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Pandora Sees ‘Healthy’ Sales So Far This Year

Pandora, which sells charm bracelets with prices ranging from $60 to more than $2,000, has been a rare bright spot among retailers and brands targeting aspirational consumers with affordable luxury items.
Pandora, which sells charm bracelets with prices ranging from $60 to more than $2,000, has been a rare bright spot among retailers and brands targeting aspirational consumers with affordable luxury items. (Shutterstock)

Pandora, the world’s biggest jewellery maker, said on Wednesday its performance since the start of the year has been “healthy” with high single-digit sales growth, as it announced a share buyback programme after a strong run.

Pandora, which sells charm bracelets with prices ranging from $60 to more than $2,000, has been a rare bright spot among retailers and brands targeting aspirational consumers with affordable luxury items.

The company aims for organic revenue growth of 6-9 percent in 2024, it said, after reporting strong sales of its silver charms and bracelets which have helped its share price to more than double since the start of last year.

“Despite the worldwide macroeconomic uncertainties… the company is manoeuvring strongly and better than the market,” said Soren Lontoft Hansen, senior analyst at Sydbank.

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The growth target is in line with a goal set in October for a 7-9 percent compound annual growth rate from 2023 to 2026.

Pandora also announced a share buyback programme of up to 4 billion Danish crowns ($577.7 million), and a dividend of 18 Danish crowns per share. Its shares rose 0.5 percent at the open.

A weak spot was China, where Pandora said fourth-quarter sales missed expectations, falling to 116 million crowns from 143 million in the same quarter a year earlier.

Expectations for a strong post-pandemic rebound in China were derailed last year by a property crisis and high youth unemployment, curbing consumer spending and hitting luxury brands like Burberry.

China accounted for just 2 percent of Pandora’s total revenues in 2023, down from 5 percent of revenues as recently as 2021.

“We’re in there for the long game. It’s going to be step by step, and one day China will be a significant portion of Pandora,” CEO Alexander Lacik said in an interview with Reuters.

Pandora, which sold 107 million pieces of jewellery in 2023, up from 103 million in 2022, has been building its brand, opening more stores and moving away from wholesale.

“They have improved their communication and marketing very significantly,” said Jaime Vazquez de Lapuerta, portfolio manager at Bestinver in Madrid, which holds Pandora shares.

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Pandora has a big opportunity to open more stores in its biggest market, the United States, he added. “Then you have a potential turnaround in China, but you don’t need to believe in that to be bullish on Pandora.”

Pandora said its marketing spending would increase over the first quarter as it revamp the brand, impacting first-quarter EBIT (earnings before interest and tax) margin. The company aims for 25 percent EBIT margin for 2024 as a whole.

Marketing costs grew by 5 percent in 2023 in constant currencies, but the cost as a share of revenues declined slightly to 13.7 percent.

The company’s revenue in the US increased by 2 percent to 8.3 billion crowns over 2023. Revenue in China fell by 9 percent to 564 million crowns over the year.

By Helen Reid, Isabelle Yr Carlsson, Boleslaw Lasocki and Agata Rybska; Editors: Savio D’Souza, Mark Potter, Jan Harvey and Louise Heavens

Learn more:

Pandora Raises Sales Forecast After Q3 Profit Beat

Danish jewellery maker Pandora reported a smaller than expected drop in third-quarter profit as more shoppers came to its stores, and raised its full-year sales outlook, sending its shares up.

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