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Non-Tech : Just For Feet (FEET) -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Don Dorsey who wrote (607)7/22/1998 1:20:00 AM
From: lanac  Respond to of 750
 
Faces Changing Industry
By PHILANA PATTERSON
Dow Jones Newswires

NEW YORK -- Once the superstar of athletic footwear retailing, Venator Group Inc. (Z) may be caught in a swirl of fundamental change in the industry.

Tuesday, the company, formerly named Woolworth, said it expects to report a fiscal second-quarter loss of 5 cents to 10 cents a share, which is below the First Call Corp. estimate of 21 cents a share. The company earned 19 cents a share in the year-ago period.

The owner of Foot Locker, Lady Foot Locker, Champs and other specialty retail chains also said if current sales trends continue throughout the second half of the year, full-year earnings, excluding its pending acquisition of Sports Authority Inc. (TSA) and nonrecurring items, could be between $1.10 and $1.20 per share. The First Call estimate for the year is $1.72 a share.

Sports Authority also said Tuesday that its fiscal second-quarter earnings will be between 12 cents and 14 cents a share, below the First Call estimate of 25 cents a share. The company earned 30 cents a share in the year-ago period.

For more than a year, the athletic footwear and apparel industry has been struggling with a reduction in demand. In the U.S., fashion shifted toward brown shoes and away from basketball and cross-training athletic shoes. In Asia, which was once pegged as a key growth market for athletic products, consumer demand slowed because of the economic crisis there. The situation created a glut of inventory that has put a lot of bargain-priced athletic footwear in the marketplace.

That hasn't seemed to hurt retailers such as Just For Feet Inc. (FEET) and Finish Line Inc. (FINL), which have the room in their stores and the customer demand to sell closeout merchandise. Both companies said they have taken advantage of the inventory glut to stock up on and sell discounted merchandise.

"We've chosen different routes," said Finish Line Chief Financial Officer Steve Schneider. "Our market is men, women and children, not just young fashionable males."

Catering to the family and using a larger format have made the difference for his company and Finish Line, said Just For Feet Chairman and Chief Executive Harold Ruttenberg.

In addition, adding entertainment to the mix as Just For Feet has done with in-store basketball courts and video walls also helps drive traffic, Ruttenberg said. Its stores are up to 20,000 square feet and most are freestanding or located in strip shopping centers as opposed to indoor malls. Finish Line stores are up to 25,000 square feet and have a more upscale look.

"We have a much newer and fresher approach," Ruttenberg said.

Employing new approaches is helping companies such as Just For Feet take market share in a changing business. Young males - the market segment on which Venator built its athletic business - are no longer the driving force in the athletic shoe industry, said Mike Kormas, president of Footwear Market Insights. Stores are now finding that their core ethnic consumers are choosing dressier styles, he said. In order to compete, retailers must show differentiation, whether it's from a price, entertainment or selection standpoint. Creating an environment where families and people over age 35 want to shop has also become more important.

"The big-box retailers have created a new environment as opposed to the smaller mall-based stores," Kormas said.

Venator's proposed acquisition of Sports Authority would provide an additional format that could potentially help Venator compete with growing athletic footwear companies and expand its focus from the young men's fashion market.

That is, if the acquisition happens. Denver-based sporting goods company Gart Sports Co. (GRTS) made a bid for Sports Authority last week that appears to top Venator's proposal. And even if Sports Authority rebuffs Gart's offer, Venator's stock is trading at levels that could jeopardize the deal. Sports Authority has the option of delaying or even terminating the merger if Venator's stock falls below $20.50 in the 20 trading days before the vote, which is expected later this summer.

Venator's NYSE-listed shares fell 2 3/4, or 13.1%, to 18 1/4 Tuesday on volume of about 3.3 million, compared with average daily volume of 652,500. Earlier, the shares fell to 17 3/4, a 52-week low; the previous low of 18 1/4 was set Oct. 30, 1997. Sports Authority's NYSE-listed shares were down 12.5%, or 2 1/16, at 14 1/2 on volume of 1.2 million, compared with average daily volume of 456,500.

"(Venator) probably thought that once they closed the Woolworth stores that they would be on the way up, but that hasn't happened," said Argus Research analyst David Toung. "It used to be that every six weeks, kids were buying a new pair of shoes - what a machine - but that's not happening anymore."

