Tag Archives: Lulu

Nicole Kidman, Lulu Wang Break Down ‘Expats’ Premiere, and How Blondie’s ‘Heart of Glass’ Came to Score ‘Haunting’ Dance Scene – Variety

  1. Nicole Kidman, Lulu Wang Break Down ‘Expats’ Premiere, and How Blondie’s ‘Heart of Glass’ Came to Score ‘Haunting’ Dance Scene Variety
  2. Private yachts, occasional wife-swapping and over-the-counter Ozempic: the secret lives of expats The Telegraph
  3. Nicole Kidman Astounds in ‘Expats,’ Prime Video’s Haunting Series About Womanhood and Regret: TV Review Variety
  4. ‘Expats’ review: Lulu Wang and Nicole Kidman team up for a painful exploration of grief Mashable
  5. ‘Expats’ Premiere Recap: Episode 1: ‘The Peak’ Vulture

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U.S. Retail Sales Fell 1.1% in December

Purchases at stores, restaurants and online, declined a seasonally adjusted 1.1% in December from the prior month, the Commerce Department said Wednesday. Sales were also revised lower in November and have fallen three of the past four months. The department seasonally adjusts monthly data to make it comparable over time. On an unadjusted basis, December is typically the peak sales month for the year.

A Federal Reserve report Wednesday found economic activity was relatively flat at the start of the year and businesses are pessimistic about growth in the months ahead. A separate Fed report showed U.S. industrial production slumped in December, led by weakness in manufacturing. A Labor Department report showed inflation was cooling.

Stocks fell Wednesday after the data releases. The S&P 500 shed 1.6%. The Dow Jones Industrial Average was down 1.8%, while the Nasdaq Composite Index lost 1.2%. The yield on the benchmark 10-year Treasury note declined 0.16 percentage point to 3.374%.

The latest data add to signs that the U.S. economy is slowing as the Fed pushes up interest rates to combat inflation. Hiring and wage growth eased in December, U.S. commerce with the rest of the world declined significantly in November, and existing-home sales have fallen for 10 straight months.

S&P Global downgraded its estimate for fourth-quarter economic growth Wednesday by a half percentage point to a 2.3% annual rate. Economists surveyed by The Wall Street Journal this month expect higher interest rates to tip the U.S. economy into a recession in the coming year.

“The lag impact of elevated inflation weighs heavily on U.S. households, it’s very clear that the median American consumer is still reeling from the loss of wages in inflation-adjusted terms,” said

Joseph Brusuelas,

chief economist at RSM US LLP. “We’re moving towards what I would expect to be a mild recession in 2023,” he added.

Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis President

James Bullard

said Wednesday the central bank should keep on rapidly raising interest rates and supported a half-percentage-point increase at the Jan. 31-Feb. 1 meeting. 

“We want to err on the tighter side to make sure we get the disinflationary process to take hold in the economy,” he said at a Wall Street Journal Live event.

Mr. Bullard’s position is at odds with several of his colleagues, who have suggested that a slower pace of rate increases would be appropriate to allow Fed officials to gauge how their aggressive pace of policy tightening has affected the economy.

Inflation, while still historically high, is showing signs of cooling as demand eases. Unlike many government reports, retail sales aren’t adjusted for inflation. 

Consumer prices advanced 6.5% from a year earlier in December, the sixth straight month of deceleration. The producer-price index, which generally reflects supply conditions in the economy, fell in December from the prior month, and increased at the slowest annual pace since March 2021, the Labor Department said Wednesday.

The National Retail Federation said Wednesday holiday sales were disappointing. The trade group said November and December sales rose 5.3% compared with the same period last year to $936.3 billion. In November, the NRF said it expected holiday sales to rise between 6% and 8%. The NRF figures aren’t adjusted for inflation and exclude fuel, auto and restaurant spending.

Somewhat slower inflation at the end of the year didn’t offset weaker demand, said NRF Chief economist

Jack Kleinhenz.

 Consumers are “hit with higher food prices, they are getting hit with higher service prices and they are having to make choices,” he said. Some spending was likely pulled into October as retailers kicked off deals early this year, he added. Retailers discounted heavily and early to clear excess stock from their shelves and warehouses.

Zach Carney, of Boston, said he has been cutting back on eggs and red meat because the prices are so high. “The price of eggs really jumps out at you,” the 28-year-old publicist said. Instead, he has been stocking up on value packs of chicken and buying more store-brand cereal and olive oil, which cost less than national brands.

In 2021, officials thought high inflation would be temporary. But a year later, it was still near a four-decade high. WSJ’s Jon Hilsenrath explains factors that have kept inflation up longer than expected. Illustration: Jacob Reynolds

The retail sales report showed spending declined in a number of gift-giving categories in December, including at electronics, clothing and department stores, and with online retailers, a category which includes companies such as Amazon.com Inc.

