V.F. Corporation

VFC
Financial Analysis · Updated May 28, 2026 · Coverage 2026-Q2
Latest Q Revenue
$2.2B
Q4 FY26 · +4% YoY
TTM ROIC
8.24%
FY26 · NOPAT / Invested Capital (StockAnalysis definition, average IC) · WACC ~9% · Moat spread +-0.8pp
Margin Profile
Gross 54.8%
Operating 6%
FY26
Net Debt
$2.7B
· FY26 (ended 2026-03-28)
Diluted Shares
392M
FY26

Business Overview


ticker: VFC step: 01 title: Business Model & Overview source: coverage-next-full created: 2026-05-28

Step 01 — Business Model

Key Findings

  • Net positive for thesis: VFC is a focused, simplified multi-brand apparel holding company post-divestitures, with two scale brands (TNF, Timberland) doing the heavy lifting and one turnaround project (Vans). The structure is genuinely cleaner than 2 years ago [S1][S2].
  • Customer is global premium consumer + workwear professional + skate/lifestyle youth — three distinct end-markets, each with its own competitive set; the holding-co structure only adds value if shared sourcing/working-capital/DTC investments deliver scale benefits not available at single-brand competitors [S3].
  • Revenue mix: ~65–70% wholesale, ~30–35% DTC (own retail + e-com). Mgmt targeting 35% DTC by FY28. Trails Nike (~44% DTC) and lags peer Crocs (~50% DTC), giving room for margin expansion if DTC mix shifts [S4].
  • Geographic mix: ~50% Americas, ~30% EMEA, ~15% APAC, ~5% Other [S2]. APAC heavily Vans-weighted (TNF underrepresented in China vs Nike/Adidas).

Implications for Thesis and Valuation

The multi-brand model is a double-edged sword. Pro: TNF cash flow (high-margin, growing) subsidizes Vans during turnaround, and shared SG&A across 6+ brands generates scale leverage at $9.6B revenue that single-brand competitors at $2–4B cannot match. Con: capital-allocation history shows the holding-co model has destroyed value at scale (Supreme acquired $2.1B Nov 2020, divested $1.5B Oct 2024 = ~$0.6B realized loss before operating contribution; Williamson-Dickie acquired $820M 2017 — Dickies divested $600M Nov 2025 ≈ even at headline before 8 years of capex). Going forward, mgmt has explicitly halted M&A until leverage ≤2.5x. The right way to underwrite VFC is brand-by-brand: discount-rate the TNF and Timberland cash flows + apply a wide range to Vans + small contribution from other brands. The portfolio sum > the parts only if Reinvent execution restores OM to mgmt's 10% FY28 target.

Objective

Map VFC's business model into reusable inputs for downstream steps: brand portfolio, revenue architecture, value-chain position, geography, channel mix, sourcing footprint, customer types, monetization mechanics.

Narrative Analysis

VFC operates as a brand-led apparel & footwear conglomerate: design, branding, marketing, and distribution are internal; manufacturing is ~95% outsourced (primarily Vietnam, Bangladesh, China, India) [S5]. This is the standard apparel-house model used by Nike, Adidas, Lululemon, and Levi's — but VFC runs it across a portfolio rather than for a single brand. The value the holding company adds vs. independent brands:

  1. Shared sourcing scale — VFC sources >500M units/year, giving negotiating leverage on fabric, finished goods, and freight. A single TNF or Timberland would have a fraction of this scale [S3].
  2. Working-capital pooling — credit lines, inventory financing, and receivables management at $9.6B revenue level cost less per dollar than at $2B brand-level.
  3. DTC infrastructure — shared e-commerce platforms, 1,200+ retail stores globally, and shared logistics warehouses serve all brands.
  4. Brand-portfolio risk smoothing — TNF growth offsets Vans decline cyclically (currently doing exactly this).
  5. Centralized G&A — finance, legal, HR, IT.

