Categories Consumer, Earnings Call Transcripts
Ralph Lauren Corporation (RL) Q3 2023 Earnings Call Transcript
RL Earnings Call - Final Transcript
Ralph Lauren Corporation (NYSE: RL) Q3 2023 earnings call dated Feb. 09, 2023
Corporate Participants:
Corinna Van Der Ghinst — Vice President, Investor Relations
Patrice Louvet — President and Chief Executive Officer
Jane Nielsen — Chief Operating Officer and Chief Financial Officer
Analysts:
Dana Telsey — Telsey Advisory Group — Analyst
Matthew Boss — JPMorgan — Analyst
Michael Binetti — Credit Suisse — Analyst
Paul Kearney — Barclays — Analyst
Laurent Vasilescu — BNP Paribas — Analyst
Ike Boruchow — Wells Fargo — Analyst
Presentation:
Operator
Ladies and gentlemen, thank you for standing by. Welcome to the Ralph Lauren Third Quarter Fiscal Year 2023 earnings call. At this time, all participants are in a listen-only mode. Later we will conduct a question-and-answer session. [Operator Instructions] As a reminder, this conference is being recorded. I’d now like to turn over the conference to our host, Ms. Corinna Van Der Ghinst. Please go ahead.
Corinna Van Der Ghinst — Vice President, Investor Relations
Good morning, and thank you for joining Ralph Lauren’s Third Quarter Fiscal 2023 conference call. With me today are Patrice Louvet, the company’s President and Chief Executive Officer; and Jane Nielsen, Chief Operating Officer and Chief Financial Officer. After prepared remarks, we will open up the call for your questions, which we ask that you limit to one per caller. During today’s call we will be making some forward-looking statements within the meaning of the federal securities laws, including our financial outlook. Forward-looking statements are not guarantees, and our actual results may differ materially from those expressed or implied in the forward-looking statements. Our expectations contain many risks and uncertainties. Principal risks and uncertainties that could cause our results to differ materially from our current expectations are detailed in our SEC filings. To find disclosures and reconciliations of non-GAAP measures that we use when discussing our financial results, you should refer to this morning’s earnings release and to our SEC filings that can be found on our Investor Relations website. With that, I will turn the call over to Patrice.
Patrice Louvet — President and Chief Executive Officer
Thank you, Cory. Good morning, everyone, and thank you for joining today’s call. We were pleased to deliver another quarter of better-than-expected performance, including through the important holiday season. All three regions contributed positively to revenue growth, and at the same time, we made strong progress on the strategic priorities we outlined last September in our Next Great Chapter: Accelerate plan. We have multiple levers of growth and a broad lifestyle portfolio of products, combined with the agility muscle our teams have built over the last several years, this puts us in a position of strength to become the world’s leading luxury-lifestyle company even amid macro uncertainty. A key element of this strategy is our commitment to brand and product elevation as we have demonstrated over the past five years. And we’re doing all this while maintaining flexibility to respond to consumer demand and market dynamics. This translated to another quarter of double-digit AUR growth even as the broader marketplace became more promotional as anticipated.
We also continue to drive a culture of operating and cost discipline, which enabled us to meet our operating margin targets in the period. As our guidance reflected from the start of this fiscal year, the global environment has been choppy. We are encouraged that our core consumer has remained generally resilient which reflects the growing desirability of our brand. At the same time, we continue to watch our more value-oriented customers and channels carefully. In this environment, we are taking a pragmatic approach to merchandising, pricing and inventory planning. As we navigate ongoing macro uncertainties, we remain steadfast in driving our three strategic pillars of long-term growth and value-creation. These are, first, elevate and energize our lifestyle brand. Second, drive the core and expand for more. And third, win in key cities with our consumer ecosystem.
Let me take you through a few of our third quarter highlights across each of these strategic pillars. First on our efforts to elevate and energize our lifestyle brand. We continue to invest in our most powerful asset, our timeless luxury brand and way of life to inspire and engage our consumers and ultimately drive lifetime value. We continue to build our brand desirability with consumers while also growing their value perception of our brand. This is enabling us to grow both market-share and AUR. In the third quarter, we drove a diverse range of both global and localized brand activations showcasing the Ralph Lauren lifestyle. We kicked-off the quarter with our California Dreaming fashion show at the Huntington Library in LA. This represented our first-ever show on the West Coast, where we have historically been underdeveloped and have an opportunity to scale our presence. From there, we launched into holiday with our gift of togetherness campaign featuring friends of the brand like Shalom Harlow and Tyson Beckford. Our local flagship events range from a family-friendly pop-up skating rink in Ginza to live musical performances at Bond Street in London. These campaigns leverage our authentic brand values around family and togetherness, combined with unique localized engagement to excite and delight our consumers around the world. For Polo lovers, we offered our seven days, seven drops on our Polo 67 fan-out. With a limited edition collection of custom-made skis, vintage ski jackets and collectible posters from the RL archive. In Asia, we drove another successful Singles’ Day event ranking Number two for men’s apparel and number four for women’s apparel on Timo. The campaign included our first-ever Tmall Cat face logo collaboration generating billions of impressions across online and offline channels in China’s key cities. And as we continue to lead in gaming and the metaverse, we launched an innovative collaboration with Fortnite targeted to next-gen consumers with additional exciting partnerships to come for spring and fall 2003. Together, these activations are both reengaging existing customers while also attracting younger full-price consumers to our business. In our DTC businesses, we added 1.6 million new consumers this quarter consistent with recent trends. We exceeded 51 million social media followers globally, a high-single-digit increase to last year, led by double-digit growth on Instagram. And our online search trends continued to significantly outpace our peers across our top markets globally driven by our core categories.
