How Has The Strengthening Dollar Affected Under Armour In the Last 3 Years?

-12.84%
Downside
8.71
Market
7.59
Trefis
UA: Under Armour logo
UA
Under Armour

Under Armour (NYSE:UA) generates majority of its revenues from the United States and the reporting currency for the consolidated financial statements is the U.S. dollar. As its net revenues and expenses generated outside the U.S. increase, the company’s results could be adversely impacted by changes in foreign currency exchange rates as it recognizes foreign revenues in the local foreign currency. Furthermore, the apparel giant is exposed to gains and losses resulting from fluctuations in foreign currency rates on transactions generated by its foreign subsidiaries in currencies other than the local currencies. Such gains and losses are primarily driven by inter-company transactions and inventory purchases denominated in currencies other than the functional currency of the purchasing entity. The graph below depicts the gradual strengthening of the dollar versus the euro.

USD vs EUR

Additionally, the company purchases derivative foreign currency forward contracts, a strategy to minimize losses from exchange rates fluctuations. As one can see in the table below, this strategy has worked very well for the company, curtailing losses to $8.9 million in 2015. This, along with the aforementioned expenses, is classified in the Income Statement as Other Expenses and is broken down in the table below.

Relevant Articles
  1. What’s Next For Under Armour Stock?
  2. Down 20% This Year, Will Under Armour’s Stock Recover Following Q4 Results?
  3. Down 25% This Year Will Under Armour Stock Rebound After Its Q2?
  4. Under Armour Stock Down 24% This Year, What’s Next?
  5. Under Armour Stock Up 28% Over Last Month, What’s Next?
  6. What To Watch For In Under Armour’s Stock Post Q1?

Capture

So, as we can see from the table above, the strengthening dollar has quite a significant unfavorable impact on the company which was partially offset by the company’s forward hedging strategies. Despite this, total expenses from currency related costs spiked by almost 661% in the last two years.

Notes:

1) The purpose of these analyses is to help readers focus on a few important things. We hope such lean communication sparks thinking, and encourages readers to comment / ask questions on the comments section

2) Figures mentioned are approximate values to help our readers remember the key concepts more intuitively. For precise figures, please refer to our full analysis for Under Armour

View Interactive Institutional Research (Powered by Trefis):
Global Large Cap | U.S. Mid & Small Cap | European Large & Mid Cap
More Trefis Research