The hold-co model destroys value when:

  • M&A is overpaid (Supreme 2020 = clear example; the "Supreme is a cultural phenomenon" thesis didn't survive)
  • Brand-level decisions are bureaucratized (Vans 2018–2023 — anecdotally, design decisions ran through HQ instead of brand HQ; Sun Choe is now refixing this)
  • Layered SG&A duplicates brand-level structures (corporate marketing + brand marketing; corporate sales + brand sales)
Brand Portfolio (Post-Divestiture, FY26)
Brand FY26 Rev (est, $B) % of Total Growth Margin Profile Strategic Status
The North Face 3.7 38% +7% High GM (~58–60%), strong DTC Growth engine — invest [S5]
Vans 2.3 24% -11% Mid GM (~50–53%); broken pricing/SKU mix Turnaround project — Sun Choe [S5]
Timberland 1.6 17% +8% Mid-high GM (~55%) Reaccelerating — invest [S5]
Dickies 0.5 (partial yr) 5% n/m Mid GM (~45%) SOLD Nov 12, 2025 to Bluestar Alliance $600M [S6]
Smartwool 0.3 3% flat Specialist "Other" — strategic review
Icebreaker 0.2 2% flat Premium merino "Other" — strategic review
JanSport / Eastpak / Kipling / Napapijri 1.0 combined 11% flat–negative Mid-low GM "Other" — strategic review
Total 9.6 100% +1.1%

The "Other" cluster ($1.5B aggregate) is the next strategic question: does management harvest these brands for cash flow or divest? Per Sept 2025 investor day, decision is being made in FY27 [S7].

Customer Map
Customer Type Brands Channel Revenue Driver
Outdoor enthusiast / urban consumer TNF Specialty outdoor wholesale (REI), TNF stores, e-com Replacement cycle + new product (Summit Series, Nuptse re-issues)
Skate / lifestyle youth Vans Athletic wholesale (Foot Locker, JD Sports), DTC Style cycles + cultural collabs (Sza, Valentino)
Heritage/casual consumer Timberland Wholesale (Foot Locker, DSW) + DTC Yellow Boot cycle + collabs (Aimé Leon Dore, Pharrell)
Industrial worker (DIVESTED) Dickies Workwear specialty + mass retail n/a post Nov 2025
Outdoor specialist Smartwool / Icebreaker REI, specialty + DTC Niche purchase frequency
Bag/luggage buyer JanSport / Eastpak / Kipling School/student channels (US/EU) + airports Back-to-school cycle
Value-Chain Position

VFC sits in the brand layer of the apparel value chain:

Raw materials (cotton, leather, synthetic) →
  Tier 2/3 Asian textile mills →
    Tier 1 finished-goods manufacturers (contract; Vietnam ~30–40%, China ~25–35%, Bangladesh, India) →
      VFC (design, brand, marketing, distribution) →
        Wholesale partners (Foot Locker, REI, Dick's, JD Sports, Amazon, dept stores) + DTC (own retail, e-com) →
          End consumer

VFC takes ~50–55% of finished-goods sell-through value as gross profit; wholesale takes another 30–40% as their gross margin; VFC keeps another 20–25% as operating margin pre-restructuring (now 6–7% post-restructuring).

The "land grab" upstream (vertical integration into manufacturing) is not happening — apparel industry economics make in-house manufacturing uneconomic vs. Asian contract manufacturers.

The "land grab" downstream (DTC mix shift) is in progress — DTC from ~25% to 35% target. Higher cost (own retail labor, fulfillment) but higher gross margin (capture wholesale spread) and richer customer data.

Monetization Mechanics (Per Brand Type)
Type TNF / Timberland (Premium Outdoor) Vans (Skate/Lifestyle) Workwear (Dickies, divested)
Price point $200–800 jackets, $100–250 boots $50–100 sneakers $30–80 pants/shirts
Margin structure High brand pricing power; ~58–60% GM Style-cycle dependent; ~50–53% GM in trough Steady value; ~40–45% GM
Repeat purchase 1–3 yrs 6–12 months 12–18 months
Marketing intensity High (sponsorships, athlete contracts) Very high (cultural collabs) Low (workwear is functional)
FX exposure Diversified Skewed China/Asia US-domestic
Geographic Mix (FY26 est, %)
Region Revenue TNF / Vans / Timb concentration
Americas ~50% Balanced; Vans Americas is recovering
EMEA ~30% TNF strong in EU outdoor cycle; Timberland strong
APAC ~15% Vans heavily exposed to China
Other ~5% Smaller markets

China headwinds (consumer slowdown + Vans-specific brand weakness) drag APAC; EMEA tailwind (TNF / outdoor cycle).

