Tiffany makes inroads with millennials as Hepburn era fades

epa01100375 Pedestrians walk past Tiffany & Co.'s  main store in Ginza, Japan, 27 August 2007. Goldman Sachs Group announced plans to purchase the store and property for 37 billion yen (233 million euro). The purchase price will be 180 million yen (1.13 million euro) per 3.3 square metres, to become Japan's most expensive piece of real estate.  EPA/EVERETT KENNEDY BROWN

Bloomberg

Tiffany & Co. is making headway with millennials who seek fashion jewellery while forgoing some of the treasures of the Audrey Hepburn generation: wedding and engagement rings.
Growth in fashion and designer jewellery helped boost revenue to $959.7 million during the second quarter, even as sales of wedding rings underperformed, the company. While revenue topped analysts’ estimates, same-store sales companywide fell 1 percent, missing projections.
The results reflect Tiffany’s strategy to win back customers, including younger shoppers, by renovating stores and offering new designs, such as the HardWear collection promoted by singer Lady Gaga.
The collection features rings, bracelets and earrings with dangle balls, items that may appeal to younger shoppers.
“One of the more promising areas of progress is the company’s attempts to better connect
with younger consumers—a
constituency with which it
had lost traction,” said Neil
Saunders, managing director of GlobalData Retail.
Lady Gaga was introduced as the new face of the jeweller in an ad that aired during the Super Bowl in February.
The chain had long been most closely associated with Hepburn’s image, which was embedded into popular culture with the 1961 movie Breakfast at Tiffany’s.
Shares of the company fell 1.3 percent to $87.55 at the close in New York after earlier gaining as much as 4.3 percent. The stock has climbed 13 percent this year.
Signet Jewelers Ltd., owner of the Kay, Zales and Jared chains, surged the most in 3 1/2 years after reporting a surprise sales gain in the second quarter. The company also raised its full-year profit forecast and announced it bought the company that operates JamesAllen.com to expand its presence online. Signet climbed 17 percent to $60.54, trimming its decline this year to 36 percent.

‘Decent Quarter’
At Tiffany, earnings were 92 cents a share in the second quarter that ended last month. That topped analysts’ average 86-cent projection.
Same-store sales exceeded estimates in the US and Japan while missing in Europe and the Asia-Pacific region.
“It’s a decent quarter, it’s good enough to support the stock here,” said Brian Yarbrough, an analyst at Edward Jones & Co. “But across the board, the business remains difficult. At some point we really need to see some acceleration in comps or there’s going to be questions,” he said, referring to same-store sales.
The jeweller is betting Alessandro Bogliolo, who takes over
as chief executive officer in early October, will further invigorate the brand.
The results follow an unexpected sales decline in the first quarter. Tiffany’s past results drew the attention of activist investor Jana Partners, which said the shares were undervalued.
Another investor, CtW Investment Group, has been pushing for more diversity and younger directors on the jeweler’s aging board.
Tiffany maintained its forecast for the full year, calling for sales to grow by a low single-digit percentage. Excluding some items, profit is expected to climb
by a mid-single-digit percentage from $3.75 a share in the last fiscal year.
Tiffany is focused on innovating designs in jewellery and luxury accessories and making marketing more impactful to bolster the in-store and online experience for customers, interim Chief Executive Officer Michael Kowalski said in a statement.

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