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adidas-Salomon in the first nine months of 2001:

Sales Exceed Targets, 2001 EPS Target Unchanged +++ Impressive Q3 sales development: North America up for the first time this year +++ North American Footwear backlogs positive for the first time in ten quarters +++ Major working capital improvement, led by inventories +++ Group sales up 6 percent, growth in all product divisions

November 06, 2001

Herzogenaurach, 06/11/01 - adidas-Salomon net sales in the first nine months of 2001 increased by 6 percent to € 4.7 billion, compared to € 4.4 billion in the prior year. The sales increase in the third quarter was 7 percent to € 1.8 billion, compared to € 1.7 billion a year earlier.

Footwear sales increased 6 percent to € 2.1 billion in the first nine months. Apparel sales grew 3 percent to € 1.7 billion. Hardware sales improved 15 percent to € 852 million.

Positive sales performance continues for all brands

adidas brand sales increased 4 percent in the third quarter to € 1.4 billion, driving sales for the first nine months to € 3.8 billion, a 4 percent increase year-over-year.

TaylorMade-adidas Golf increased net sales in the first nine months by 22 percent year-over-year to € 438 million and grew 19 percent to € 113 million in the third quarter.

Salomon sales increased by 15 percent to € 384 million in the first nine months, boosted by strong growth in all alpine categories and higher inline skate sales in North America. Sales in the third quarter gained 23 percent to € 221 million.

North American sales up for the first time this year

Net sales for adidas-Salomon in North America increased 1 percent in the third quarter to € 536 million. This was the first quarter of positive sales development for the Group in the region this year and brought year-to-date performance to minus 2 percent or € 1.4 billion.

European sales grew 8 percent in the third quarter to € 933 million and 8 percent in the first nine months to reach € 2.4 billion. In Asia, sales grew 17 percent in the third quarter to € 265 million and 18 percent year-to-date to € 693 million. In Latin America, net sales declined by 10 percent to € 47 million for the quarter as a result of generally weaker market conditions but remained up 7 percent year-to-date versus the prior year at € 129 million.

Gross margin at 42.8 percent

The gross margin in the first nine months of 2001 was 42.8 percent. This represents a 0.6 percentage point decline versus the previous year and was the result of currency impacts on product purchasing prices as well as the highly promotional environment in North America. In the third quarter, the gross margin for the Group decreased 1.4 percentage points to 42.0 percent.

Strict cost control contributes to operating profit improvements

Strict cost control led nine-month operating profit to rise 9 percent to € 420 million versus € 384 million the previous year. In the third quarter operating profit gained 4 percent to € 222 million, compared to € 214 million a year earlier.

IBT up 1 percent for the first nine months

Income before taxes reached € 330 million for the first nine months of the year, compared to € 326 million a year earlier. This represents a year-over-year increase of 1 percent and was the result of strong sales development, stable margins and strict cost control, but higher financial expenses. In the third quarter, the IBT grew 1 percent to € 191 million versus € 190 million the prior year.

EPS increases 4 percent year-to-date

Net income increased 9 percent in the third quarter to € 114 million or € 2.51 per share, compared to € 105 million or € 2.31 per share in the prior year. In the first nine months net income rose 4 percent to € 184 million and earnings per share were € 4.07, versus € 177 million or € 3.91 per share a year earlier.

North American Footwear backlogs currency-neutral positive for the first time in ten quarters

Order backlogs for the adidas brand continued to develop positively. At the end of September, orders were 3 percent above the previous year’s level on a currency-neutral basis. The backlog situation in North America improved significantly, increasing 12 percentage points to minus 1 percent versus the prior quarter on a currency-neutral basis. In particular, Footwear made significant progress, becoming positive for the first time in ten quarters. In Asia, backlogs increased 32 percent in constant currency.

Big strides made in working capital

Inventories for the Group were up less than 1 percent at the end of September versus the previous year. The inventory aging structure also developed positively. These results reflect the significant progress adidas-Salomon has already made on the management of its working capital.

At the end of September, receivables increased 8 percent versus the previous year. This was largely in line with sales increases for the Group during the third quarter.

Shareholders’ equity increased 13 percent year-over-year and now represents 23 percent of adidas-Salomon total assets.

Outlook

The results recorded for the first nine months of 2001 are in line with expectations and support the full year outlook. The events of September 11, 2001 had no significant impact on the adidas-Salomon results in the third quarter. While increased market uncertainty does make future performance more difficult to predict, adidas-Salomon continues to expect consolidated sales growth of around 5 percent for 2001. The targeted 15 percent earnings increase for the current year remains unchanged and growth in all business categories will continue in 2002.

Statement from Herbert Hainer, adidas-Salomon CEO

“The impact of the events of September 11, 2001 is still being assessed throughout our Company. While it is inevitable that these events will have negative effects on the world economy and our industry, we continue to believe that we are well positioned within the market to meet our 15 percent earnings growth target for 2001 and further grow our business in 2002.”
 

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