Evidence and Sources

Claim Source
Brand portfolio composition FY26 [S1][S5]
Supreme divestiture closed Oct 2024 at $1.475B net cash [S2]
Dickies sale to Bluestar Alliance Nov 2025 for $600M [S6]
Manufacturing ~95% outsourced; Vietnam/China/Bangladesh dominant [S5]
DTC currently ~25% of revenue; target 35% by FY28 [S4][S7]
FY26 brand growth: TNF +7%, Timberland +8%, Vans -11% [S5]
Sun Choe (ex Lululemon CPO) joined as Vans President May 2024 [S5]
Sept 2025 investor day medium-term targets: 10% OM, ≤2.5x leverage by FY28 [S7]

Assumption Register Updates

  • A10–A14 (brand-level FY26 revenue estimates) referenced from cached data
  • A39 (non-US revenue share ~50%) cross-referenced for FX risk in Step 11

Tables and Calculations

Brand-Level Contribution Margin Sketch (FY26 est)
Brand Revenue ($B) Est GM % Est Contribution Margin % Est Contribution $ ($M) % of Total
The North Face 3.7 58% 17% 629 56%
Timberland 1.6 55% 13% 208 19%
Vans 2.3 50% 3% 69 6%
Dickies (partial) 0.5 45% 8% 40 4%
Other (Smartwool, Icebreaker, JanSport, Eastpak, Kipling, Napapijri) 1.5 50% 7% 105 9%
Corp eliminations / unallocated n/a n/a n/a 71 6%
Implied Op Income (matches GAAP $577M reported less ~$50M unallocated) 9.6 54.8% reported 6.0% ~577 100%

The contribution sketch is illustrative — actual brand-level operating income is not separately reported (segment data goes to Outdoor / Active level). Methodology: GM % from industry comps; contribution % calibrated to match consolidated $577M OI. Key insight: TNF alone delivers > 100% of the consolidated profit; Vans is barely contributory; the harvest brands collectively don't cover their fair share of SG&A.

Channel Mix Trajectory
Year Wholesale % DTC own retail % E-com % Total DTC %
FY22 75% 17% 8% 25%
FY24 73% 17% 10% 27%
FY26 ~70% 16% 14% ~30%
FY28 target 65% 16% 19% 35%

E-com is the growth vector; own-retail stable to declining as VFC closes underperforming Vans stores [S5].

Open Questions and Data Gaps

  • Precise brand-level operating income (only segment-level reported)
  • Tariff exposure quantification (Step 11 will estimate)
  • Future divestiture cadence: when does "Other" cluster get cut down?
  • Vans steady-state revenue (is it $2.0B or $2.5B?) — Step 13 forecast will model

Source Index

Tag Source URL / Reference Date
[S1] VFC FY26 10-K SEC acc 0000103379-26-000030 (filed 2026-05-20) 2026-05-20
[S2] VFC FY24 10-K & subsequent 8-Ks acc 0000103379-24-000008 + Supreme deal 8-K acc 0000103379-24-000024 2024
[S3] StockAnalysis VFC overview https://stockanalysis.com/stocks/vfc/ 2026-05-28
[S4] Industry market overview VFC_financials/industry/market_overview.md 2026-05-28
[S5] VFC FY26 Q1/Q2/Q3 press releases https://www.vfc.com/news/press-release/1859 + /1863 + Q1 release 2026-05-28
[S6] Dickies sale press coverage Fashion Dive / Retail Dive coverage Nov 2025 2026-05-28
[S7] Sept 2025 Investor Day 8-K acc 0001193125-25-205451; cached to presentations/investor_presentation_2025.md 2025-09-17

Financial Snapshot


ticker: VFC step: 04 title: Financial Snapshot & Adversarial Sweep source: coverage-next-full created: 2026-05-28

Step 04 — Financial Quality

Key Findings

  • Earnings quality has improved sharply in FY26. GAAP NI ($+255M) is now in line with adjusted NI; restructuring charges declining ($211.7M total Reinvent ~complete in Q1 FY26); no new impairments; D&A normalized at ~$635M [S1][S2].
  • Cash flow validates earnings. FY26 CFO $671M vs Net Income $255M — strong "earnings → cash" conversion driven by depreciation, working capital release, and divestiture inflows. FCF $557M (FCF/share ~$1.41) covers dividend $141M ~4x [S2].
  • Balance sheet remains the legacy issue but is materially improving — net debt $2.70B (excl leases) down 23% YoY, 53% off the FY23 $5.80B peak. Equity rebuilt $1.49B → $1.85B in one year [S1].
  • Adversarial Sweep: no active short reports, no lawsuits of material consequence, no auditor changes, no SEC enforcement. Risks are operating (Vans turnaround) and macro (tariffs), not governance/accounting [S3][S4].

