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My Newest Review – Video
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#BeBold – The Sexy and I Know it Workout Plan! – Video
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#BeBold - The Sexy and I Know it Workout Plan! - Video
June-Marie Raw Food and Fitness Health Dancing in sexy hot pink babydoll mini dress 001 – Video
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June-Marie Raw Food and Fitness Health Dancing in sexy hot pink babydoll mini dress 001 - Video
Top 5 Fitness and Health Apps for the iPhone – Video
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Health group Fitness First which has a club in Norwich is in talks over loans
Posted: at 4:58 pm
Health group Fitness First is in talks over loans
Friday, February 3, 2012
11:31 AM
The largest health club group in the world - Fitness First - is facing tough discussions with its lenders as it moves close to breaching bank loan terms.
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The gym chain, which has a club in Norwich employs 13,000 people and has 1.2 million members worldwide, is understood to be drawing up a turnaround strategy in a bid to persuade its banks to refinance its £550m debt burden.
But as it stands Fitness First, which has 430 clubs worldwide, including 140 in the UK, is currently set to breach banking convenant tests at the end of this month.
The chain’s owners, BC Partners, has fired the company’s top management team as part of an overhaul, including chief executive Colin Waggett, finance director Duncan Tatton-Brown and UK managing director John Gamble, it has been reported.
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Health group Fitness First which has a club in Norwich is in talks over loans
Health and fitness agenda: Germany's BioFach and Vivaness events
Posted: at 4:58 pm
Coming up, yogis can log on to one of the only virtual yoga conferences, while Nuremberg, Germany, readies its massive BioFach, the world's largest trade fair dedicated to organic products.
3rd Yoga, Health & Happiness: Virtual World Yoga Conference
February 7-11
Online
The Virtual World Yoga Conference is the first yoga event of its kind in which you can participate from anywhere in the world. This year's program is smaller and less expensive than last year's, with 35 speakers addressing yoga, healthy living, wellness, nutrition and cultural and indigenous medicines. The conference will be recorded, for you to reply at your leisure. The conference fee is €129.
http://events.yogahub.com
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23rd BioFach & 6th Vivaness
February 15-18
Exhibition Centre, Nuremberg, Germany
BioFach is the oldest and largest trade fair dedicated to organic products, and in 2012 it continues to extend from food products into holistic health and wellness through its partnership with the Vivaness event. The event is larger in scope and size than other comparable European organic and natural ingredients trade fairs, such as Food Ingredients Europe and Natural Ingredients Expo, held in November in France. BioFach and Vivaness expect to attract some 45,000 visitors in an exhibition space of 89,000 m2. The event has a global presence with events in Shanghai, Sao Paulo, Tokyo, Mumbai, and Baltimore. Vivaness will showcase thousands of products ranging from natural cosmetics and body care to natural medicines and household products. Day tickets for both are €32. http://www.biofach.de/en
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Watch: http://streaming.interlake.net/watch?1C2CCAE89BD8C1298FE2A5|1782|274290
27th GSMA Mobile World Congress
February 27-March 1
Barcelona, Spain
GSMA Mobile World Congress, a four-day event dedicated to cutting-edge mobile technology, will feature a GSMA Mobile Health program, focusing on remote monitoring, wellness, and assisted living technologies. A full program of conferences, keynotes, and panel discussions runs alongside an exhibition of the hottest new products and concept designs from the top mobile companies in the field. More than 60,000 industry members from 200 countries are expected in 2012. Tickets range from €4,999 for a platinum executive pass to €699 for an exhibitor pass. A standard gold pass, allowing access to all exhibitions, conferences, and networking opportunities, is priced at €2,699.