Moving to our second key initiative, drive the core and expand for more. Across our organization, we are committed to becoming the leading luxury-lifestyle company globally. This starts with the work Ralph and our creative teams are doing every day to offer sophisticated timeless products that meet the needs of our consumers across their modern lifestyles. Ralph Lauren has a unique positioning in the marketplace that has enabled our brands to thrive over 50 years. Our brand stands for much more than a single product or category. It invites our customers to step into their dream of a better life. At the heart of our business is our collection of iconic core products which represent 70% of sales and remain a consistent driver of our business season after season. Our core products grew high single-digits in the third quarter led by sweaters, seasonal core knits, sweatshirts and suit separates. Our core also establishes the foundation and credibility to grow our high-potential categories. These include, women’s, outerwear, and our emerging Home business. Together, these high-potential categories increased low-teens in the quarter.
Women’s represents our single largest long-term opportunity from market-share gains and category growth as a company. We are trading her into the brand across categories to drive lifetime value and up to more elevated styles with the women’s AUR up 12% in the third quarter. Highlights from the period included our dedicated head to toe holiday campaigns for both Polo Women’s and Lauren, including the expansion of our Polo ID bags in new seasonal fabrications. Other product highlights and special releases this quarter included the official launch of our Polo Originals line, elevating the upper tier of our core brand with high quality AUR enhancing styles [Indecipherable] our exclusive navy and gold logo collection capsule with influential Japanese retailer BEAMS, and our Fortnite collaboration with core icons featuring the new Llama player logo, and our Polo stadium collection of digital and physical products. Through these dynamic times we continue to leverage the breadth of our brand and assortments to give consumers what they want as their lifestyles evolve. This enables us to flex from stay-at-home sweatshirts to return to work outfits to wedding dresses and evening wear.
Switching to our third key initiative, winning key cities with our consumer ecosystem. We continue to invest in our long-term strategy to develop our key city ecosystems around the world in the third quarter with a focus on elevating and connecting all our consumer touch points across every channel. Starting with digital. Third quarter sales for our total Ralph Lauren digital ecosystem, including our directly-operated sites, departmentstore.com, pure players and social commerce increased high-single-digits in constant-currency. Our Asia digital ecosystem once again delivered the fastest growth globally. This included another strong Singles’ Day with double-digit new customer acquisition and sales, significantly outperforming our peers even as we grew AUR by 28%.
Within our own digital sites, sales grew low-double-digits globally in the third quarter. As part of our fully connected ecosystems, we also continue to open new physical stores that enable consumers to engage directly with our brands around the world. We opened 55 new stores and concessions focused on our top cities globally this quarter with the majority again in Asia, particularly the Chinese mainland. Our brand momentum and opportunities in China remained strong. We reported third quarter mainland sales up high-single-digits in constant-currency. This was an encouraging result in light of widespread COVID disruptions following the relaxation of zero COVID policies in the period with over 90% of our stores impacted by foreclosures, reduced trading hours and staffing levels. As our dedicated teams on-the-ground continued to manage near-term disruptions with agility, we expect the country’s reopening to be a net positive as we continue to strengthen our growing presence in this key market. Elsewhere in the region, we continue to drive double-digit constant-currency growth across Japan, Korea, Australia and Southeast Asia, where we opened our first Ralph’s Coffee experience in Kuala Lumpur this quarter.
In addition to our sustained momentum across Asia, we remain bullish on our long-term growth opportunities and ability to strategically drive lifetime value across North-America and Europe. In Q3, we opened our largest children store in the world on Via della Spiga in Milan. Located across from our flagship, we are now able to showcase the full breadth of our luxury-lifestyle proposition in this important market. We also launched our first full-price emblematic store in Barcelona, another influential fashion market, as we continue to build our connected ecosystems across the region.
And finally, touching briefly on our enablers. In addition to our strategic priorities, our business continued to be supported by our five key enablers. In the third quarter, we were proud to be recognized on Fast Company’s 2022 Brands That Matter list for our collaboration with Morehouse and Spelman colleges launched last March. This groundbreaking partnership was just one example of our commitment to evolve, how we portray the American dream, in the stories we tell, and the faces and creators we champion. We were also recognized as one of Fortune’s World’s Most Admired Companies moving from number six last year to number two this year for our sector. And on the sustainability front, we highlighted our first Cradle to Cradle certified product just a few weeks ago with our luxury gold cashmere sweater. The first-of-its-kind luxury product to achieve this global standard, this is just one part of our commitment to enable our past and future products to live on responsibly. This sweater is the first of five iconic products that we plan to make C2C certified by 2025.
