Ralph Lauren Corp
F:PRL
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Ralph Lauren Corp
F:PRL
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Ralph Lauren Corp
Ralph Lauren makes and sells clothing, shoes, accessories, home goods, and fragrances under the Ralph Lauren brand and related labels. Its products are built around a classic American lifestyle image, with staples like polo shirts, dress shirts, outerwear, leather goods, and furniture-style home items. The company sells to both men and women, and also offers kids’ products in some lines. The company reaches shoppers through its own stores, its website, outlet locations, and third-party retailers such as department stores and specialty shops. It makes money mainly by selling finished goods at retail and wholesale prices, and it also earns income from brand licensing in categories like fragrance and some other products. That mix lets Ralph Lauren control how its brand looks while still reaching a wide customer base. What makes Ralph Lauren different is that it is not just an apparel maker; it is a brand business built around a clear image and lifestyle. Customers are buying the Ralph Lauren name and the style it stands for, not only the fabric or construction of the product. That brand power gives the company a role similar to a fashion house and a consumer products company at the same time.
Ralph Lauren makes and sells clothing, shoes, accessories, home goods, and fragrances under the Ralph Lauren brand and related labels. Its products are built around a classic American lifestyle image, with staples like polo shirts, dress shirts, outerwear, leather goods, and furniture-style home items. The company sells to both men and women, and also offers kids’ products in some lines.
The company reaches shoppers through its own stores, its website, outlet locations, and third-party retailers such as department stores and specialty shops. It makes money mainly by selling finished goods at retail and wholesale prices, and it also earns income from brand licensing in categories like fragrance and some other products. That mix lets Ralph Lauren control how its brand looks while still reaching a wide customer base.
What makes Ralph Lauren different is that it is not just an apparel maker; it is a brand business built around a clear image and lifestyle. Customers are buying the Ralph Lauren name and the style it stands for, not only the fabric or construction of the product. That brand power gives the company a role similar to a fashion house and a consumer products company at the same time.
Revenue Beat: Ralph Lauren reported 10% revenue growth in Q3, ahead of its mid-single-digit outlook, with strong performances across all regions and channels.
Margin Expansion: Gross margin expanded by 140 basis points to 69.8%, and operating margin increased 200 basis points to 20.7%, both beating plans.
AUR Surge: Average unit retail (AUR) rose 18% in Q3, driven by reduced discounting, strong full-price demand, and favorable mix, with no signs of price resistance.
Guidance Raised: The company raised full-year revenue growth guidance to high single to low double digits (from 5–7% previously) and now expects operating margin to expand by 100–140 basis points.
Asia and China Strength: Asia sales rose 22%, with China up over 30%, outpacing expectations and supported by new customer acquisition.
Marketing Investment: Marketing spend was increased to 8% of sales in Q3 and full-year guidance was raised to 7.5–8% of sales, reflecting confidence in ROI.
Tariff and Cost Pressures: Higher US tariffs and input costs are headwinds, especially for Q4, but are being offset by pricing power and cost mitigation strategies.
AI and Digital Momentum: AI-powered tools like "Ask Ralph" are helping drive customer engagement, personalization, and first-party data collection.