Q1 2025 Birkenstock Holding PLC Earnings Call

Thomson Reuters StreetEvents
21 Feb

Participants

Megan Kulick; Director- Investor Relations; Birkenstock Holding PLC

Oliver Reichert; Chief Executive Officer, Director; Birkenstock Holding PLC

Erik Massmann; Chief Financial Officer; Birkenstock Holding PLC

Ivica Krolo; Chief Financial Officer; Birkenstock Holding PLC

Alexander Hoff; VP Global Finance; Birkenstock Holding PLC

David Kahan; President of Americas; Birkenstock Holding PLC

Klaus Baumann; Chief Sales Officer; Birkenstock Holding PLC

Jay Sole; Analyst; UBS Investment Bank

Matthew Boss; Analyst; JPMorgan Chase & Co

Randy Konik; Analyst; Jefferies

Paul Lejuez; Analyst; $Citigroup Inc(C-N)$.

Simeon Siegel; Analyst; BMO Capital Markets Equity Research

Dana Telsey; Analyst; Telsey Advisory Group

Lorraine Hutchinson; Analyst; BofA Securities

Michael Benetti; Analyst; Evercore Inc.

Anna Andreeva; Analyst; Piper Sandler & Co.

Sam Poser; Analyst; William Trading

Erwan Rambourg; Analyst; HSBC

Jim Duffy; Analyst; Stifel

Jeanine Stichter; Analyst; BTIG

Presentation

Operator

Good morning, and thank you for standing by. Welcome to Birkenstocks first quarter 2025 earnings conference call. (Operator Instructions) , Following the presentation, we will conduct a question-and-answer session. The company allocated 60 minutes in total to this conference call. I would like to remind everyone that this conference call is being recorded. I will now turn over the call to Megan Kulik, Director of Investor Relations.

Megan Kulick

Hello, and thank you, everyone, for joining us today. On the call are Oliver Reichert, Director of Birkenstock Holdings Plc and Chief Executive Officer of the Birkenstock Group. Erik Massmann, the outgoing Chief Financial Officer of the Birkenstock Group; and Ivica Krolo, Chief Financial Officer of the Birkenstock Group as of February 1.
Klaus Baumann, Chief Sales Officer; David Kahan, President Americas; Nico Bouyakhf, President, EMEA; Alexander Hoff, Vice President, Global Finance, will also join us for the Q&A.
Today, we are reporting the financial results of our fiscal first quarter of 2025 ending December 31, 2024. The -- you may find the press release and a supplemental presentation connected to today's discussion on our Investor Relations website at birkenstock-holding.com.
We would like to remind you that some of the information provided during this call is forward-looking and accordingly, is subject to the safe harbor provisions of the federal securities laws. These statements are subject to various risks, uncertainties and assumptions which could cause our actual results to differ materially from these statements. These risks, uncertainties and assumptions are detailed in this morning's press release as well as in our filings with the SEC, which can be found on our website at birkenstockholdings.com.
We undertake no obligation to revise or update any forward-looking statements or information, except as required by law. During the call, all revenue growth rates will be cited on a constant currency basis unless otherwise stated. We will also refer to certain non-IFRS financial information.
We use non-IFRS measures as we believe they represent the operational performance and underlying results of our business more accurately. The presentation of this non-IFRS financial information is not intended to be considered by itself or as a substitute for the financial information prepared and presented in accordance with IFRS. Reconciliations of IFRS to non-IFRS measures can be found in this morning's press release and in our SEC filings.
As a reminder, this quarter marks the first quarter we are reporting under our new operating and reporting segments: the Americas, EMEA and APAC. We filed a 6-K on January 16 with a recast of fiscal 2023 and 2024 segment results to align with the new reporting structure and to aid in your analysis of our results.
With that, I'll turn it over to Oliver.

