Category: Burberry

January 8th, 2012

Constellation Brands’ profit slumps in 3Q

ROCHESTER, N.Y. Constellation Brands Inc. said Thursday its third-quarter profit slumped 25 percent on weaker wine and beer sales in North America, price hikes that hurt sales of two popular wine brands and stepped-up promotional costs.

The results narrowly missed Wall Street estimates. Its shares fell 71 cents, or 3.5 percent, to close at $19.73 Thursday.

The world’s No. 2 winemaker by volume said revenue dropped 27 percent to $700.7 million from $966.4 million largely because it sold the bulk of its Australian and British wine business a year ago.

Its wine and spirits sales in North America fell 4 percent, and beer sales dropped 12 percent. The drop in volume was driven largely by a year-over-year shift in inventory created by a distributor network consolidation it launched in September 2009.

In addition, price increases on its low-end Arbor Mist and Vendange wines hurt sales and cut into profits along with a spending bump to launch 20 new wines and other alcoholic beverages in 2012, the company said.

On a brighter note, Chief Executive Rob Sands pointed to a long-awaited industry uptick in wine sales in bars and restaurants in the quarter.

After a sharp drop in wine sales in 2009, volumes have rebounded over the last year as Americans take advantage of more discounts to trade up to higher-priced brands. The so-called “on-premise” category was especially hard-hit and the slowest to recover.

“We’re seeing the on-premise channel up for the first time in a long time … probably in the 1 to 2 percent range,” Sands said in a conference call with analysts.

“For us, we probably gained (market) share on a dollar perspective and lost share on a volume percentage because we significantly changed the mix of products we’re selling on-premise to more high-end, premium-plus products from the lower end.”

Constellation reported net income of $104.8 million, or 52 cents per share, in the September-to-November quarter, down from $139.3 million, or 65 cents, a year earlier.

Excluding one-time items, Constellation earned 50 cents per share. Wall Street expected 53 cents per share, according to a survey by FactSet.

Its wine brands include Robert Mondavi, Clos du Bois, Ravenswood and Ruffino. Through its Crown Imports wholesale business joint venture with Mexican brewer Grupo Modelo SA, it also imports moderately priced beers such as Corona Extra, Tsingtao and St. Pauli Girl.

Based in Victor, N.Y., Constellation said it remains on track to meet its full-year profit goal. In October, it raised its comparable-basis guidance to a range of $2 to $2.10 per share. Analysts expect $2.06 a share and typically exclude one-time items from the estimates.

Constellation has been pruning methodically for five years to solidify its supremacy in higher-margin wines priced from $5 to $20 a bottle and revive profits and revenue in a choppy economy.

A family business with post-World War II roots in the Finger Lakes grape-and-wine country in western New York, Constellation jumped into California’s coveted wine market by netting Franciscan in 1999, Ravenswood in 2001 and Robert Mondavi Corp. in 2004.

Its 21 acquisitions over 21 years ran through 2007 when it bought Fortune Brands’ U.S. wine business, maker of Wild Horse and Clos Du Bois. Then came the cost-cutting.

It divested Almaden,wholesale Burberry Cheap, Inglenook and other low-priced wines that generally sell for less than $5 a bottle, paring its 300 brands to 100. It has slashed its debt to below $3 billion from $5.3 billion and shrunk its payroll to 4,300 from 9,400.

Last January, Constellation lost its eight-year status as the world’s No. 1 winemaker when it offloaded 80 percent of a once-promising Australian wine business that had gone awry.

It dropped back to No. 2 in the vintner-by-volume rankings behind longtime leader E. & J. Gallo of Modesto, Calif. But it remains the world’s biggest premium-category winemaker with an estimated 17 percent share of that segment in the United States, ahead of rivals that include Gallo, Treasury Wine Estates, Kendall-Jackson and Diageo.

January 5th, 2012

Kate Middleton is fashion’s new star

There was speculation for years about whether Prince William would finally pop the question to his longtime girlfriend Kate Middleton, and on Nov. 16, Clarence House made the announcement that there was going to be a royal wedding. As soon as details of the engagement became public with William and Kate giving an interview, the Internet became slammed with searches for Kate Middleton and her fashion. Why has this future queen become such a fashion icon in such a short amount of time, and how can the average person get her style? The answers follow.

Princess Diana was also a fashion icon, but she didn’t ever have the effect that Kate Middleton has had on the fashion world in such a short time. As soon as the engagement ring that Prince William gave Kate was revealed, jewelry sites crashed and stores were inundated with phone calls for replicas of the now famous ring. We all know that the ring was the same ring given to Princess Diana by Prince Charles, and while it was replicated then, it was not ever as popular as it is today. If you want to get your hands on a replica of the ring, a good site is Emitations.com. They sell a similar faux design for $63.99. But hurry because their selling out fast.

Kate Middleton’s Sapphire Issa Dress that she wore to announce her engagement to Prince William was also a fashion must have. As soon as the world got a glimpse of how beautiful Kate looked in the dress, everyone else wanted to follow suit. Only two days after Kate was seen wearing the Issa stunner, it was sold out in London and women were scrambling everywhere to find it. Soon after, Tesco, a retailer in the UK launched a replica version of the Issa dress and, within one hour, the dress was sold out online. Peacocks, another U.K.-based retailer, also released a version of the dress, which is now also sold out.

Soon after the announcement of the royal engagement came the official engagement photos. In the pictures Kate is pictured wearing a white Reiss dress from its fall collection. Reiss, because of the dress’ newly found popularity, has decided to re-release it as a part of their spring 2011 line. Also, the earrings that Kate wore in the photos were the Links of London”Hope Egg earrings,” are available for sale for $470. They would make the perfect present for any woman.

So if you’re eager to get one of Kate Middleton’s looks, another one of her best pieces of clothing was the white asymmetrical collar coat Kate has been seen wearing multiple times. The coat, seen here, is a classic piece that you will be able to wear long past the frenzy that Kate Middleton has caused calms down, but for now it’s very trendy too. To get this look, try the Precis coat found here.

Once the royal wedding takes place,Replica Christian Dior sunglasses, I’m sure brides across the world will be replicating her wedding dress too. Kate has caused such fashion frenzy because she is an admirable young lady who has fashion that is accessible to the average woman. A lot of fashion that celebrities in America wear is so expensive that most people can’t afford them. Kate has made fashion available to every woman.

November 13th, 2011

American Dreams

“I Love America”—that’s the anthem Paul & Joe inspired director Sophie Albou was singing as Spring 2012. Her American adoration came through in her latest accumulation in the manner of pants, brimmed ponchos, and reworked army surplus looks. Style.com’s Tim Blanks went backstage by the Paul & Joe Paris show apt find out extra approximately the inspiration after Albou’s American girl. Watch the movie immediately.