Higher tariffs will eventually cause price increases in the US, “but it is currently impossible to quantify these or to conclude what impact this could have on the consumer demand for our products,” Chief Executive Bjoern Gulden said in a statement.
Also Read: Adidas replaces Puma as Mercedes F1 partner post-Lewis Hamilton eraAdidas shares were little changed in early German trading, and are down 8.2% this year, a better performance than rivals Nike Inc. and Puma SE. Adidas is still benefiting from a two-year hot streak for classic sneaker models like the Samba and Gazelle, which fueled the surprisingly robust earnings the company reported last week.
Gulden has said that buzz is helping Adidas pull in new customers for apparel and performance sports gear and take market share from industry leader Nike. The company is also trying to extend the trend into other sneaker models, including the thin-soled Tokyo and Taekwondo.
Investors are assessing whether the German brand can keep up the momentum in the face of US tariffs and growing economic uncertainty. Questions include if its wholesale partners, especially in the US, are trimming their orders at all and if the retro shoe craze is showing signs of cooling.
Adidas’s first-quarter sales exceeded analyst estimates in every market except North America, where it faced the largest impact of the phasing out of the Yeezy business from the defunct partnership with the rapper Ye, Piral Dadhania, an analyst at RBC Capital Markets, said in a note.
Also Read: Adidas headquarters raided in years-long tax investigation
“Adidas is executing well in a tough consumer environment and delivering amongst the highest revenue and earnings growth across our coverage,” Dadhania said.
While Adidas doesn’t ship many shoes or apparel from China to the US, it’s heavily reliant on production in countries like Vietnam and Indonesia, which received high tariffs in Trump’s original announcement. Those levies have since been paused while the US negotiates with countries over trade.
Adidas “currently cannot produce almost any of our products in the US,” it said. Still, it’s trying “to assure that our US retail partners, and our US consumers will get the Adidas product they want at the best possible price.”
In March, Adidas said it expected to generate operating profit of €1.7 billion ($1.94 billion) to €1.8 billion this year — an outlook that disappointed investors at the time. It also forecast currency-neutral sales to grow at a high-single-digit rate. The trade war has clouded the view.
“We therefore stick to our original outlook but admit that there are uncertainties that could put negative pressure on this later in the year,” Gulden said.
Also Read: Man’s devotion to elder sister leads to Adidas copyright case — here’s how it ended