http://www.mobileworldcongress.com
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32nd Natural Products Expo West
March 8-11
Anaheim, California, US
Now in its 32nd year, the Natural Products Expo West is one of the largest natural, organic and healthy products trade shows and conventions in the world, alongside Vivaness, with more than 55,000 industry professional attending last year's event. More than 3,000 exhibits from over 1,900 different companies showcasing the newest products in natural and specialty foods, organic, health and beauty, natural living, supplements and pet products. Its sister show, the 26th Natural Products Expo East, ran September 21-24, in Baltimore, Maryland, and drew a crowd of 25,000 with 1,300 exhibits. Natural Products Expo Asia, in its tenth year in 2012, is being held in Hong Kong (dates not announced). In 2011, the event attracted some 10,000 visitors and 300 exhibitors. Admission fees range for industry professionals; admission for non-industry professionals is $375 if purchased by February 3. http://www.expowest.com
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101st International Women's Day
March 8
Worldwide
This year marks the 101st anniversary of International Women's Day, a global day celebrating the economic, political, and social achievements of women past, present, and future. In some countries, such as China, Russia, Vietnam and Bulgaria, it is a national holiday. Hundreds of events will be held around the world to mark the occasion, including talks, discussions, exhibitions, workshops and a range of local events. This year's theme is "Connecting Girls, Inspiring Futures." To celebrate, CARE USA, a humanitarian organization that fights global poverty, will host the CARE Conference & International Women's Day Celebration, March 8, in Washington DC. For more about the conference: http://www.careconference.org
Find out what is happening near you: http://www.internationalwomensday.com
31st IHRSA Convention
March 14-17
Los Angeles, California, US
A rival to the IDEA World Fitness Convention and FIBO, the International Health, Racquet & Sportsclub Association annual convention is another top, long-standing fitness trade show held in Los Angeles, drawing a crowd of some 7,000 industry pros every year to swap ideas and flaunt new techniques and products. Four-day passes for nonmembers are $795/$595 for members. Two-day passes are priced at $559 (nonmembers)/$395 (members) and a one-day pass costs $450 (nonmembers)/$250 (members). http://www.ihrsa.org
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Aeropostale Hits the Value Bull's-Eye
Posted: at 4:57 pm
Tom is a member of The Motley Fool Blog Network -- entries represent the personal opinions of our bloggers and are not formally edited.
The teen fashion market is not generally an investing niche geared toward value-focused opportunities. The industry contains very little, if any, barriers to entry, and is thus highly fragmented with many players all targeting the same customer base. Likewise, as with most fashion sectors, teen apparel is subject to large swings in popularity. Most brands are therefore largely fad-fueled, and the door for new entrants and those leaving the industry is ever-revolving.
Aeropostale (NYSE: ARO), which targets the market with highly sellable active wear geared towards the so-called “universal teen,” represents a potentially lucrative value investment at its recent market price of $16.80.
Why So Cheap?
At $16.80, ARO trades inexpensively on both an absolute and relative basis.
Largely due to a generally weak retail sector over the past several quarters and the new breed of value-conscious buyers, as well as rising commodity costs, nearly all players in the consumer apparel industry have been subject to “perfect storm” like conditions.
ARO, which markets products at a lower price point than other premium-priced competitors like Abercrombie & Fitch (NYSE: ANF), American Eagle Outfitters (NYSE: AEO), and Urban Outfitters (NASDAQ: URBN), has maintained modest sales growth but largely at the expense of slowly dipping margins.
Average 10-year gross and operating margins – 32.4% and 11.2%, respectively – have decreased nearly 5.5 and 6.6 percentage points, respectively, over the past three quarters. ARO’s stock price fell over 65% within the first nine months of 2011 as a result, and prices have recently stabilized nearly 37% off their early 2010 highs.
ARO Past Performance
An investment in ARO more or less follows a return to normalcy hypothesis. By no means is the recent slump deeply ingrained in the corporation’s operations, as some sort of gross inefficiency. In looking at the past performance of the company, quite the opposite is actually true.
SSS = Same Store Sales
ARO’s past five year performance is much more consistent than that of the competition, despite the unfavorable economic climate. Likewise, its strong performance over the past decade hints that ARO contains a degree of lasting value and is by no means a passing fad – sales have grown at a 20.2% CAGR between 2003 and 2011, gross and operating margins both increased nearly 700 basis points over the same time period, and the growth was largely organic:
Between 2003 and 2011:
Number of stores increased 275% Average SSS growth was 5.7% Sales/square foot increased 33%
Although the retailer’s past three quarters performance has disappointed the market, a normalization scenario under which ARO shares revert back to their early 2010 highs in the mid $20s is not farfetched.
First, the sector will not continue to operate with depressed margins indefinitely. ARO has historically been priced on a lower tier than premium priced brands – ANF’s five year gross margins averaged 66% -- and margins have recently been squeezed from both ends as higher-level brands utilized uncharacteristically prolonged periods of promotion and input prices skyrocketed.