In closing, our strong performance through the first three quarters of the year underscores our consistency and strong execution. This is underpinned by the power of our brand and Ralph Lauren’s multiple drivers of long-term sustainable growth and value creation. Ralph and I are proud of our team’s continued agility, execution and productivity as we effectively navigate a dynamic global operating environment. Our focus on offense, agility and pragmatism continues to inspire our approach moving forward. And I just want to take a moment to welcome our newest board member, Wei Zhang, former President of Alibaba Pictures and SVP of Alibaba Group, who joined us this quarter. Her leadership experience across international business development focusing on China, entertainment, media, and corporate social responsibility make her a unique addition to our Board. With that, I’ll hand it over to Jane to discuss our financial results and I’ll join her at the end to answer your questions.
Jane Nielsen — Chief Operating Officer and Chief Financial Officer
Thank you, Patrice, and good morning everyone. We are encouraged by our strong early progress on our Next Great Chapter: Accelerate plan. We leveraged our multiple strategic drivers and superior operational capabilities to deliver third quarter results ahead of our expectations. We drove another quarter of solid topline growth, with Q3 revenues up 1% on a reported basis and 7% in constant currency above our outlook. All three regions delivered positive revenue growth on both a reported and constant currency basis as well as positive retail comp growth.
Operating margin was at the high end of our guidance with strong expense discipline more than offsetting lower-than-expected gross margin. Operating with discipline has been and will continue to be a cornerstone of our long-term strategic plan with productivity helping to fuel our investments in sustainable long-term growth. Exiting the quarter, we continue to leverage the strength of our balance sheet which has served us well through times of uncertainty. We believe our elevated brand, clear strategy and targeted investments combined with our culture of operating discipline and fortress foundation enablers put us in a position of strength to continue to drive long-term value creation.
Let me take you through our third quarter financial highlights. Total company revenues increased 7% in constant currency, above our low to mid-single-digit outlook, led by double-digit growth in Asia and Europe. Guidance in results included a timing shift with the week between Christmas and New Year’s moving back into the third quarter from the fourth quarter last year due to the 53rd week in fiscal ’22. This benefited this year’s Q3 sales by about 130 basis points, which should negatively impact our smaller fourth quarter by an estimated 170 basis points. Ralph Lauren digital ecosystem sales grew high single digits in constant currency and more than 40% on a two-year stack. With our owned Ralph Lauren digital sites, sales grew 10% on top of more than 30% growth last year. We continue to elevate and expand the breadth of our offering online while enhancing the user experience with a rich digital content.
We are also driving further improvements in quality of sales with an increase in full price sales penetration and digital margins strongly accretive to our overall profitability in the quarter. Note that the fiscal quarter shift benefited our own digital sales by about 2 points in Q3 and should negatively impact Q4 by about 3 points. We continue to deliver gross margin expansion in constant currency this quarter consistent with our long-term guidance. Total company adjusted gross margin was 65.2%, down 80 basis points to last year on a reported basis, but up 80 basis points in constant currency. The increase was driven by product mix elevation with AUR up 10% on top of 19% growth last year and lower air freight reliance following last year’s supply chain disruptions.
While we continue to drive our long-term brand elevation strategy, gross margins were below our expectations this holiday driven by, first, targeted outlet promotions in North America to drive conversion with our value-oriented consumers; second, stronger-than-expected post-Christmas sale days which shifted into the third quarter from Q4 last year; and finally, higher duty costs in Europe. Compared to fiscal ’20 pre-pandemic levels, adjusted gross margin was still 300 basis points higher in the third quarter. Our better-than-expected revenues and operating expense discipline in the third quarter also enabled us to deliver operating margins at the top of our guidance range. Adjusted operating margin was 16% on a reported basis and 17.8% in constant currency, representing 190 basis point constant currency increase to last year. Adjusted operating expenses declined 1%, including a marketing expense decline of 8% over last year’s disproportionately back half-weighted spend. Marketing was 7.3% of sales compared to 8.1% in the prior year period. As Patrice mentioned, operational excellence remains a key element of our fortress Foundation, and we remain sharply focused on operating expense discipline even as we continue to invest behind our brands and targeted global expansion to drive long-term sustainable growth.
Moving to segment performance, starting with North America. Third quarter revenues grew 1% as stronger direct-to-consume performance more than offset a slight decline in wholesale, as anticipated. The shift of post-Christmas days benefited our performance by about 190 basis points in the quarter. This shift should negatively impact our fourth quarter sales by about 270 basis points. In addition, the absence of last year’s 53rd week is expected to negatively impact North America by another 460 basis points in Q4. In North America Retail, third quarter comps grew 2% on top of a strong 38% COVID reopening compare last year. While we were encouraged by another quarter of positive comp growth in our full-price stores, this was offset by softer performance in our outlets as anticipated in our guidance.
