Ralph Lauren, an American fashion and lifestyle brand once again delivering revenue growth while many other firms have reported significant declines. The company’s Q1 results, released on 7 August, continued this positive trend.

Regarding this, Patrice Louvet, President and CEO of Ralph Lauren said, “While we continue to approach the current global operating environment with prudence, we are encouraged by the broad-based strength in our brand and our businesses as we execute on our long-term strategic priorities.
Including recruiting new and younger consumers, strengthening our core and high-potential categories, and developing our key city ecosystems in each region, he added.
The company’s outlook factors in the expected impact of tariffs and softer consumer sentiment. In May, Ralph Lauren announced plans to shift production to countries facing lower U.S. tariff rates. CFO Justin Picicci explained at the time that no single country accounts for more than 20% of the brand’s production.
By segment, Ralph Lauren’s Q1 retail sales grew 16%, wholesale rose 8.5%, and licensing increased 1%.
The brand’s focus on selling, marketing, and merchandising has boosted margins and pricing, with the average unit retail price climbing 14% this quarter, according to David Swartz, senior equity analyst at Morningstar Research Services.
Looking ahead to Q2, Ralph Lauren expects revenue growth in the high single digits, with momentum from Q4 last year carrying into Q1 this year, led by direct-to-consumer (DTC) and digital channels. The company anticipates Q2 growth to also be driven primarily by DTC.
Evercore analysts led by Michael Benetti noted in a client report that they had previously believed Ralph Lauren’s guidance strategy was intentionally conservative “to be able to demonstrate the strength of its model,” but the new projections are “well above consensus.”
“And importantly, RL is signaling that it has not changed its 2H guidance…leaving room for consistent positive revisions throughout the year,” Benetti added.