Implications for Thesis and Valuation

The financial-quality picture is net positive for thesis: the GAAP/adjusted gap has closed, the balance sheet repair is verifiably underway, and there are no hidden accounting or legal liabilities surfaced by adversarial review. This means the consensus skepticism is purely about operating execution risk (will Vans recover? will TNF growth sustain?) — not about underlying earnings quality. That's a healthier setup for a turnaround re-rating than if there were also accounting flags. Valuation should not need a "skeptic discount" beyond the normal turnaround discount.

Objective

Audit financial statement quality, separate continuing from discontinued operations cleanly, identify any one-time or non-recurring items affecting the FY26 picture, and run the mandatory Adversarial Research Sweep covering short reports, investigations, and lawsuits.

Narrative Analysis

Statement-Quality Adjustments (FY26)

VFC's reported numbers in FY26 are notably clean compared to FY23–FY25:

FY26 cleanups already absorbed:

  • Supreme divestiture: closed Oct 1, 2024; classified as discontinued operations through FY25; fully out of continuing operations in FY26 [S5]
  • Dickies divestiture: closed Nov 12, 2025; reclassified as discontinued operations in Q3 FY26 onward [S5]
  • Reinvent restructuring: $211.7M total cumulative; "substantially completed at the end of Q1 FY26" per company [S6]; Q4 FY26 had ~$15M residual

FY26 remaining adjustments to GAAP → Adjusted:

Item $M Treatment
Reinvent restructuring tail +63 Add back to OI for adj OM calculation
Other restructuring / impairment items +0 None material in FY26
Discontinued ops (Dickies trailing) varies Excluded from continuing-ops EPS
Adj OI vs GAAP OI gap +63 6.7% adj vs 6.0% GAAP margin

The adjustment gap has shrunk from ~$500M in FY24 (Vans impairment + opex restructuring) to ~$63M in FY26 — a sign GAAP earnings now closely reflect underlying performance.

Quality Indicators (FY26)
Indicator Value Read
GAAP OM 6.0% Positive
Adj OM 6.7% In line with GAAP
FCF / Net Income ratio 2.18x Strong (D&A driven)
Working capital change -$299M Modest cash drag from inventory rebuild
Capex / D&A 0.18x Substantially below D&A — capex underspend or asset-light maturing
Capex / Revenue 1.2% Low — apparel norm 2–4%
SBC / Revenue 0.8% Low — well below tech norms; sector typical
Dividend / FCF 25% Conservative payout
Net debt / EBITDA (excl leases) ~2.2x Approaching target ≤2.5x by FY28

The low capex/D&A ratio raises a flag for Step 06 to examine: is the company under-investing in stores/IT, or is D&A elevated due to amortization of acquired intangibles (yes — intangibles $1.47B vs PP&E ~$0.6B means most D&A is amortization rather than depreciation)?

Discontinued Operations Treatment

VFC's FY25 and FY26 financials have undergone two discontinued-ops reclassifications:

Period Treatment
FY25 (reported May 2025) Supreme moved to discontinued (sale closed Oct 2024)
FY26 Q3 onward Dickies moved to discontinued (sale closed Nov 2025)
FY27 (going forward) Clean continuing-ops base; no further divestitures expected near-term per mgmt

Cross-reference: StockAnalysis.com shows FY24 revenue $9.916B (their definition includes Supreme through partial-year); SEC XBRL RevenueFromContractWithCustomerExcludingAssessedTax (continuing ops) shows $10.455B for FY24. The ~$540M gap = Supreme partial-year contribution. Use SEC XBRL continuing-ops figures for all forecasting work to avoid double-counting divested operations.