But Venator is making some efforts to fit in the new athletic environment in other ways outside the pending Sports Authority acquisition. The company is gradually adding larger stores. Its three-year, $1 billion-plus capital spending program will provide for the remodeling of many of its stores, a spokesman said. When the remodels are complete, more than half its stores will be less than three years old. Many of the stores will also be bigger. Now the stores have about 1,500 square feet of selling space. The remodels will boost that to 2,000 square feet.

The company has also struck deals to be the exclusive carrier of women's Saucony Inc. (SCNYA, SCNYB) products in Lady Foot Locker and Champion brand footwear in Foot Locker and Kids Foot Locker.

But no matter what Venator, Just For Feet or other athletic players do, the industry is undergoing fundamental change, said Footwear Market Insights' Kormas.

"In order to grow, retail (companies) are going to have to take market share," Kormas said.

Just For Feet said in June it would buy privately held Sneaker Stadium Inc. Consolidation will likely continue, Kormas and Just For Feet's Ruttenberg said.

And Venator will have to work harder to deal with the competition.

"They had it too easy for a long time," Ruttenberg said. "Stuff was just blowing off their shelves."

- Philana Patterson; 201-938-5360

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Briefing Book for: FEET | FINL | GRTS | SCNYA | SCNYB | TSA | Z


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Copyright c 1998 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. All Rights Reserved.



To: Don Dorsey who wrote (607)7/22/1998 1:22:00 AM
From: lanac  Respond to of 750
 
Sporting-Goods Retailers Warn
Weak Sales Will Hurt Results
By YUMIKO ONO
Staff Reporter of THE WALL STREET JOURNAL

Venator Group Inc. and Sports Authority Inc. said dismal sales of athletic shoes and clothes will sharply reduce their fiscal second-quarter results. Each company's shares tumbled 13% on the disclosures.

The share prices of the sporting-goods retailers are being watched closely on Wall Street, given that Venator has had a stock offer on the table to acquire Sports Authority since May, and last week a competing bidder emerged.

In May, Venator, which recently changed its name from Woolworth Corp., agreed to pay 0.8 share for each of Sports Authority's approximately 31.6 million shares outstanding. Based on Venator's closing price Tuesday, that offer has a value of about $461.4 million. But last Thursday, Gart Sports Co., Denver, outbid Venator with an unsolicited offer for 70% of Sports Authority at $20 a share, or about $442 million. The Gart offer values the entire company at about $630 million.

Venator, New York, wouldn't comment on whether it will revise its bid. Sports Authority, Fort Lauderdale, Fla., which said last week that it was evaluating Gart's bid, declined to comment further. Gart said its offer still stands, and is awaiting response from Sports Authority.

Tuesday, citing an oversupply of sports merchandise that forced it to discount prices heavily, Venator said it expects to report a net loss of five cents to 10 cents a diluted share for the quarter ending Aug. 1. Venator's net was expected to be 21 cents a share, according to a consensus estimate from First Call. Venator's stores include Foot Locker, Lady Foot Locker and Champs Sports. A year earlier, Venator, as Woolworth, reported income from continuing operations of $26 million, or 19 cents a share. That excluded a $207 million loss from discontinued operations, namely its well-known five-and-dime stores.

Sports Authority said earnings for the quarter ending July 26 are expected to be 12 cents to 14 cents a diluted share, off from analysts' estimates of 25 cents a share. The company's year-earlier earnings were $9.6 million, or 30 cents a share. The company said sales in stores open a year or more are expected to fall between 2% and 3% in the second quarter.

In composite New York Stock Exchange trading Tuesday, Venator's shares fell $2.75 to $18.25, a 52-week-low, and Sports Authority's fell $2.0625 to $14.50.

Both companies have struggled as more young consumers shun sneakers in favor of boots and leather shoes.

Venator, which is the nation's largest retailer of athletic shoes and clothes, has been struggling in an increasingly competitive market. Rivals, including Just for Feet Inc., are building some stores that are several times larger than many Foot Lockers. Others, such as Finish Line Inc., are capitalizing on the glut of sneakers by stocking up on closeout merchandise and selling it at a discount. Venator typically sells the latest model sneakers, at full price.

If the weak sales trends continue, Venator said, it expects its full-year earnings to be $1.10 to $1.20 a diluted share, below analysts' estimates of $1.72 a share. In the year ended Jan. 31, income from continued operations was $213 million, or $1.57 a diluted share.

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