Oliver Reichert

Good morning, everybody, and thank you for joining today's call. Before I start the quarterly review, I want to thank Erik for his strong leadership and guidance over the past two years as we navigated the IPO process and first year as a public company. Erik, I wish you all the best in your future personal and professional life.
And of course, I want to welcome Ivica Krolo to the Birkenstock family. Ivica brings the operational background we need as we allocate our resources to the most attractive opportunities for both revenue growth and cost containment. Ivica also brings the technical background to continue Erik's efforts to level up our finance function across all areas, including audit, tax and FP&A. I look forward to working with you as we write the next chapter of our success story. Welcome Ivica.
We are proud to report a very strong start to our fiscal 2025 and -- with record first quarter results, which came in ahead of our expectations, driven by very strong holiday demand for Birkenstock products. We delivered 19% revenue growth in the first quarter above the high end of our 15% to 17% target for the full year. Revenue growth was supported by double-digit volume growth and mid-single-digit growth in average selling price.
Growth in our B2B business benefited from very strong sell-through and reorders from our key wholesale partners throughout the holiday season. And our DTC business also strengthened during the critical holiday shopping period as strong gifting demand for styles such as the Boston clog led to record traffic to our website.
We are starting fiscal 2025, much in the same way we exited fiscal 2024 with strong and growing demand from our core markets and products by leaning into the white space growth opportunities we have identified. Closed-toe shoes, the APAC region and own retail.
During the quarter, revenue from closed-toe silhouettes grew at over twice the rate of the overall group, an increased share of business by 600 basis points, accounting for well over half of the revenue in the quarter. Our peak winter quarter.
During the first quarter, 12 of our top 20 selling silhouettes were closed-toe, including six in clogs and six in traditional laced up shoes and foot category. We are very successfully turning Birkenstock into a four season brand.
Our APAC business grew at 47%, 2.5 times the pace of the overall business. and we opened four new own retail doors during the first quarter, bringing the total to 71 stores globally. By channel, as expected, we saw continued strength in our wholesale business, which grew by 30% during the first quarter of 2025. Once again, over 90% of the growth came from within existing doors as our partners continue to allocate more shelf space to the business shop brands.
Our DTC business grew 10% and a strong result when compared to the 30% growth in the year ago quarter. As we look to Q2 and the remainder of 2025, we expect more balanced growth between our DTC and B2B businesses. With DTC likely to grow slightly faster than B2B in the second half of the year as we continue to add additional stores and invest in our digital business globally. Our membership base continued to grow nicely, reaching 8.8 million loyal members, up nearly 30% year-over-year.
Now let's move to a brief discussion of segment performance for the year. Within our largest segment, the Americas, we experienced strong consumer demand for our brands throughout the quarter, especially around the peak holiday shopping period. Revenue in the region was up 16% compared to the first quarter of 2024. Closed-toe share of business reached nearly two-third of driven by the incredibly strong demand for clogs, a category like sandals that is becoming synonymous with the name Birkenstock and making us a year around World Group stable.
B2B was especially strong as many of our strategic partners allocated more space to Birkenstock and experienced very strong holiday sell-through with many high-demand styles. -- such as the Boston Clog selling out at most retail partners.
Americas B2C, which is almost entirely from our digital business, strengthened late in the quarter as shoppers sort out high-demand holiday gifting at, including clocks, home shoes and our shelling executions, especially at the cold weather setting. Search for Birkenstock clogs was up over the critical holiday shopping period versus last year, driving increased traffic to businessshop.com.
We expanded our physical retail presence, opening our Boston Newbury Street store during the quarter, the ninth location in the US, and we plan to add several additional stores later this year. In EMEA, we delivered growth of 17%, which was broad-based across all countries. This result stands out in the current market environment. characterized by flat market growth, macro economic challenges and uncertainties.
As consumers switch to their winter wall grow, they remain loyal to the Birkenstock brands. close-toe, including clogs, grew over 2.5 times faster than sandals, driving ASP higher.
Laced up shoes and boots were up over 50% and increased share of business by 300 basis points. In our online channel in EMEA 16 of our top 20 selling styles were close-toe, including seven boots. Shoes became the number two category in EMEA. showcasing strong growth in this important expansionary category. In our B2B channel, we doubled share of business in shoes compared to last year. and continue to see strong growth in our order book for spring-summer '25.
We were pleased to see that Birkenstock was a top choice and holiday wish list with sell-throughs at our key retail partners, increasing up to 30% year-over-year during gifting season. We opened a new store in Amsterdam, Netherlands during the quarter, bringing our store count in EMEA to 35 and identified key locations throughout Europe for additional own retail stores through 2025.
I -- the APAC region was again the fastest growing segment in the quarter, growing 47%, 2.5 times the pace of the overall business and now representing 13% of total revenue, up from 10.5% a year ago. Growth in the quarter benefited from an accelerated pace of store openings and earlier shipments to some B2B partners as we continue to make progress toward penetrating this significant white space for the Birkenstock brand.
Aligned with our road map and commitment to the region, we added two new own retail stores. bringing our total to 27 in the APAC region. We also expanded our strategic partnerships, increasing our mono brand partner doors by 19. We expect the pace of openings to moderate in the coming quarters, leading to a more normalized APAC growth rate of double the group average.
Greater China made up approximately 30% share of APAC revenue and grew above segment average. We are still in the early stages of our market rollout there, but are steadily building brand awareness and demand through our increased retail and online presence. It is a market where we see a tremendous opportunity for strong brands to take share. We opened our first owned store in Chengdu, in October and will turn our successful pop-up store in Shanghai into a permanent store later this year.
I will now turn it over to Erik to discuss our financial results in more detail.

Erik Massmann

Thanks, Oliver, and good morning, everyone. Before I jump into the quarterly results, I want to thank you all for your partnership, support and patience as we navigated the IPO process and first year as a public company together. I wish Ivico, the entire Birkenstock family continued success in the future. Now I'm happy to share with you one last time Birkenstock's exceptional performance for the first quarter of 2025 and which came in ahead of our expectations.
First quarter revenue were EUR362 million, growth of 19% in both reported and constant currency,; above the high end of our 15% to 17% annual guidance for the year. B2B was up 30% and our D2C was up by 10%, a strong result. share of business was 49% in the quarter, down 400 basis points from a year ago.
As Oliver mentioned, we expect more balanced growth between B2C and B2B for the remainder of 2025. I -- gross margin for the quarter was 60.3%, slightly down 70 basis points year-over-year, primarily due to the higher B2B mix this year.
Selling and distribution expenditures were EUR118 million in the first quarter, representing 32.7% of revenue, down 130 basis points primarily due to the lower D2C penetration compared to last year.
General and administration expenses were EUR24 million or 6.7% of revenue in the quarter, down 120 basis points year-over-year, primarily due to the operating leverage from strong revenue growth and lower IPO-related expenses.
EBITDA in Q1 of EUR102 million was up 25% year-over-year, and margin of 28.2% was up 130 basis points year-over-year due to the strong improvement in SG&A. Adjusted net profit of EUR33 million in the first quarter was up 99% and earnings per share was EUR0.18, up 100% from a year ago.
Cash flows used in operating activities during the first quarter was EUR12 million, an improvement of EUR34 million year-over-year. This was driven by the strong EBITDA growth, combined with improved working capital efficiency. We ended the quarter with cash and cash equivalents of EUR299 million, down from EUR356 million at the end of fiscal 2024 due to the normal seasonality of our working capital usage.
We improved our inventory to sales ratio to 39%, down from 42% in Q1 2024. Our DSO for the quarter were 15%, down from 19% a year ago, despite the higher B2B mix.
During the quarter, we spent EUR90 million in capital expenditures, adding to our production capacity in Pasewalk, Gorliz and. Our net leverage was 1.9 times as of December 31, 2024, up slightly from 1.8 times at the end of fiscal year 2024 due to the seasonality of our working capital.
I'll now hand the call over to Ivica to discuss the outlook for the second quarter and remainder of fiscal 2025.