Dining out at bars and restaurants dropped 0.9% in December. Sales of furniture and vehicles, which are sensitive to higher borrowing costs, both fell sharply. The only categories to post slight growth in December were grocery, sporting goods and home improvement stores, as winter storms battered many parts of the U.S.

Some retailers have said the recently completed holiday shopping season turned out to be weaker than expected. Macy’s Inc. warned of softer sales, and Lululemon Athletica Inc. said its profit margins were squeezed as shoppers bought more items on sale.

Many retailers had benefited from surging sales earlier in the pandemic as shoppers stocked up on everything from toilet paper to home electronics and furniture, supported by government stimulus dollars. Those tailwinds have cooled, leaving retailers and product manufactures to confront slower spending in some categories and the longer term dynamics of the industry, such as a gradual shift to online spending.

Apparel retailers are especially exposed to the current pullback in discretionary spending, said Kelly Pedersen, the U.S. retail leader at PwC, a consulting firm. “Buying fashion items at department stores is discretionary,” said Mr. Pedersen. Many apparel retailers are still working to sell through excess inventory and offering deep discounts amid weak demand, he said. 

Department stores, which saw a 6.6% sales drop in December, struggled to boost sales before the pandemic quickly shifted buying habits. In 2020, a string of department stores filed for bankruptcy, including Lord & Taylor, J.C. Penney Co., Neiman Marcus Group Ltd. and Stage Stores Inc. 

Party City Holdco Inc. filed for chapter 11 bankruptcy this week while noting inflationary pressures have hampered customers’ willingness to spend. Bed Bath & Beyond Inc. said this month it plans more layoffs and cost cuts amid falling sales.

The retail sales report offers a partial picture of consumer demand because it doesn’t include spending on many services such as travel, housing and utilities. The Commerce Department will release December household spending figures covering goods and services later this month.

Corporate reports out in February will add to that picture. Walmart Inc., Target Corp. and other large retailers—which sell a variety of goods such as food, clothes and décor—report quarterly earnings next month, which will include December sales.

Write to Harriet Torry at harriet.torry@wsj.com and Sarah Nassauer at Sarah.Nassauer@wsj.com

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Lululemon (LULU) announces new 5-year targets at analyst day 2022

A customer looks at athletic apparel inside a Lululemon store.

Xaume Olleros | Bloomberg | Getty Images

Lululemon aims to double its 2021 revenue in the next five years, putting it on track to hit $12.5 billion in sales by 2026, as the retailer rides a wave of pandemic-fueled demand for workout clothes.

Lululemon on Wednesday announced a handful of longer-term growth targets, including for its men’s business, ahead of a scheduled analyst day event. It cited three key drivers of momentum in the coming years: product innovation, customer experience and market expansion.

The athletic apparel retailer is aiming to double its men’s revenue, double its digital sales, and quadruple international revenue, all in the next five years. Lululemon teased the official debut of a new membership offering in the coming months, as well as its foray into Spain and Italy through new brick-and-mortar shops.

“We remain early in our growth journey,” said Lululemon Chief Executive Calvin McDonald, in a statement. “I am excited about taking our growth strategies to the next level.”

The retailer’s sales grew more than 40% in 2021 from the prior year, totaling $6.25 billion, fueled by a strong direct-to-consumer business and overseas momentum for its yoga pants, leggings and sports bras. That’s compared with revenue of $3.98 billion in 2019.

In April of 2019, Lululemon had laid out a number of financial targets, including doubling its then-nascent men’s business, by 2023. It ended up achieving the men’s goal two years ahead of schedule and also tripled digital revenue from 2018 to 2021.

The company’s shares are up about 25% over the past 12 months.

Lululemon said Wednesday that it projects earnings-per-share growth to outpace revenue growth in the next five years. It expects to increase its square footage annually in the low double digits. Its women’s business and North American division are projected to see low, double-digit annual compound growth rates in revenue through 2026.

Lululemon’s Chief Financial Officer Meghan Frank called the targets “bold but realistic.”

The company cited recent initiatives including its first-ever footwear collection and a trade-in and resale program that it said should help to achieve these fresh financial targets.

Lululemon is expected to share more around these goals, and answer analysts’ questions, during a meeting set to kick off later Wednesday morning.

This story is developing. Please check back for updates.

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Lululemon (LULU) Q4 2020 earnings

Pedestrians wearing protective masks walk past a Lululemon store in San Francisco, California, on Monday, March 29, 2021.

David Paul Morris | Bloomberg | Getty Images

Lululemon on Tuesday reported revenue and profit for the holiday quarter that topped analysts’ estimates, boosted by the athletic apparel maker’s online business, and double-digit sales growth in both its women’s and men’s divisions.

It also offered an upbeat outlook for sales during the current quarter and for the year, anticipating consumer demand for its sweat-wicking leggings and sports bras will continue.

Its shares were up about 1% in afterhours trading.