Our outlet AUR was up high single digits, reflecting our ongoing brand and product elevation in the channel. However, we continued to see softness in our value-oriented consumers. We are focused on driving a strong value proposition to the consumer, which includes expanded category assortments, enhanced selling environments and targeted communications. Our fiscal ’23 outlook still assumes caution in this channel through the rest of the year. Comps in our owned ralphlauren.com site increased 9% and more than 40% on a two-year stack, driven by strong performance in core product, tailored styles and footwear. Digital AUR increased on continued product mix elevation.
In North America Wholesale, revenues declined 2% to last year. As we discussed in November, the decline was entirely driven by a customs delay, which resulted in missed Q3 shipment windows, representing about three points of negative impact. As expected, we also saw a slowdown in replenishment trends as our partners focus on keeping inventories clean heading into the new year. Outside of this, our positioning in the wholesale channel remains competitively strong. We gained market share across men’s, women’s and kids in key partners, and our AUR and wholesale grew 10% on continued product elevation. Promotions on our brands at wholesale were largely aligned with our expectations going into the season. Inventories at wholesale are now normalized following last year’s supply chain disruption, and we have experienced minimal cancellations to-date for spring ’23. We still expect wholesale to be up in the fourth quarter of fiscal ’23, despite our more cautious view on replenishment and our spring ’23 inventory buys.
Moving on to Europe. Third quarter revenue increased 1% on a reported basis and 13% in constant currency. This 13% growth included about 450 basis points of benefit from the post-Christmas timing shift as well as a wholesale allowance benefit recognized in the quarter. We estimate the timing shift will negatively impact the smaller fourth quarter by about 120 basis points in Europe. Q3 European retail comps increased 11% on top of the 55% compare last year. Brick-and-mortar comps also up 11%, benefited from lapping the start of last year’s Omicron variant as well as the post-Christmas sales shift into Q3. AUR increased 12% with gains in both brick-and-mortar and digital AUR.
Total digital ecosystem grew mid-single digits in the quarter, with low double-digit growth in owned digital commerce and wholesale.com more than offsetting softer pure-play results as anticipated. Europe wholesale declined 1% on a reported basis, but grew 11% in constant currency. This was ahead of our expectations, driven by roughly 8 points benefit related to lower-than-anticipated wholesale allowances as well as stronger spring ’23 shipments and fill rates, more than offsetting softer reorder trends. Note that our wholesale outlook continues to embed a notable deceleration through Q4 based on challenging compares and macro headwinds. Overall, while our Europe business has performed better than expected through the first three quarters of the year, we remain cautious on the remainder of fiscal ’23 into fiscal ’24, given dynamic macro conditions across the region.
Turning to Asia. Revenue increased 1% on a reported basis and 16% in constant currency, a strong result given significant COVID outbreaks in the Chinese mainland as well as higher infection rates in Japan. Asia retail comps were up 8% with balanced growth across digital commerce and brick-and-mortar stores. By market, third quarter sales in Japan and Korea each increased mid-teens in constant currency. Australia, New Zealand and Southeast Asia were up more than 25% and 50%, respectively. The Chinese mainland was up 7%, despite the significant COVID impacts Patrice mentioned, while Hong Kong, Macau and Taiwan grew low teens in the quarter. We returned to full operations in the Mainland by mid-January. And while our teams are prepared to manage through further disruptions, we are encouraged by the continued resilience and strength of our consumer and brand momentum in China along with the rest of Asia.
Moving on to the balance sheet. Our balance sheet continues to be an important element of our Fortress Foundation, enabling us to balance strategic investments in our brand and business with returning cash to shareholders even through dynamic times. Through the third quarter, we returned approximately $560 million in the form of our dividend and share repurchases year-to-date. We ended the period with $1.7 billion in cash and short-term investments and $1.1 billion in total debt. Net inventory increased 33%, moderating from first half trends as we reduced goods in transit and significantly improved our lead times from last year’s global supply chain delays. Inventory growth still reflects earlier timing of receipts, higher product costs and our strategy of product mix elevation. Nevertheless, we still expect to end fiscal ’23 with inventory more closely aligned to sales growth. We continue to manage our inventory position smartly with the majority still weighted [Indecipherable] product. This gives us greater flexibility to adjust future production levels and allocate product to the channels and geographies with the strongest demand. We also continue to make meaningful improvements in transit times as we move through this year.
Looking ahead, our outlook is based on the evolving macro environment, including inflationary pressures, disruptions in the global supply chain, COVID-19, foreign currency volatility and the war in the Ukraine. We continue to plan across a range of scenarios, and our guidance represents our best assessment of market conditions and resulting consumer impact. For fiscal ’23, we are maintaining our full year outlook in constant currency with revenues expected to increase high single digits or about 8% on a 52-week comparable basis. Our outlook continues to assume a challenging consumer backdrop in Europe and North America. We now expect foreign currency to negatively impact revenues by approximately 600 basis points. We expect operating margin of approximately 13.5% to 14% in constant currency compared to our prior outlook of about 14%. This is based on a more modest level of gross margin expansion in the second half of the year as we keep inventories current and align to demand.