Ivica Krolo

Thank you, Erik, and I appreciate your support during this transition. As we look forward to the remainder of fiscal 2025, we believe we are well positioned to meet our stated growth and profitability objectives. For the remainder of 2025, we see more balanced and healthy growth from both B2C and B2B with B2C coming in slightly ahead of B2B overall for the year.
We are reiterating our growth and margin targets for the year. We forecast revenue growth of 15% to 17% in constant currency gross profit margin should improve year-over-year as we increase utilization and efficiency at our production facility moving closer to our 60% target. And we expect adjusted EBITDA margin in the range of 30.8% to 31.3%, an increase of up to 50 basis points compared with 2024. CapEx are expected in the range of EUR80 million, and we see net leverage of approximately 1.5 times by year-end.
As you know, the second quarter is an important quarter for our B2B business with significant shipments to our partners for the spring-summer season. We feel good about where we are relative to our full year revenue growth guidance of 15% to 17%. We -- the mix in Q2 is more heavily weighted to B2B, so we expect the usual seasonal decline in gross margin and increased EBITDA margin when compared to the fiscal first quarter but all within the context of our full year margin guidance.
And now I'll hand it back to Oliver for his closing remarks.

Oliver Reichert

Thanks Ivica. We are off to an excellent start in 2025 with strong double-digit revenue growth. Excellent margins and success leaning into the white space areas we highlighted over a year ago. Our brand strength was evident as Birkenstock proved to be one of their clear winners this holiday season, and that strength continues with a very strong order book into the important spring summer season.
We are leaning into the strong consumer demand in both our B2B and DTC channels and continue to carefully execute on our proven engineering distribution strategy to drive ASP growth, ensure healthy stock levels and maintain strong full price realization.
We are entering the next chapter of growth as we tap into our white space opportunities and see a long runway for growth in all three closed-toe shoes, owned retail and APAC.
Globally, we are increasing brand awareness, educating the consumer on the purpose of the Birkenstock footbed and growing our retail and digital presence to gain share.
I would now kindly ask the operator to open our Q&A session. Thank you.

Question and Answer Session

Operator

(Operator Instructions) Jay Sole, UBS.

Jay Sole

Great. I have one question in two parts. The first question is, Oliver, the the quarter was really strong. Why aren't you raising the guidance for the full year given the strong beat that you had in the first quarter?
And then secondly, can you address the strong B2B growth that you had? What drove the strength? And why will the growth be more balanced between channels as you look over the rest of the year? Thank you.

Oliver Reichert

Jay. Thank you for your question. Yes, we are off to a great start into 2025. But keep in mind that Q1 is the smallest quarter of the year. In '24, it was made up only 17% of the total annual revenue, so we still have over 80% of the year ahead of us.
Also, we have a very strong order book, but keep in mind that there is a lot of macroeconomic uncertainty. Interest rates, currency movement, tariffs. The inflation in the U.S. is over 3%. In the Eurozone, we're facing inflation of 2.5% at the moment. And all this is before the impact of any new tariffs.
So the potential impact on the global economy and global consumer is highly uncertain. And we have a big DTC business in the second half of the year, which is not that good foreseeable compared to an order book we're playing in the wholesale. So while we are off to a great start in business is strong for all of those reasons, we think it's prudent to stick with our current guidance for the year.
And coming back to your second question or second part of the question, our sell-through was up around 40% full price, 40% up full price, with an average price increase of around 10%. I think these are very strong metrics for the wholesale business. And the average inventory was only up 10%. So stock-to-sales ratio is very healthy.
Our B2B business continues to be a very strong indicator of the overall end user demand, especially in an environment where consumers, especially the younger target groups are returning to in-person shopping. So this is a great wholesale business, and we love our wholesale business. Be assured our demand is super strong, and we will never, never compromise our distribution strategy from pull to push, don't expect such a thing from us.
Going forward, DTC, we see more balanced growth as we accelerate our own global retail store growth. Our own retail business was up 70% in the quarter on a small base. but we're also seeing more global opportunities to grow our digital business in the future. Thank you.

Jay Sole

Great. Thank you so much.

Operator

Laurent Vasilescu, BNP Paribas.

Good morning. Thank you very much for taking my question, Erik, thank you for your leadership and support over the last 18 months, and I wish you the best in the future. Ivica, welcome, as you looked at the opportunity to joined Birkenstock, what was it that excited you most? What do you see as the biggest challenge? And how do you plan to address that? And then I have a quick follow-up on the model. Thank you.

Ivica Krolo

Thanks, Lauretn, for the question. And I'm looking forward to be working with all of you in the future. It's a lot about the opportunity at Birkenstock, which is very attractive to me to state the obvious. We have significant growth opportunities for the company over the next decade and beyond. It's really rare to find a company with a 250-year-old legacy that still have such substantial growth ahead, and that's very exciting.
Then culturally, I think it's a great fit for me I love the brand, love the history, its purpose and it's a real and just really looking forward to help to guide the company through the next black of growth together with a great team.
On the biggest challenges, well, the challenges, obviously, any rapidly growing company is facing, so making sure that systems infrastructure and team are scaling in line with the business. So keeping up with the growth that we are seeing is certainly a big challenge and be leading in terms of technology, processes and communications.
The good news is I'm coming to a company with a very, very strong foundation and the resources to ensure the proper investments are made and scale the business right away.

