True Religion Jeans Website is Now at True-religionjeans. com

True Religion Jeans Website is Now at True-religionjeans. com



True-religionjeans. com is now online.



Mount Auburn, IA (PRWEB) May 22, 2006



True Religion Apparel has reported healthy results for the first quarter of 2006, delivering earnings of $0.28 per diluted share -- up 65% over last year's Q1 -- on 77% higher sales at $35.6 million. That falls firmly into the ranges expected by analysts, and shows that the age of distressed high-end denim may not be over quite yet.



The company exhibits not only an exclusive selection of well-to-do cabooses, but also dizzying sales growth and among the best margins in the apparel industry. Compare True Religion to a few of its closest peers, for example:



True Religion gets a bad rap for its checkered past, casting suspicion on the quality of management. But looking at the numbers today, it looks like the management team knows how to run this ship. New president Michael Buckley, formerly of Diesel and Ben Sherman, lessens the influence of Jeffrey Lubell (who is now "only" acting as company chairman and CEO), and brings in high-level management with documented experience in the retail apparel sector.



In particular, the fact that gross margins remain high and stable. This means that customers are not flinching at the price tags, and True Religion maintains pricing power even with an increasingly diverse product line. Couple that with the high growth we've gotten used to from the jeans maker, and you have a recipe for fat cash -- cash that management happily bakes right back into the business by expanding production and opening retail stores.



But there's trouble ahead, Fools. The earnings release also lowered guidance for the coming quarter -- without detailing the reasons. While the reiteration of full-year targets would imply that things are still generally on track, the dropped short-term expectations spooked investors, and the stock opened 5% lower this morning.



At prices around $18 a share, True Religion trades for about 18 times trailing earnings and 14.5 times the forecasted full-year earnings. How many companies do you know that grow earnings by 65% with no end in sight (this is still a small-cap company with plenty of room to grow), yet still trade at those earnings multiples? Current five-year forecasts look for 25% annual growth, which says sets the bar ridiculously low. It takes three years to double earnings at that pace, something the company now does in six quarters. But let's stay with the growth forecast; we're still looking at PEG ratios between 0.36 and 0.45.



True Religion Fans will surely love to find a new website dedicated mainly to True Religion Jeans. Check out the True Religion Jeans at true-religionjeans. com.



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