Foreign currency is now expected to negatively impact operating margin by about 180 basis points. This compares to operating margin of 13.1% on a 52-week basis and 13.4% on a 53-week basis last year, both on a reported basis. Gross margin is now expected to be flattish to last year on a constant currency basis. We plan to continue driving stronger AUR and favorable product mix to offset increased product costs. Foreign currency is now expected to negatively impact gross margins by about 150 basis points in fiscal ’23. For the fourth quarter, on a 13-week comparable basis, we expect constant currency revenue growth of about mid to high single digits. On a reported basis, which includes the impact of last year’s 53rd week, we expect revenues to be up 1% to 2% in constant currency. Foreign currency is expected to negatively impact revenue growth by approximately 500 basis points.
Our outlook also includes about 170 basis points of negative impact from the week after Christmas shifting into fiscal Q3 from Q4 last year. We expect fourth quarter operating margin of about 5.5% in constant currency. This represents a roughly 190 basis point increase to last year, driven primarily by operating expense leverage as we normalize our cadence of marketing spend versus last year. Foreign currency is expected to negatively impact operating margin by about 160 basis points in the quarter. We expect constant currency gross margins to be about flat in Q4. This implies roughly 50 basis points of expansion on a 13-week comparable basis. Foreign currency is expected to negatively impact gross margin in the quarter by about 140 basis points. We now expect our tax rate in the range of 24% to 25% for the full year and estimate a roughly 29% tax rate for the fourth quarter. Though this could vary widely as Q4 is our smallest quarter and highly dependent on mix and discrete items. And lastly, we now expect capital expenditures in the range of $240 million to $250 million based on the timing of build-out.
In closing, our teams around the world are operating with agility and executing strongly, driving continued progress on our Next Great Chapter: Accelerate plan. This is a testament to the power of our iconic brand that Ralph created over 50 years ago, and the strength of our Fortress Foundation coupled with diversified engines of growth across product categories, geographies and channels. And with that, let’s open up the call for your questions.
Questions and Answers:
Operator
[Operator Instructions] The first question comes from Dana Telsey with Telsey Advisory Group.
Dana Telsey — Telsey Advisory Group — Analyst
Good morning everyone, and nice to see the progress. Certainly seems that there’s still a lot of moving pieces on the macro side and you beat again on top line this quarter while continuing to grow AUI, the environment has become more promotional. Just bigger picture, can you talk about what gives you the confidence that your elevation strategy can continue to work in a less favorable macro or pricing backdrop? And along those lines, any expansion on your thoughts on the health of the consumer in the wholesale channel in different regions and what you’re seeing in your own retail DTC business with the health of the consumer? Thank you.
Patrice Louvet — President and Chief Executive Officer
Hey good morning, Dana, thanks for your question. Listen, Ralph, Jane and I are really proud of our company’s outperformance this year to-date. As you mentioned, the macro environment certainly continues to be quite choppy but I think we’re used to that by now. Our teams have built this incredible agility muscle over the past few years, if you kind of reflect on what we’ve worked through COVID, inflation and now a relatively promotional environment. So this agility gives us confidence looking ahead, but it’s that agility plus other three things that I would really call out. The first one, and it touches on your second question is, our core consumer remains quite resilient. And that’s true around the world, and that’s true across channels. And as you know we’ve done a lot of work over the past few years to evolve our customer base to bring in a higher value, younger customer that played out again this past quarter 1.6 million new consumers, higher value, less price-sensitive, younger consumer.
The second point is our diverse growth strategy that has multiple growth levers, and we constantly challenge ourselves to make sure they’re still relevant in the environment that we are operating in and looking ahead, and we believe they are as relevant as ever, even in a tougher environment. What do I mean by that? Well, you can look at our opportunities to grow across regions, right? We have significant growth opportunities, of course across Asia, including in China in particular, but also in key cities across North America and in Europe. On the products front, we have a very wide lifestyle portfolio, and so that enables us to drive our core. You saw our core did quite well this past quarter, up high single digits, but also go after high potential categories like women’s up mid-teens this quarter and outerwear up high single digits.
And then the third point is really around flexibility, right? And two things I would call out here. One is because of this breadth of product portfolio, we can really flex up and down, and you’ve seen us do that over the past few years based on where the consumer desires, wants, needs are. And I’m sure we’ll have the opportunity today to talk a little bit more about products and what we’re seeing. But this ability to flex, I think, is quite unique, and it’s a real strength for our company. The other thing is our elevation journey, means our pricing structure has built in flexibility. If you look back since the start of this elevation phase, our AUR is up close to 70%, which means we can still react to the competitive environment, including when it gets more promotional without walking back our overall brand elevation strategy. I was really encouraged to see our AUR performance again this quarter, up 10%, bringing in more consumers, driving strong topline growth in what is pretty clearly a more aggressive promotional environment. And then underlying our diverse and flexible growth drivers are two critical things: one is our ongoing productivity work, which is as relevant as ever; and the second is our Fortress balance sheet. So while the environment remains choppy and we expect it to remain choppy around the world, we believe we are well positioned to continue to attract higher-value consumers and drive growth and value creation.