Very clear. And then it's good to hear that DTC and B2B should be balanced growth going forward. Should we assume that for the second quarter? And should we overall assume overall sales to be roughly in line in that -- of that revenue range of 15% to 17%? Or should we see it a little bit higher or a little bit lower. Thank you.

Megan Kulick

it's Meghan. I'm going to have to ask you to repeat that question. We had a siren going behind right when you were in the middle of --

I'm sorry to hear that. Okay. Hopefully, there's no fire. Yes. So the quick question here is, it's break to hear that B2B and DTC will be will have balanced growth for the year. I think that's a big debate out there in the investment community. But just curious to know should we assume that for the second quarter? And overall, I think last quarter, you called out for 1Q to be on the slightly higher range of 15% to 17% growth. Should we assume a certain range for 2Q for overall sales. Thank you very much.

Alexander Hoff

HeyLaurent. This is Alexander speaking. Yes, overall, we said we want to achieve a balanced growth between the channels, B2B and B2C on a year level 2025. We also called out that there are some fluctuations between the quarters. This can always happen depending on how we ship, but overall, with that outperformance in B2B in the first quarter, it is fair to assume that we expect over the next quarters, cumulative stronger growth in compared to B2B.

Okay, thank you very much. Best of luck.

Operator

Mark Altschwager, Baird.

Great. Thank you for taking my question And Erik, we wish you well. So you delivered some nice EBITDA margin expansion in Q1, well ahead of the run rate for the annual guide with improvement in SG&A I was hoping you could talk us through the drivers here and the implications for the balance of the year? And could you see upside to the guidance for 50 basis points of EBITDA margin expansion given the strong start that you delivered? Thank you.

Alexander Hoff

Thank you. Mark, this is Alexander. Great question. First of all, and let me guide you a little bit through the first quarter as a starting point. Essentially, the biggest driver of the improvement in the EBITDA margin was really the shift in channels in the quarter. So as you recall, we have always said that our B2B channel has a significant lower gross margin compared to DTC, but it has a slightly higher EBITDA margin, and this is what we are now seeing as a result in the fourth quarter because it's -- those channels, the DTC channels have a much higher selling and distribution expenses compared to B2B.
So with the stronger B2B growth in the first quarter compared to DTC, this had an impact on the SG&A comparison year-over-year. And as I said in the first question. As we look into the full year '25 and the more balanced growth between the channels, we expect the upcoming quarters not to be impacted in that way, how it was in the first quarter, based on those trends, there should be less an impact on SG&A as well as EBITDA margin year-over-year in the next quarters. So we stick here with our guidance in EBITDA margin of up to 50 basis points for the full year, and you shouldn't assume that the 130 basis points improvement in the first quarter carries through the remainder of the year.

Thank you. And maybe just a quick follow-up there related to gross margin then. For the first quarter, you did not call out incremental pressure related to the facility expansion. So it sounds like that ramp must be going well. And then with the channel dynamics, you talked about perhaps less of a pressure on gross margin in the second quarter. So I guess as we put all that together, should we expect gross margin expansion beginning in the second quarter? Thank you.

Alexander Hoff

Yes, you're absolutely right. We didn't call that out in the first quarter, any impact from capacity expansion. 0It's quite the same than last year. So it has not an incremental margin impact in the first quarter of this financial year. And as we said before, we are expecting that in the second half of the year, we expect a positive impact from the utilization of our factories. So you can at a full year basis, expect a modest improvement in gross margin.

Great thanks again.

Operator

Matthew Boss, JPMorgan.

Matthew Boss

Thanks, congrats on another nice quarter. So Oliver, maybe could you elaborate on key drivers of the revenue upside in the first quarter, maybe particularly the direct-to-consumer acceleration that you cited to exit the quarter?
And then just relative to the larger picture comments on macro uncertainty, I guess, have you seen any softening at all in demand momentum post holiday in the second quarter? And just anything you're seeing in terms of visibility for the back half aside from just the larger picture macro uncertainty?

Oliver Reichert

Hey, Matt, thank you for the question. I'll take the first part. We don't see any softening at all. I mean we believe that the brand demand is super strong globally, by the way, I think the ultimate truth is in wholesale. If you perform, as we do perform in wholesale with this full prioritization, very high sell-through ratio.
It's an unbelievable strong demand out there. And the people and the customers they should decide where they want to shop our product and they do it, especially the younger target groups, but Nico and David can give you some more detailed color on this on the -- we see a very strong order book. We see very strong demand globally. So we're fine on this.

Matt, this is Nico. Thank you for your question. I'll touch a bit on the growth drivers in Q1. So as we heard in the earlier part of this call, it is really a broad-based demand across all regions. So that's something that we have to consider that we're very pleased with. Particularly, we had a very strong holiday and gifting season as consumers, even in the areas of our globe where it was getting colder, as they've switched into the winter walk, they really remained loyal to us, and we are becoming much more of a full year brand.
Furthermore, I would like to share that we see a very strong growth contribution from the white space opportunities we shared during our IPO. Close-toe, as we shared earlier, is going at twice the speed compared to our overall growth, and the share of business is up 600 basis points and now making up more than 50% of revenues.
In the Americas region, it's two-third of the business, driven by close-toe. In EMEA, our online business is the same, two-third of the business is close-toe. Retail is our fastest-growing channel and be reminded that we've just opened four new stores totaling now at 71 stores globally. and the bigger part of expansion is still to come. So we're bringing the 71 stores closer to 100 in this fiscal year. So you see us opening many more stores again, across all the regions.
And finally, I want to touch on the APAC region. Again, a very, very strong growth, strong results with accelerated partner store openings. We opened 19 partner stores, and that's also paying into the B2B revenue recognition. And we generally see an increasing brand awareness in that region that resulted in strong demand, especially in higher price points. That's also something really worth mentioning compared to other brands.

