayee Chatterjee; Editing by Pooja Desai

Learn more:

Canada Goose Boosts Sales on Asia Strength, Lightweight Apparel

The company reported better-than-expected revenue of C$88.1 million for the fiscal first quarter, driven by strong sales in Asia, despite a 3 percent drop in North American sales.

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