If I double-click on your question regarding consumers and at the risk of repeating myself, a few things to call out. First of all, our core consumer is resilient and in good shape. And so we’re seeing him and her respond nicely to the work we’re doing on brand elevation, product elevation, shopping experience elevation. I’m very encouraged by the fact that the teams are able to continue to bring in large numbers of new consumers, 1.6 million, I think, is the highest we’ve done in several quarters now. We’ve been around 1.3 million, 1.4 million. And again, the makeup of that customer group is higher value, less price sensitive. So we feel good about that. We did mention last quarter that our more value-oriented consumer, which is a much smaller part of our business today, is obviously feeling the inflationary pressures and is having to be more discerning in terms of how they spend, but they’re still buying clothes. And here, we’re encouraged by our share progress because we’re growing share particularly on the wholesale channel that you touched on, Dana. We’re growing share in men’s. We’re growing share in women’s. We’re growing share in kids. So we’re staying very focused on making sure our value perception continues to strengthen, and it did again this quarter such that across all channels, across all consumer groups, we win the consumer level.
Jane Nielsen — Chief Operating Officer and Chief Financial Officer
And we had that win in North America specifically with AURs up 10%. So that elevation journey continued on a promotional day base that was about equal to last year. Really happy with that quality.
Corinna Van Der Ghinst — Vice President, Investor Relations
Next question, please.
Operator
Thank you. The next question comes from Matthew Boss with JPMorgan.
Matthew Boss — JPMorgan — Analyst
Great. Thanks, and congrats on a nice quarter.
Patrice Louvet — President and Chief Executive Officer
Thank you, Matt. Good morning.
Matthew Boss — JPMorgan — Analyst
So Patrice, could you speak to demand relative to plan that you’re seeing for the Polo brand? And maybe just outline market share gain that you’re seeing in the women’s category? And then, Jane, just in relation to your larger picture comments, how best to think about North America next year relative to your mid-single-digit multiyear target? And just any change in the path to mid-teens constant currency operating margins by FY ’25 that we should consider based on anything that you’re seeing today?
Patrice Louvet — President and Chief Executive Officer
Sure. So starting on demand on the Polo brands, particularly in the Polo brand, as you know is the heart of this company. We are seeing progress on men’s consistently. And what I’m excited about, we touched on it in our prepared remarks, is the introduction of the Polo Originals line that kind of pays [Indecipherable] to the Polo [Indecipherable], which is just a beautiful line of products that our teams [Indecipherable] with really a communication that’s really resonating with the customers. So continuing to drive that elevation and tapping into the breadth of the portfolio so that if you want athleisure, we have that available with exciting products. But we also have investments in the more tailored proposition, which is where we’re seeing the consumer gravitate more and more to this more elevated casual proposition. So Polo men is really nice momentum with a number of engines of growth that were very promising for the future. Outerwear is obviously an area of strength on the Polo men’s here.
On the women’s side, across all the key categories actually, we’re seeing Polo women’s get significant traction. And as we’re seeing the consumer gravitate to this more elevated casual dimension, then we’re able to leverage the breadth of the portfolio and that ranges from sweaters to dresses to acceleration in outerwear, and we expect that to continue. Obviously, we see significant growth opportunities ahead on Polo women. And then on Polo kids, we’re also continuing to see nice traction and share growth. We’re seeing share growth for quite a while on that business as well, and expect that to continue as we throw a relatively wide net when it comes to attracting new consumers and leveraging the presence we have across multiple categories. So the range of product offerings we have on the Polo brand and the skew to our sweet spot, which is this elevated casual, I think, sets up to run nicely, not just for outperformance now, but for the future. Jane, I’ll turn it over to you for the second question.
Jane Nielsen — Chief Operating Officer and Chief Financial Officer
Yes, on some larger-picture perspective now, we feel that this year’s performance is consistent with our FY ’25 guidance of getting to a mid-teens OI margin. And we feel that because our — despite some macro choppiness, our strategy is working. Again, this quarter, we were able to offset inflation, putting up at 10% AUR growth. And what undergirds that gives us confidence is that our consumer value perception rating again this quarter improved and is obviously improved from the pre-pandemic level. So the consumer is giving us confidence in our ability to navigate with gross margin — holding and expanding our gross margin over the next several years. We also have a robust productivity plan that we outlined. We’re still committed to delivering this $400 million over the life of the plan in productivity savings. We’re investing in that, and we’re seeing the benefits of that in our supply chain, in our buying groups and in just our cost management. And you saw that flow through this quarter in our expense management and beating our OI margin guidance. So those are things that are giving us confidence and courage. Also the resiliency of Asia, multiple countries delivering strongly and the resiliency that we see in our China business and Europe continuing in a difficult environment to outperform. All those things are confidence builders that 15% is the right margin. On North America next year, I think that we’ve outlined as called out for the last couple of quarters, the pressure on the value consumer, I think we’re responding appropriately and well within the guardrails of our strategy. So we’re still confident in our outlook for growth in North America next year and are pleased with the progress we’ve made since the reset putting it on a healthier base. So absolutely, yes.