Operator

Randy Konik, Jefferies.

Randy Konik

Hey, good morning, maybe give us some perspective on the amount of allocation improvement or space -- shelf-space gains that you got in 2024, maybe dimensionalize that for us and maybe give us some perspective on what you see in 2025. And maybe kind of characterize how you also see pricing versus units looking into the year to come up with your guidance on overall top line?
And then relatedly, maybe just give us some perspective on APAC. It's obviously growing extremely well, and it's early days. Just maybe give us some -- again, some perspective on where you are with allocation there, wholesale partners, et cetera, just the building blocks of that business or that geography would be super helpful. Thanks guys.

David Kahan

Hey Randy, this is David. Thanks for the question. As the word allocation ties to the term engineered distribution we use. We are a true sell-through company, not a sell-in company. So as we take share, we manage the allocation to make sure the stock-to-sales ratios are always healthy.
As -- as Oliver said, when he answered the opening question, when you're delivering selling results in an aggregate of retail partners that's 30% to 40% and above 40% increases on an average stock level that's only up 10%, your stock-to-sales ratios are incredibly healthy.
Are we -- and where we're taking share goes beyond our traditional sandal category. I think that's the beauty of this. The growth rate in closed-toe shoes is twice the rate of the rest of the collection. In the Americas, closed-toe shoes was two-third of the revenue in the quarter.
So you're seeing a much broader-based acceptance for the brand clogs are leading the way, but it's clogs, it shoes, it's shearling and sandals. So very broad-based success in the quarter, and we continue to allocate against that. And as Oliver said, in the opening question, we will never compromise the allocation, the scarcity.
So suffice to say as much as the demand increases. And as much as there's an appetite in the wholesale market to increase our shelf space, we manage that very strictly.

Alexander Hoff

Hey, Randy. This is Alexander Second part of the question, brief and quite straightforward. So we expect and reiterate two-third unit growth and one-third in ASP and ASP will continuously driven on the one hand by product mix with consumers continuously buying into more higher price points.
And secondly, like-for-like pricing. And with a balanced growth between channels for 25, you should not expect an impact from channel mix.

Matthew Boss

-- just on Asia.

Megan Kulick

Hi, can you just repeat the question on Asia?

Randy Konik

Just give us some -- just further give us some perspective on where we are with that. Obviously, we're early days. where are we with distribution? Where can we expect to go with distribution over the next couple of years that would be super helpful.

Klaus Baumann

Hello, Randy. This is Klaus. So as we always said, we are expanding in a mixed model. So we are having partners in Asia. -- running mono brand stores. As you have seen, we are very strong in opening our own fleet in B2C. And also this season, we had the first holiday season with this setup and we said that's coming in very strong.
So we will keep the pace of opening but very in a very good premium way. And important is to really do the brand -- building the brand awareness and being strong on spreading the word of the brand into territory as consumer is really getting the right message here.

Operator

Louise Singlehurst, Goldman Sachs.

Hi, good morning, everyone. Thank you for taking my question. Just wanted to have some commentary regard lots of new products coming through on the new launches and the opportunities for price mix that, that might provide for you as you work your way through '25, but also looking further down the line.
And the new products, are they -- can you just give us a bit of color in terms of the appetite from the consumer? Is that more of a loyal customer coming in and broadening out the Birkenstock range at home? Or is that a good new customer acquisition tool as well? That would be very helpful. Thank you.

Hey, Louis, this is Niko again. I can give you some color on the latest launches in Q1 in EMEA. So we are very pleased to see that in EMEA, shoes, one of our expansionary categories had a record quarter. So as Oliver was referring to, the majority of the top 20 and the top 10 selling styles was close shoes, but also boots at a price point of EUR200.
So how we usually spare head that success is we venture into our DTC business, where we have the most loyal customers. And what we see is we can easily migrate them into new styles into higher price points and that's also what we saw with the shoes category.
Now you might recall that we also doubled the order intake because what we do is for B2B, we take the success from DTC and bring it into B2B doubled the order intake for Auto in 24 on shoes, and we're just seeing now very promising sell-through results. So this is how we expand with our expansionary categories. starting with DTC, with our most loyal customers and then going into B2B to reach a more critical mass and drive penetration in the market, and there's more to come on this one.

Operator

Paul Lejuez, Citi.

Paul Lejuez

Hi, This is Kelly on for Paul. Just wanted to clarify a comment from earlier on the gross margin. Did you say the capacity rands of your Pasewalk facility was still a drag in 1Q? Any way to quantify that? I believe it was only a 50 basis point drag in 1Q last year. And just given it was a pretty significant headwind to gross margin in 2Q last year, should we expect that to flip to a tailwind beginning in this year?
And then just any other -- if you could just give us any more detail on the puts and takes of the gross margin in 1Q. How much did pricing benefit gross margin and what we should expect for pricing going forward? Thank you.

Alexander Hoff

Hey, Kelly, this is Alexander speaking. Yes, on the gross margin in the first quarter, you're right, it was still an impact, but the same impact than the previous year's first quarter. So not an incremental pressure on margin, and we expect in the back half of the year. So starting second, third, fourth quarter to be a little bit positive against that 150 basis points on full year or the year '24 and we confirm also that we want to completely offset this 150 basis points margin pressure in the third quarter of '26.
So you will see a constant improvement quarter-by-quarter on the gross margin piece from the underutilization from the Pasewalk factory.

