Levi's revenue in the recent holiday quarter was down 12% year-over-year.- Sales beat expectations as losses slowed in the fourth quarter.
- As many remote workers trade out their
jeans for sweats, Levi's is starting to sellloungewear .
Levi Strauss & Co reported its fourth-quarter earnings on Wednesday, revealing that revenue was down 12% in the holiday period - an improvement over the prior quarter.
Despite the double-digit revenue decline, the fourth quarter still generated positive cash flow, and president and CEO Chip Bergh highlighted that sales beat Wall Street expectations during an investor call Wednesday.
The holiday quarter was better than the third quarter, which saw a 27% decline in revenue, thanks in part to Black Friday. Bergh called it a "really strong year given the backdrop" of the COVID-19 pandemic.
Still, even as losses grow smaller, the future of jeans, or "hard pants," is unclear as people spend more time at home and loungewear becomes more acceptable. Experts have been predicting the end of jeans as go-to casual wear since the pandemic began, in The Wall Street Journal, The Washington Post, NPR, and other outlets, noting that jean sales were already falling before the pandemic.
Bergh and the company acknowledged that "changes look like they're here to stay," including "casualization," or more loungewear. Notably, losses were greatest in Asia, at 14%, though the continent has seen the most success in batting COVID-19 and reopening.
Levi's calls itself the "global leader in