Corinna Van Der Ghinst — Vice President, Investor Relations
Next question please. Angela.
Operator
Thank you. The next question comes from Michael Binetti with Credit Suisse.
Michael Binetti — Credit Suisse — Analyst
Hey guys, congrats on a really nice holiday.
Patrice Louvet — President and Chief Executive Officer
Thanks, Michael. How much of the AUR increase going forward is North America driven? And within that, how much should we think about from here is from SKU mix or channel compared to a like-for-like pricing opportunities? And then Jane, it feels like the right time to ask, North America margin crossed above pre-COVID levels this quarter for the first time in a while. It was nice to see. Could you outline bridge for North America operating margin to get back to the 21%, 22% zone that it was in prior to COVID. You’ve given us some of the components like digital being accretive, those kinds of things, you know our bigger businesses today. I’m curious what your thoughts are there.
Jane Nielsen — Chief Operating Officer and Chief Financial Officer
Yeah, sure. Let me take the first part of your question, which is AUR base. So as we move forward in this pricing journey, you’ve seen us continuously put up AUR increases across all three regions. Again, this quarter we saw Asia, which is furthest along in the journey put a very strong AUR delivery, but more modest than the rest of the regions because they’re further along in their journey but fully offsetting inflation and expanding gross margin. Europe, which is in the middle of the journey also put up nice AUR expansion as did North America. I do believe that because North America is earlier on in their journey that they will be slightly outpaced in AUR progression through this long term — through the length of our plan, and they’re certainly positioned to offset inflation through the length of this plan. So it’s not a disproportionate amount, but I do think there’s more opportunities. We’ve just started this journey in wholesale. We’re early on there. And we’ve continued to make progress across full price, our outlets and our digital. So we’re encouraged by the breadth of AUR progression that we see in North America. And again, we have a multi-pronged strategy. Because of inflation, like-for-like pricing is a part of that, but we’re getting continued benefits from geographic, and because we’re shifting to DTC, we’ll see DTC also be a positive tailwind for us and also including the elevation of our assortments, which will continue as we elevate the brand.
As I look at North America operating margin, overall we’re very pleased with the reset of North America and putting North America on a more profitable base. Year-to-date, our margins have been pressured really by two primary things. One is, rate impacts were disproportionate in North America, and we do expect that to start to abate a bit in the latter fourth quarter, but certainly into FY ’24. The other factor was wage actions that we took last year that were overlapping this year. Those were primarily in our distribution centers and in our retail staff. We think it was the right thing to do, and as we elevate the brand, that continuity is important in our retail. So clearly, as we come out of that and start to get a freight benefit into ’24 and we’ll be out of the overlap of wages, it will be a positive benefit as we move it into North America. And as I said before, we have made some meaningful investments in digital. We have a home app. We now have a full content RL app. Those have been good investments that are now made, and we can start to leverage in the future.
Corinna Van Der Ghinst — Vice President, Investor Relations
Thank you. Next question.
Jane Nielsen — Chief Operating Officer and Chief Financial Officer
Thank you. The next question comes from Paul Kearney with Barclays.
Paul Kearney — Barclays — Analyst
Good morning, thanks for taking my question. Jane, I was wondering, can you help unpack the foreign currency into next year based on current rates? How much of the transaction impact has already hedged or locked in for the year? And what are some of the ways to recapture the 180 basis points of margin impact that you now expect from this year? Thanks.
Jane Nielsen — Chief Operating Officer and Chief Financial Officer
So the primary way that we will address gross margin expansion on both a constant currency and reported basis is going to be our pricing strategy. It’s a proven muscle for us, and we expect to deliver over the next several years. Now foreign currency, given the tailwinds that we’ve seen this quarter, which we called out and the impact of ForEx will have lessened since the start of the year in our guidance, we’re encouraged, but I don’t have a crystal ball. But I do know that I think we’ve been relatively wise about the hedges we placed going into next year. And as currency continues to strengthen, we should have both a translational and a transactional benefit, but we do hedge [Indecipherable] in layers and again, just optimizing around being relatively smart in placing those layers. So I’m feeling good, but again, I don’t have a crystal ball. And it is our practice, we’ll give guidance in our fourth quarter results, but we will call out the impacts based on the spot at that time.
Corinna Van Der Ghinst — Vice President, Investor Relations
Thank you. Next question, please.
Operator
Thank you. The next question comes from Laurent Vasilescu with BNP Paribas.
Laurent Vasilescu — BNP Paribas — Analyst
Good morning, thank you very much for taking my question. Jane, I want to ask about China. I think you mentioned — I know you usually don’t mention quarter-to-date trends, but you mentioned that your China operations are back to full operations mid-January. I know it’s only three weeks, but just for the audience, if you can kind of unpack what you’re seeing? Is it just — is it traffic just coming back? Or are you also seeing conversion? And then just one quick question on the 4Q gross margin. If you can give us some puts and takes, great to hear that the 4Q gross margin should be up 50 bps. If you can parse that out a little bit, that would be very helpful. Thank you.