Paul Lejuez

Just on pricing?

Alexander Hoff

Yes, on pricing, I mean we are regularly reviewing our pricing structure. I mentioned before that ASP will be not only driven by product mix, but also by like-for-like pricing. We are doing it very surgically those kind of adjustments. So it will be in the single digit -- low single-digit amount each year.
We are doing style-by-style not on average for all of those products depending on how we want to price each of the products. And yes, on inflation, so clearly, the goal is to offset inflation by pricing, but we're also working internally on cost structures and supply chain to further gain shares here.

Paul Lejuez

Got it. And just one follow-up on just the flow of the year from the top line perspective. Is it fair to assume that given we're coming up on some of your biggest quarters here and the share of close-toe, I assume, given as we move to spring becomes a lower penetration of assortment. Would we assume 2Q, 3Q or sort of towards the low end of the guidance range? Just any color you could provide there would be helpful. Thank you.

Alexander Hoff

Yes. We are not guiding specifically for quarters, Kelly. I think we've given a little bit of guidance around how we see margins in the next quarters, but we are not specifically guiding quarters.

Paul Lejuez

Alright thanks.

Operator

Simeon Siegel, BMO.

Simeon Siegel

Thanks everyone. Nice broad-based growth. Erik, it's been great getting to know you best of luck on the next chapter and if you go welcome board. Looking forward to meeting you in the future.
So we can hear your comfort and the health of the B2B business in the qualitative comments, but you also offered some quantitative color. I mean you brought up the improving DSOs near mark. Any further color you could share on composition of receivable health maybe talk about how much of the B2B growth has come from deeper -- going deeper with existing doors versus new.
David, I assume from your comments, safe to say your retail partners would still love to take more if you're willing to give them more. So anything further on that would be helpful. Thanks guys.

David Kahan

Yeah, yes, Simeon, just a quick comment on that. As we've said, 90-plus percent of our wholesale growth is coming from existing partners and existing doors. So that indicates that on this growth level, it's clearly taking share and it's clearly expansion from our basis business.
So the stronger the businesses, the more we continue to expand slowly and very deliberately. We had a very, very strong holiday sell-through and the business was strong going into the holiday season. So obviously, results correspond to future order book and demand. And clearly, you're absolutely right. There's probably not a retailer out there that would not want more product. And then it's contingent upon us to determine how much they get and in what quantities and how the brand shows up at retail.
So we can be very intentional right now about where we're taking our business and continue what we've been doing based on the results.

Simeon Siegel

That's great. That's great. And then would you guys be willing to quantify the gross margin drivers this quarter at all anymore, just digging through product, geo, channel mix shifts, higher ASP, et cetera. So anything in terms of how Q1 played out? Thank you.

Alexander Hoff

Thank you. Simeon, this is Alexander again. Yes, I think I touched a little bit already on the first quarter gross margin. So it's quite straightforward in this quarter. So the -- really the biggest part of the 70 bps decline is relating to the change of the channel mix with 400 basis points less DTC penetration that gives you approximately the gap you're looking for.
And yes, all other drivers have been not material. So we managed to offset inflation. So this was not a big driver by the targeted price actions. Product mix was not a big driver. So essentially, it's I call also our Pasewalk, so essentially, it's only than the channel mix.

Simeon Siegel

Great, thanks a lot guys, best of luck for the rest of the year.

Operator

Dana Telsey, Telsey.

Dana Telsey

Thank you. Good morning, everyone. Nice to see the progress. As you've touched on faster DTC growth than B2B as we go through the year, any more perspective on e-commerce versus owned stores how you're seeing current store opening performance versus the base? And how are you thinking about store openings by region this year? Thank you.

Hey Dana. This is Nico speaking. Great question. I'm happy to take the question. So as I touched on, retail is the fastest-growing channel, and we'll remain the fastest-growing channel when we look into the future. We operate 71 stores. We just opened four stores in this quarter, and we're going to bring the total number closer to 100 this year. So we will be opening many, many stores.
What we see is the newly opened stores, they deliver higher ASP, a better conversion rate and a better square mean of productivity. So, it's a proven store model that we are not looking for locations at a AAA location. We are going through this site suite next to the AAA location. We operate stores at 120, 150 square meters. The CapEx payback is and will be at between 12 and 18 months. So it's a really highly proven store model and we definitely see success,
On some locations that we are -- that we have secured. So there will be locations across all three regions where we open new stores. There will be a new store in London, another store in Paris. We'll also look into the Spanish region, but you'll see opening every quarter dynamically growing into every region.
So on the online business, we do believe we have a very strong online business. As you know, it's 90% of our DTC, and we still do see a significant growth opportunities from a regional perspective, but also from a customer perspective.
Just be reminded in our Asia region, in the APAC region, we just opened four new countries as new Donald Templincom destinations. Our business in dotcom and Middle East Africa is just two years old, so really in its infancy and you see further growth coming from those regions.
And just to close off with new customer audiences. As we expand with expansionary categories in our online business, and we just shared the great results there, we also acquire new customers, and that's going to continue also into the next quarters and the next two years. So we are very, very positive about the DTC and the outlook that we have with this channel.

Operator

Lorraine Hutchinson, Bank of America.

Lorraine Hutchinson

Thank you. Good morning. As you run scenarios around potential tariffs into the U.S. What levers are you considering? Do you plan to offset any potential tariffs with pricing?