In order for brands like ANF to retain their premium images and their premium pricing powers, prices will need to return to normalized levels. As the general state of the retail sector improves and consumers’ willingness (and ability) to spend increases, prices will follow suit. Cotton prices, although still elevated, have fallen from their mid-2011 peaks. With margins at near all-time lows, even a slight improvement will tend to revamp the market’s confidence in the brand and the stock.
Next, the retailer has been accused of missing recent changes in fashion. Inventory levels, in relation to the seasonal nature of the corporation’s sales, have returned to very manageable levels. Management’s stated plans of heavy product focus and slight store redesigns to better highlight products should help to strengthen margins as inventory would be better tailored to consumer tastes. Likewise, seeing that there is no longer a gross overabundance of inventory, and taking into account the slowly strengthening retail market, chances of another fire sale-like operating environment are low.
Sales figures on four quarter run, and DSI on four quarter averages, to adjust for seasonality
Lastly, from a long-term perspective, ARO’s largely-organic growth strategy has been efficient, and more importantly, safe. Unlike the past five year operating history of competitors like ANF, AEO, and GPS, ARO’s system of stores has not appeared to be affected by severe cannibalization. New store openings per year have slowed to a conservative level, and per-store metrics have continued to improve despite the opposite effect most competitors have experienced. Likewise, as previously mentioned, ARO is hardly a passing fad. Its “universal teen” product focus is once again effective yet safe, and its performance shows that the style resonates with a large portion of the younger generation despite their tendency to frequently change tastes.
Valuation
What does the market’s current price imply about the growth prospects of the brand, and what would it take for the stock to appreciate 40+ % to its early-2010 high in the mid $20s?
*Look at footnote for additional information
Aside from the sales, margin expansion, and same-store metrics that ARO has improved over the past several years, the corporation has created superior shareholder value through the growth of residual earnings – above and beyond its cost of capital requirements – on its core operating assets. Residual operating income over the last twelve month period, $90.1 million, is severely dampened by the market conditions already discussed.
Residual operating income grew at a 24.4% CAGR between 2004 and 2011, and at a 10.2% CAGR between 2004 and the last twelve months. What is the market assuming?
_________________________________________________________________________
Market Price Per Share = Net Operating Assets Per Share – Net Financial Obligations Per Share + [Residual Earnings Per Share / ((1 + Cost of Capital) * (Cost of Capital – Growth Rate))]
$16.80 = $3.75 - (-$0.99) + [($1.12) / ((1.15)*(.15 - G))]
G = 6.9%
_________________________________________________________________________
The current market price, which assumes a very pessimistic 6.9% future growth rate for ARO’s residual operating income, offers one of the best entry points for the stock over the past several years. Even with the recent cyclical downturn, which can be assumed to occur once every decade, the corporation’s residual growth rate has averaged 10.2% per year. Assuming that ARO continues at this average trajectory – although its growth rate prior to the recent downturn averaged near 25% per year – a market price of $24/share is very realistic (plug 10% growth rate into equation above).
Considering that margins are at near all-time lows and the retailer’s residual operating earnings are at trough levels, even a slight improvement in performance should yield residual earnings growth in excess of the market’s assumptions. The recent ARO sell off, from a long-term, value-focused perspective, is well overdone.
* Footnote
NOA, net operating assets = (total assets – financial assets) – (total liabilities – financial liabilities). NFO, net financial assets = (total liabilities – operating liabilities) – (total assets – operating assets) CSE, common shareholders’ equity = NOA - NFO 5% of each year’s sales is assumed to be needed for operations, and the remaining cash/equivalents balance is considered excess financial assets. Financial assets, because the firm has never taken on any debt, is zero for each year. The firm is essentially a net creditor, as its financial assets outweigh its financial obligations. Post-Tax is post tax operating income. RNOA = return on net operating assets = (post tax operating income / average net operating assets) Residual operating income = (RNOA – 15% cost of capital) * average net operating assets
The Motley Fool owns shares of Aeropostale and has the following options: long JAN 2014 $10.00 calls on Aeropostale, long JAN 2014 $15.00 calls on Aeropostale and long JAN 2014 $20.00 calls on Aeropostale. gibbstom13 has no positions in the stocks mentioned above. Try any of our Foolish newsletter services free for 30 days. We Fools may not all hold the same opinions, but we all believe that considering a diverse range of insights makes us better investors. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.
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Tom Gibbs
Tom Gibbs is a member of The Motley Fool Blog Network.
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