Patrice Louvet — President and Chief Executive Officer
Laurent, we’ll tag team on this one. Few things on China. First of all, I have to say, I am really proud of our team’s execution, actually not just in China, but across the entire APAC region. And as we talked in prior forums, we see significant near- and long-term growth opportunities in China, strong brand building, a relevant product offering and a connected ecosystem expansion in key markets. In Q3, we were up 7% constant currency in China despite 94% of our stores impacted either by closures or reduced hours or staffing shortages. So it gives you a sense of the team’s agility that I referred to earlier and the ability to kind of navigate that still connect with the consumer while the access is a little constrained. You are right that we don’t generally comment on in-quarter performance, and it’s only been three weeks, but we’ve been very encouraged by the reopening. We are now up and running everywhere, and we’re seeing consumers reengage strongly. So far, I think, double-digit rebound across mainland China. And we’re seeing a combination of, of course, the return of traffic both on — in our brick-and-mortar stores and also online and then strong conversion. And why strong conversion? Because the work that the teams are doing on brand desirability in China is really resonating with the consumer, and they’re leaving the brand into the local fabric of the Chinese culture in a way that really sets us apart. If you think about what the Ralph Lauren brand is about, right, it’s understated luxury grounded in heritage and icons. And that’s a pretty unique proposition. And based on where the Chinese consumers’ mindset is right now, which is maybe a little less focused on short-term fashion and more focused on brands that have a history, that have a heritage and have a set of clear values, that positions us very well. Team is doing a really nice job curating our product line up there, and as we’ve mentioned in prior calls, we’re continuing to see consumers there gravitate towards our highest price items actually around the world. And then we’re super excited about the way the ecosystems are playing out in the top six cities that we’ve called out. Those of you who plan to visit Mainland China in the near term, you can visit our new store in Shenzen, which we opened a few days ago and is off to a wonderful start, and a store we opened recently flagship in Chengdu, which is also doing quite well. And then this is only about domestic consumption, right? So the other thing that’s going to happen is, we’re going to see Chinese travelers wanting to shop our brand around the world, and we’re in a much better position in terms of brand perception than we were three years ago. So I think we’ll be able to benefit from that, and we’re starting to see some of that in Southeast Asia and parts of Northeast Asia for our business. So promising start, excited about the long-term perspective, and we have a very intentional game plan to win with the Chinese consumer.
Jane Nielsen — Chief Operating Officer and Chief Financial Officer
Yeah, a few things to this — giving us confidence in our Q4 guide on gross margins. But one is that what Patrice just said, which is we expect China to come back resiliently in the quarter. It’s our highest gross margin country within — one of our highest gross margin countries within Asia. So we expect that to be a mix benefit as we move forward in gross margin. We’re also starting to see some of the freight benefits, both the reduction in air freight and some reductions starting in ocean freight. So we’re encouraged by that as a tailwind. But underlying it all is our confidence in the pricing strategy that we have and the mix benefits that we have in our assortment moving forward into the fourth quarter, and that is really the strength along with the consumer perception strength that we see that gives us confidence in the fourth quarter.
Corinna Van Der Ghinst — Vice President, Investor Relations
We’ll take the last question please, Angela.
Operator
Thank you. Our final question comes from Ike Boruchow with Wells Fargo.
Ike Boruchow — Wells Fargo — Analyst
Hey, thanks, good morning, everyone. So Jane, that’s actually what I wanted to ask about. So understanding the pricing strategies are working and the margins themselves in absolute terms are still very healthy. Can you just explain, versus three months ago looking into Q4, the gross margin differential? Because you’re lowering the gross margin for the year. I think the Street was looking at like flattish gross margin. Now you’re guiding down 140. I know that that’s FX-driven, but just directionally, something is a little bit worse ex-currency. So I don’t know if that has to do with wholesale being weaker, but can you just kind of explain exactly what’s kind of taking place in Q4 versus maybe the prior plan?
Jane Nielsen — Chief Operating Officer and Chief Financial Officer
So I think that when we guided in May, we gave guidance based on our best estimate of consumer response and pressure. I think the consumer — the value consumer that we’ve called out is more pressured than what we gave our original guidance. And we’ve also looked at the fourth quarter and want to ensure that we are in good shape as we start fiscal year ’24 from an inventory perspective. As we’ve committed, we’re going to have inventories more closely aligned to sales, and that’s been responding to the desires of our value consumers to have a really compelling value. Total value for us has made us a little more responsive to that and as well that we want to make sure that we’re healthy on inventories as we move out of the fourth quarter.
Patrice Louvet — President and Chief Executive Officer
Okay, well listen, thank you everyone for joining us today. We look forward to sharing our fourth quarter and full year fiscal ’23 results with you in late May. And until then, stay safe, and have a great day.
Operator
[Operator Closing Remarks]
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