Ivica Krolo

Thank you, Laurent, for your question. It's Nico speaking. As you know, all final assembly is entirely in Germany. So we would only be impacted by tariffs on imports from Germany. And the good news is here that we have historically had the ability to take pricing at team globally that offset these inflationary pressures, including tariffs without any impact on our business.
This is something that we will obviously monitor closely and do whatever we can do to mitigate the impact with cost initiatives and pricing adjustments. So it's not about just pricing adjustment,; but it's overall for us to gain efficiency through cost initiatives. One point I want to mention in addition is that besides we may see a couple of indirect impact as tariffs may drive inflation generally and may impact also consumer sentiment, which certainly adds to the uncertainty also mentioned in his initial statement. But overall, we're watching that closely.

Operator

Michael Binetti, Evercore ISI.

Michael Benetti

Hey guys, thanks for taking our question and for all the detail on the call here. Congrats on a great quarter. Just to double click on the earlier question on gross margin. I think in second quarter last year, there was a pretty big step up in the gross margin pressure from the factory to leverage relative to 1Q. I know you did speak to it.
I can hear your confidence in the gross margin in the second half. Is there -- are there any puts or takes that are unusual that we should think about on the gross margin in the second quarter? That holds you back from saying, there's a step-up in the gross margin there? Or is it just conservatism given it's a bigger wholesale quarter.
I guess and then maybe a bigger picture one for David, as you look across some of the parts of the wholesale channel in the U.S. that's stocked out, which we saw a lot of our work, stocked out of key gifting items this Christmas. How do you think about adjusting the strategy relative to that level of unmet demand for next holiday. I know you're always balancing this, David, with managing the corporate first principles at Birkenstock for managing scarcity? Just any thoughts you have as you look across the results on this holiday.

Alexander Hoff

Michael Alexander. Speaking for the first part of the question regarding gross margin. Yes, the puts and takes, again, we are not guiding specifically quarters. But what I can say is that we are not seeing a substantial impact from channel mix in the second quarter. And on the impact, as I said before, we are not expecting additional pressure, so -- but quarter-by-quarter, you will see now that 150 bps from last year turning into a positive impact quarter-by-quarter.

David Kahan

Michael, I'll take the second part of that. This is David. As you know from following our brand in the market, allocation and distribution is half art and half science. I mean we do it with a lot of data. We have planners. We have analysts on a door-by-door on a style-by-style basis. We're always going to make sure that the stock-to-sales ratios are always healthy.
To while we don't want stock outs all over the market, clearly, some of that unrequired love and the demand that it creates with the brand is part of this flywheel impact that we get, and that's why demand keeps increasing. And what we keep finding continually is the more we put additional product into the wholesale market the more the demand continues to increase.
And again, just remember, our DTC base is already at 40% penetration with 90-plus percent of it being digital. So as we open more of our own doors, the white space category that we've been talking about, that's just more points of distribution where we can fulfill that demand. So it's all really part of one ecosystem.
Suffice to say, the stock-to-sales ratios that are maintained very healthy in the wholesale market are basically the foundation for the entire business model.

Michael Benetti

Okay. And maybe just one quick follow-up on the model. Is there related to your very last comment there, is there anything in the guidance for the year assuming a price increase that's directly earmarked for tariffs? Or would that be incremental if tariffs happen and it's not included in the guidance at this point?

Oliver Reichert

This is Oliver. I think there's no big sense in discussing the possible tariffs up and down because it's really impossible to foresee this. I think the tariffs will have more an impact overall inflation and the overall macroeconomic because as I mentioned in my first question and the answer, it was inflation in the U.S. is above 3%, and that's before all the tariff kicks in. So this is why we are concerned about the tariffs.
As you know, we constantly adjust our pricing every season very, very precisely style by style. It's the opposite. What you can see from the luxury industry where they pricing all over by 10%, 20%, 15%, 30%, we go step by step, very precise, leather, article group, textile, different ones. And that's what we're doing.
So I would call it price adjustments. And yes, if something happens, price increases on raw material side, on tariffs, whatever, then, of course, we try to balance it out within our collection, but don't expect an overall price increase to be happen with that.

Michael Benetti

Okay, thanks again guys. Congrats.

Operator

Anna Andreva, Piper Sandler.

Anna Andreeva

Great, thank you so much for all the color and taking our questions. Could you provide a little bit more color on your loyalty program? I think you said 8.8 million people this quarter. So nice growth versus, I think, 8 million you called out last quarter. Just curious, how is it performing versus expectations? And what are some of the recent KPIs of how you measure, how success is going to look like in '25. And then we had a quick follow-up.

David Kahan

Yes, thanks. Great question. Our members are very important to us. As you know, people who wear Birkenstock aren't just consumers. They become our fans, they become our brand missionaries and the more we wrap our arms around them, the better the return on investment is for us. Our membership at over $8 million right now is 30% higher year-on-year. I can certainly see it moving to 10 million quite quickly when you do the math on it.
Marketing to our members has been very successful, I believe, almost 50% of of our DTC business came from members in the past quarter. And just remember, our members tend to spend 30% higher per transaction. So the return on investment as we market to them and as we share new products, if you've worn Birkenstock in any product, if you came to us by way of the sandal or the clogs and you've experienced the footbed, odds are much higher, you're going to adapt for another use occasion, a close-toe shoe or an outdoor shoe or recovery or if you work in health care or hospitality or professional shoes.
So as our membership grows, we see that as a key driver for our DTC business. And just remember also the more touch points we have as we open retail stores around the world those retail stores also become vehicles for membership.

Anna Andreeva

That's awesome. That was very exciting. And just as a follow-up, so APAC was up very nice 47% in 1Q. And you mentioned accelerated pace of door openings and also deliveries during the quarter. Should we think there's a timing shift which could negatively impact the second quarter growth rate in the region or that should affect the current quarter?

Klaus Baumann

Hello, Aana, this is Klaus. We always said we are very signed with the growth rates in APAC have been double of our mature markets. And this is also what we keep. So I think that answers the question, right?

