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Inventory clean-up helps Puma beat first-quarter expectations 

April 30, 2026 2:20 AM EDT

Athletics - Puma event in Tokyo ahead of the World Athletics Championships - Tokyo, Japan - September 12, 2025 A new Nitro elite running shoe is presented ahead of the World Athletics Championships REUTERS/Issei Kato

By Linda Pasquini

April 30 (Reuters) - German sportswear maker ‌Puma on Thursday ​reported first-quarter ​sales and operating profit that beat expectations, supported by faster-than-expected inventory clearance.

It also announced a new chief financial officer, the latest of a series of changes to its leadership roles as it ‌seeks to turn its business around in the face of sluggish demand for its sports outfits ⁠and sneakers as well as an industry-wide hit from U.S. tariffs on imports.

Shares rose 3.7% by 0952 GMT. They have declined around 40% ‌over the past two years.

Earnings before ‌interest and taxes (EBIT) rose 19.6% to 51.9 million euros ($60.5 million), compared with analysts' estimates of 43 million euros in a company-provided poll.

This was driven by a higher gross profit margin, the company said. It is gradually reintroducing ​previously recalled inventory into the market through selected partners in the wholesale channel and selling more products directly to consumers, while facing lower freight costs.

Local rival Adidas ADSGn.DE on Wednesday also reported stronger than expected first-quarter ⁠operating profit and sales, helped by early demand for its World Cup soccer products.

Puma said a solid quarterly performance in the soccer category had benefited from ​strong demand for its World Cup kits, but declined to provide specific numbers.

More broadly, the company has recalled unsold goods and discounted its products in an effort to clean ​up inventory in the context of weak consumer demand and heavy ‌industry markdowns.

Some colours of its Speedcat sneakers can currently be seen offered at a 50% discount on Puma's UK website.

Currency-adjusted sales reached 1.86 billion euros, down by 1% but above ⁠the 1.82 billion euros forecast by analysts, while inventories declined by 8.6% in reported terms to 1.9 billion.

"We've seen a mid-double-digit decline in our inventory levels at selected (U.S.) wholesale partners," CEO Arthur Hoeld told journalists on a call, reaffirming Puma's target to normalize ⁠stock levels by end of 2026.

MANAGEMENT RESHUFFLING CONTINUES

The results provide an early sign of progress for Hoeld, who took the helm last ​July.

Puma, which has cut jobs and reshuffled managerial roles in a quest to reduce complexity, also announced it appointed former Hugo Boss CEO and Douglas CFO Mark Langer as its chief financial officer, effective Friday.

"CFO Markus Neubrand is being replaced with a consumer ‌veteran in Mark Langer (...) which should be taken well by the markets given his capital markets experience," Deutsche Bank analysts wrote in a note to clients.

In March, a filing ‌showed billionaire Mike Ashley's Frasers had become the second-largest shareholder in the sportswear brand after China's Anta Sports Products, which had ⁠earlier agreed to buy a 29% stake in ‌Puma.

Frasers has in the past used ​its minority shareholdings in companies as leverage to push for strategic changes.

($1 = 0.8574 euros)

(Reporting by Linda Pasquini, additional reporting by Helen Reid and Alexander Huebner; Editing by Thomas Seythal, Christopher Cushing and ‌Keith Weir)



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