On a more upbeat note, Peloton hinted that it plans to launch new products in the coming weeks and months. Plus, parka maker Canada Goose posted better-than-expected earnings for the quarter.

(Bloomberg)—Peloton Interactive Inc. shares plummeted the most ever after the company cut its annual revenue forecast by as much as $1 billion and lowered its projections for subscribers and profit margins.

The fitness companybest known for its exercise bikes and remote classesnow expects sales of $4.4 billion to $4.8 billion in fiscal 2022, which ends next June. Less than three months ago, it had been predicting revenue of $5.4 billion. On an earnings call with analysts, Peloton said it underestimated the impact of economic reopenings.

The grim outlook sent the stock down as much as 34% to an intraday low of $56.39 Friday morning in New York. Several analysts downgraded their ratings. Even before the swoon, Peloton shares were down 43% this year.

“Pandemic poster child in transition mode to the ‘new normal,’” MKM Partners analyst Rohit Kulkarni wrote in a note to investors.

Peloton, No. 69 in the 2021 Digital Commerce 360 Top 1000, was a pandemic phenomenon, with customers flocking to home-exercise services during lockdowns. Now people are heading back to the office, school and gyms, sapping demand for the company’s equipment. Supply chain constraints, as well as the soaring costs of commodities and freight, also are weighing on Peloton.

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“We anticipated fiscal 2022 would be a very challenging year to forecast,” management said in a letter to shareholders Thursday. “We will be taking concrete steps to reexamine our expense base and adjust our operating costs.”

At best, Peloton currently expects to have 3.45 million connected fitness subscriptions by the end of the fiscal year. It had previously called for 3.63 million. And gross profit margin will be 32%, compared with an earlier forecast of 34%. All that will add up to a loss of as much as $475 million, excluding some items.

On Peloton’s earnings call, co-founder and CEO John Foley said the “swift” change in its outlook is “not lost on us” and that visibility into its future performance has become more limited. Executives added that traffic to Peloton’s retail stores and website tapered more than anticipated, but the company saw positive response to price changes and launches internationally, particularly in Australia.

The company cut the price of its original bike by $400 in August, and that too has hurt profitability especially since more shoppers than expected opted for that model over other products.

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“A softer-than-anticipated start” to the second fiscal quarter contributed to the company’s decision to rethink its forecast, according to the letter. But Peloton added that its “confidence in and commitment to our strategy is unchanged.”

Like several other companies, Peloton also blamed Apple Inc.’s ad-related privacy changes, which have made it more difficult to target shoppers based on their interests.

Efforts to rein in costs probably won’t begin to show up for a quarter or two, the New York-based company said. Peloton expects to be profitable — before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization — by fiscal 2023.

Revenue rose 6% to $805.2 million last quarter. That was just above Peloton’s $800 million forecast, but below the roughly $809 million anticipated by analysts. The company posted a net loss of $1.25 a share.

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The slim growth came from a 94% increase in revenue from subscriptions, which totaled $304.1 million. Hardware sales fell 17% to $501 million in the first quarter.

Peloton expects to report between $1.1 billion and $1.2 billion in revenue for in the second fiscal quarter, which ends in December. That would miss Wall Street estimates of $1.5 billion. It’s projecting 2.8 million to 2.85 million in total fitness subscribers by the end of the period.

On a more upbeat note, the company hinted that it plans to launch new products in the coming weeks and months. Peloton has been working on a rowing machine and a heart-rate monitor that attaches to a wearer’s arm, Bloomberg News has reported.

Peloton previously introduced a line of treadmills but had to recall both models in May. In August, it brought back the lower-end treadmill, but not the more expensive version, which was linked to a child’s death.

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On its call Thursday, Peloton said that it expects the first fiscal quarter to be the “trough” of its results for fiscal 2022 and that inventories are healthy going into the holiday season. But its Precor businessa division acquired this year that sells workout machines to gyms, hotels and dormshas faced supply chain struggles.

As people continue to return to the office, the average number of monthly workouts fell to 16.6 per subscription from 20.7 a year earlier. In-person gyms, meanwhile, are seeing their fortunes recover. Planet Fitness Inc. jumped to a record high on Thursday after delivering a better-than-anticipated forecast.

Peloton also is trying to shed its upscale image, which may put off many middle-class consumers.

“There remains a lingering perception that Peloton is a luxury item,” the company said. “We intend to amplify the platform’s value proposition via increased marketing ahead of and during our key seasonal selling period.”

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Canada Goose CEO says supply chain is healthy

Parka maker Canada Goose Holdings Inc. (No. 182) posted better-than-expected earnings for the quarter that ended Sept. 26 and raised projections for the full year. The shares jumped 12% during pre-market trading in New York.

Supply chain bottlenecks that are slowing the global economy aren’t affecting Canada Goose, CEO Dani Reiss said in an interview. The company has “all the finished goods and all the raw materials that we need to satisfy all of demand for this year” and enough to make inventory for next year, he said.

Reiss said he expects an “outstanding fiscal 2022.” as the company raised its full-year forecast to C$1.17 to C$1.33 in adjusted earnings per share, higher than analysts’ forecasts for C$1.16.

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  • The Toronto-based company posted adjusted earnings per share of 12 Canadian cents in the second fiscal quarter, while analysts had expected a loss of 10 cents per share. Revenue of C$232.9 million also beat forecasts.
  • Reiss said the manufacturer doesn’t expect “any material revenue headwinds relating to supply or shipping constraints this fall or winter.”
  • Canada Goose is in the midst of a strategic shift to rely less on third-party sellers, disrupting its business patterns as consumers tend to buy closer to the winter months. Still, revenue from wholesalers was up 25% from last year, when the pandemic led them to delay orders.
  • In China, where Canada Goose has added several stores during the pandemic, direct sales climbed 86%. A Shanghai’s market regulator’s fine for allegedly misleading consumers appears to have had little effect on the Goose brand’s appeal. Reiss said there has been no impact, adding sales in China have been accelerating.
  • Margins at its flagship stores and on the website slipped, in part because of the end of government wage subsidies linked to the Covid-19 crisis. Some price increases helped boost gross margins with wholesalers.
  • The brand has been expanding its product lines, most recently with first footwear collection, which it will roll out next week. David Beckham’s son Romeo is one of the celebrities hired to promote the new line.
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