Anna Andreeva

Got it. Well, thank you so much.

Operator

Sam Poser, Williams Trading.

Sam Poser

Thank you for taking my question. Just quickly, you mentioned that Q2 is another big sell-in quarter. And I'm just trying to balance out how the DTC for the year is going to grow faster is do you anticipate DTC to grow faster than wholesale in Q2? Or is that DTC growth going to be driven a lot by these new stores that are going to open and impact the second half of the year?

Alexander Hoff

Sam, this is Alexander speaking. We cannot be that specific. What we said is that we want to grow in the remaining quarters more in DTC to come than on a full year basis to a balanced number. Will it be quarter two, three, four? That would be really too specific and it's also depending on how we ship into the wholesale accounts.

Oliver Reichert

Cin general, as you know, Sam, because you know the business best probably -- the first half is wholesale heavy in the second half of the year is more DTC heavy. So that probably gives you the best direction how to think about.

Sam Poser

And so that also would be a balance of the gross margin. Another reason for the gross margin in the second quarter while it may increase year-over-year to being the biggest wholesale quarter to keep it well underneath Q1 and underneath the full year average I would think. Is that a good way to think about it?

Alexander Hoff

Absolutely, that's correct.

Operator

Erwan Rambourg, HSBC.

Erwan Rambourg

And best of luck to the outgoing and incoming CFO, if I can put it that way. Two little follow-ups. First of all, on close-toe shoes being comfortably above 50% of the business in Q1. Where do you see this going in Q2 and maybe for the full year? I think you mentioned 600 basis points of incremental contribution in Q1. How should we think about the full year? I think you were a bit above 30% contribution for the full year last year. And can you -- I don't know if you've said what difference the ASP is relative to average?
And then secondly, a follow-up on wholesale for David or possibly Nico and Klaus as well. it's quite stunning that you're growing 30% given that 90% of the growth is with existing doors. So sorry for the naive question, but how much more space can you actually -- can they actually accommodate? And at some stage, even though I understand you're more pull than push, will you not need to sign up with new partners at some stage to to increase the visibility of the brand? Thank you.

On, this is Nico Thank you for your question. I'll take the first part, and then I guess we're going to share a bit the second part of your question. So yes, you're right. So close-toe increased by 600 basis points at 2x faster than the rest of the business. While our open-toe business is also growing double digits.
And I think that's really worth mentioning. We have given -- I'd be reminded that order is probably oneof the quarters with the highest close-toe penetration due to seasonality. So don't expect us to deliver the same share of business in the coming quarters. We have given not ourselves a specific target for quarter, but we see great opportunity coming out of this quarter in the closed-toe business and also specifically in flows shoes, as I just heard early on with the great results in those pull through --

Erwan Rambourg

And maybe just on the ASP point, how much more expensive in terms of ASP is close to versus the average of the business?

So just as you can imagine, closed-toe is a much higher ASP than sandals. So I referred to the boots example that we had great success in Q1 with boots, and they are sold at EUR200 price points. And that's adopted by the consumers. So you can imagine what's the sort of potential difference in ASP between those categories, between sandals and closed-toe.

Operator

Jim Duffy, Stifel.

Jim Duffy

Oh, thank you. Very clear momentum in the B2B. Following up on that last question, very interested in the evolving product mix at wholesale. You speak to what you're seeing in the order book by product type and ASP mix within the orders, specifically interested in whether the wholesale channel partners are embracing more premium offerings until that's balancing interest in EVA offerings like the Burkey. Thanks.

Alexander Hoff

Thank you, Jim, for your question. Great question. What we do definitely see is I start with the consumer. Consumers continue to seek our premium product. The leather share is increasing clogs category is doing extremely well, not just the Boston but also clogs derivates. So that's another premium category that is doing extremely well.
And what we also just shared is the great adoption of boots in Q1-. So yes, the consumer is seeking for most premium product, and that's also reflected in the B2B buys in the B2B order book as retailers are expanding their assortment and writing their assortment with us beyond the scandal. Thank you.

Operator

Janine Stitcher, BTIG.

Jeanine Stichter

Hey, thanks so much for all the color and for taking our questions. One more on B2B was hoping you could comment on what you're seeing in some of the newer doors within adjacent categories like outdoor professional and run specialties. So how penetrated are you in these categories? And just maybe what you see in terms of shelf space potential. Thank you.

David Kahan

Hey Janine, it's David. In the new distribution, which again is a little bit limited to our traditional base, we're seeing immediate adoption of the brand whether we show up as a recovery sandal recovery product and run specialty. It's the exact same place that we were in when we went into some of these other accounts 10 to 12 years ago.
The expansionary categories in our heritage business have been adopted very quickly. I mean, again, when we talk about over half of our business being non sandals, that's pretty substantial compared to a couple of years ago. And when you see the brand out at retail, you're certainly no longer seeing a sandal based brand.
So as we go into some of these other categories, where it's a different use occasion, but it's the same footbed, whether you're outdoors, whether you're wearing how house slippers, whether you're a professional and wearing it in the work environment, it's the footbed. And the more we bring the footbed to different use occasions, the more it's being adopted.
So I think it's more a matter of how many use occasions do we continue to expand into? And what's the share of closet. I mean, as you remember, the average Birkenstock consumer has owned 3.4, 3.6 pairs of our product. Anecdotally, we think that's even higher. So I don't think there's a limit to how many Birkenstock products, our fans can own in their closet, and the more they see it out in those environments where it's validated, the quicker it's being adopted.

Jeanine Stichter

Great thanks so much for the caller.

Operator

There were no other questions. And this does conclude today's conference. You may disconnect your lines at this time. Thank you for your participation.

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