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Mytheresa’s Operations Turn Profitable for Fiscal Q1

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Citing strength in the U.S. market and robust sales among its top spending customers, Mytheresa‘s operations turned profitable during the luxury website’s fiscal first quarter.

“Our profitability has improved significantly versus the previous year,” Michael Kliger, Mytheresa’s chief executive officer, told WWD in an interview. “There’s been a continuation of improvements in our business. We are very pleased.”

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Michael Kliger
Mytheresa chief executive officer Michael Kliger

Adjusted net income rose to 5.4 million euros in the three-month period ended Sept. 30, compared to a loss of 3.3 million euros in the year-ago period. The EBITDA margin stood at 1.4 percent compared to negative 0.6 percent in the year-ago period, a gain of 200 basis points.

Mytheresa did have a net loss of 23.5 million euros, but that was primarily due to the more than $20 million in legal and other costs associated with the pending purchase of Yoox Net-a-porter from Compagnie Financière Richemont. Other costs included impairment loss on property and equipment and share-based compensation.

Net sales grew 7.6 percent to 201.7 million euros in the quarter, up from 187.5 million euros in the prior-year period. Gross merchandise value grew 6.3 percent to 216.6 million euros.

The gross profit margin increased 150 basis points to 43.9 percent, from 42.4 percent in the prior year period, reflecting what Kliger said was “reduced promotional intensity versus last year.”

In another key metric, Mytheresa’s average order size increased by 9 percent to 720 euros, which Kliger said was an all-time high for the Munich-based business.

Wall Street liked the results, pushing Mytheresa’s stock price up $0.22, or 3.6 percent, to $6.32 by the close of the market Tuesday.

Asked what’s driving Mytheresa’s growth when much of the luxury sector is in decline, Kliger said: “Our geographic profile is more beneficial, with the U.S. representing 20 percent, and Europe, 50 percent so 70 percent of our business sits in healthy regions. We are far less exposed to China and Asia than some of the big luxury groups that are reporting no growth at the moment.

“The U.S. continues to be super strong where we have double-digit revenue growth — 14 percent plus,” Kliger said. “The U.S. now accounts for 20 percent of our business, so it is our biggest region now, and it continues to show great results. It became our largest region two quarters ago.