Here’s how Lululemon did during the quarter ended Jan. 31 compared with what analysts were expecting, based on a poll by Refinitiv:

  • Earnings per share: $2.58 adjusted vs. $2.49 expected
  • Revenue: $1.73 billion vs. $1.66 billion expected

Lululemon reported net income of $329.8 million, or $2.52 per share, compared with net income of $298 million, or $2.28 per share, a year earlier. Excluding one-time items, the company earned $2.58 per share, better than the $2.49 expected by analysts.

Its revenue spiked roughly 24% to $1.73 billion from $1.4 billion a year earlier. That topped expectations for $1.66 billion.

Its online sales surged 92%, as many consumers preferred staying put at home and shopping from the comfort of the sofa during the Covid pandemic. Women’s sales were up 19%, and men’s grew 17% during the quarter, the company said.

In North America, revenue grew 21%, while international sales rose 47%.

Direct-to-consumer sales nearly doubled, and represented 52% of total sales in the quarter, compared with 33% of sales during the year-ago period, it said.

“We are still in the early innings of our growth, fueled by exciting innovations,” CEO Calvin McDonald said in a statement.

Lululemon now expects first-quarter revenue to be in a range of $1.10 billion to $1.13 billion, compared with analysts’ average estimate of $999.5 million, according to Refinitiv.

For fiscal 2021, the company is calling for revenue to be in a range of $5.55 billion to $5.65 billion, compared with analysts’ average estimate of $5.42 billion.

It cautioned, however, that further resurgences in Covid-19, including from variants, could cause additional restrictions that could suppress shopper demand as well as lead to supply chain disruption.

For now, the company said it remains on track to hit the targets it previously charted to hit by 2023, including doubling its men’s and online sales, and quadrupling international revenues.

Lululemon also now owns the at-home fitness equipment maker Mirror, which offers another source of revenue growth beyond the pants, tops and workout accessories that it sells.

Lululemon’s shares are down about 8% year to date, as of Tuesday’s market close. Lululemon has a market cap of $41.3 billion.

Find the press release from Lululemon here.

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Lulu Wang Short Film for Chinese New Year Shot on Apple iPhone 12 Pro

Apple tapped director Lulu Wang to showcase the cinematic features of the tech company’s latest iPhone.

Wang, who wrote and directed 2019 feature film “The Farewell,” directed a new short for Apple in celebration of Chinese New Year, “Nian,” which puts a fresh twist on a well-known Chinese folktale. (Watch above or at this link.) The 11-minute film was directed by Wang and her team from “The Farewell” and shot on an iPhone 12 Pro Max.

Apple, which just reported a blowout holiday 2020 quarter with a record $65.6 billion in iPhone sales, has touted the iPhone 12 Pro models as the best smartphone it’s ever made for filmmakers. They’re the first iPhones that can record HDR video in Dolby Vision, as well as provide the ability to edit 4K video at up to 60 frames per second directly on the phone. During the launch event last fall, Apple showed a 60-second film shot in HDR video with Dolby Vision on an iPhone 12 Pro by Oscar-winning cinematographer Emmanuel “Chivo” Lubezki (watch at this link.)

With the release of the iPhone 12, Apple sales in Greater China soared to an all-time high of $21.3 billion for December 2020 quarter — and with the promotional short “Nian,” Apple’s fourth annual Chinese New York film, the tech giant wants to keep the momentum going.

Wang and her crew worked on “Nian” remotely in the U.S. with a mirror crew on the ground in China because of COVID travel restrictions. The team used the iPhone 12 Pro Max’s Dolby Vision, low-light, ultra-wide lens, telephoto lens, stabilization and time-lapse features. The production featured hard-to-shoot night scenes and scenes set inside a cave, where space and lighting were limited.

“Nian” tells the story of a brave young girl’s determination to find — and confront — the widely feared Nian beast. When she comes face to face with him, she discovers that Nian is not at all terrifying and the two strike up a beautiful friendship based on acceptance.

“It’s really exciting that we have this opportunity to retell this ancient story, to capture these incredibly cinematic images with the iPhone, this very versatile device,” Wang said in a behind-the-scenes feature accompanying the film. She said the “Nian” team had “a lot of fun just trying to figure out where else can we stick the phone so we can get angles and perspectives that are just a little bit more unique.”

“We thought, ‘Oh, why don’t we just put the phone inside of the Nian’s mouth?’ I think the size of it allows us to get all kinds of cool, specialty shots that would be much harder to get with the traditional camera,” Wang said.

Wang, whose parents emigrated from China to the U.S. when she was 6, added, “As a child, my parents wanted me to go further than they have ever gone. And yet there’s also this fear that I was going into the unknown, and so I wanted to bring that theme into this film.”

“Nian” was produced by Iconoclast in association with Apple ad agency TBWAMedia Arts Lab (Shanghai). The film features an original score by Alex Weston.

Apple’s previous films marking the Chinese New Year are “Daughter” (2020), “The Bucket” (2019) and “Three Minutes” (2018).

Watch the behind-the-scenes clip of the making of Wang’s “Nian”:



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