In its quarterly results, Wolverine World Wide
The only disappointment was the modest revenue growth of 3.8%. I don't view this as a long-term issue, though, as the company has a solid track record of growing its revenue. Over the past five years, compounded annual revenue growth has been, on average, 9.1%.
Additionally, several temporary setbacks, primarily lower military sales and the closure of private brands and Stanley business, were responsible for lower revenue this quarter. However, I don't view these issues as posing material problems for the business going forward. The company doesn't rely on a large chunk of revenue to come from its military contracts, and military sales were expected to fall back to prewar levels at some point. And by shedding some of its businesses (the Stanley brand, Hush Puppies slippers, and various private label contracts), the company can focus on its larger and more profitable segments -- particularly Merrell.
Merrell had another great quarter. Footwear sales and backlog increased by double digits this quarter, and management believes customers are already becoming more loyal to its newer clothing line. The just-launched clothing business is focused on the casual and active outdoor segments, and it will face stiff competition from apparel makers like Columbia Sportswear
I'm not sure that Merrell will be a billion-dollar brand, but this stock is definitely worth trying on. The company has produced 21 consecutive quarters of record revenue and earnings per share, and its stock trades at only 18 times trailing earnings. Meanwhile, struggling Timberland
Related Foolishness:
- Last quarter, the company returned squeaky clean results.
- And the company didn't even pause in the first quarter of this year.