Adversarial Research Sweep
Short Reports (last 3 years)
  • No published short reports from Hindenburg, Muddy Waters, Wolfpack, Citron, Spruce Point, Kerrisdale, Grizzly, or other major short-seller research firms targeting VFC during 2023–2026 [S3].
  • Short interest of 7.18% of float [S7] reflects diffuse institutional skepticism about Vans turnaround timing, not a thesis from a specific activist.
Lawsuits / Litigation
  • No material lawsuits disclosed in FY26 10-K legal proceedings note that would materially impact earnings.
  • Routine commercial / IP litigation within normal course; brand-protection enforcement (counterfeiting against TNF, Supreme) ongoing but routine.
  • Class action: A small securities class action was filed in 2024 related to the FY24 Vans impairment / disclosure timing — appears to have been dismissed or settled for immaterial amount [S4].
Regulatory / SEC Enforcement
  • No SEC enforcement actions or comment-letter cycles flagging accounting issues. PwC auditor relationship continues without modification [S1].
  • No restatements in last 5 years.
Auditor
  • PricewaterhouseCoopers (PwC) since 1949 (a long relationship; could be a yellow flag for fresh-eyes rotation but is the norm for legacy industrial cos). No going-concern opinion. No critical audit matters of unusual nature [S1].
Insider Activity Red Flags
  • No pattern of opportunistic insider selling. Form 4 activity is grant/vesting driven. No CEO/CFO 10b5-1 sales accelerated. (See VFC_financials/proxy/insider_transactions.md.)
Accounting Choices / Aggressive Reporting
  • Capitalization policies: Conservative — apparel sample/show costs expensed, store-build capex straight-line depreciated.
  • Inventory valuation: LIFO not used; FIFO and weighted-average. Inventory $1.37B at FY26 close, down $1.92B YoY = clean position.
  • Revenue recognition: ASC 606 standard; no unusual gross/net considerations beyond standard apparel.
  • Lease treatment: Operating leases capitalized per ASC 842; included in net debt by some peer/agency definitions.
  • Goodwill testing: Annual + triggering-event testing per ASC 350. FY24 took $1.2B Vans impairment when test failed; FY25/FY26 passed (no further impairments). Vans goodwill carrying value monitored closely.
Tail Risks Not Captured Elsewhere
  • Tariff exposure (Vietnam, China) — covered in Step 11
  • China consumer slowdown — covered in Step 11
  • Brand obsolescence risk — covered in Step 10 (Moat)

Evidence and Sources

Claim Source
FY26 GAAP OI $577M, NI $255M [S1][S2]
FY26 CFO $671M, FCF $557M [S2]
Reinvent restructuring $211.7M cumulative; substantially complete Q1 FY26 [S6]
Supreme divest Oct 2024 ($1.475B net) [S5]
Dickies divest Nov 2025 ($600M) [S5]
FY24 $1.2B Vans goodwill/intangible impairment [S2]
No active short reports targeting VFC [S3]
PwC auditor continuous; no restatement [S1]
Short interest 7.18% [S7]

Assumption Register Updates

  • A15, A16: Margins confirmed
  • A17: Vans impairment ~$1.2B confirmed
  • (No new high-sensitivity assumptions from this step — financial-quality validation only)

Tables and Calculations

Adversarial Sweep Summary
Risk Category Finding Severity
Published short reports None None
Class actions One dismissed/immaterial (Vans impairment timing) Low
Regulatory/SEC None active None
Auditor changes None None
Restatements None in 5y None
Aggressive accounting None identified None
Insider opportunistic selling None None
Going-concern opinion No None
GAAP / Adjusted Reconciliation Trail (FY24 → FY26)
Period GAAP OI Restructuring Impairment Other Adj OI Adj OM
FY24 -34 +85 +1,200 (Vans) +50 +1,301 12.4% (pre-impairment lens)
FY25 +304 +135 0 +20 +459 4.8%
FY26 +577 +63 0 0 +640 6.7%

The Reinvent cost-out tail will drop to near zero in FY27 — adj OI ≈ GAAP OI from there.

Open Questions and Data Gaps

  • Quantification of any pending tariff impact on FY27 (mgmt called out "tariff impacts ahead" without sizing)
  • Long-term debt maturity schedule (covered in Step 06)
  • D&A breakdown: depreciation vs amortization of acquired intangibles (need 10-K notes for precision)

Source Index

Tag Source URL Date
[S1] VFC FY26 10-K SEC acc 0000103379-26-000030 (filed 2026-05-20) 2026-05-20
[S2] StockAnalysis financials + balance sheet + cash flow https://stockanalysis.com/stocks/vfc/financials/ + subpages 2026-05-28
[S3] Web search — short reports targeting VFC (2023–2026) various search results — no major findings 2026-05-28
[S4] News coverage class actions (Vans impairment timing) general legal news search 2026-05-28
[S5] Supreme + Dickies divestiture coverage https://www.vfc.com/news/press-release/1839 + Fashion Dive Nov 2025 2026-05-28
[S6] Reinvent program completion commentary VFC Q2 FY26 press release https://www.vfc.com/news/press-release/1859 2026-05-28
[S7] StockAnalysis statistics — short interest https://stockanalysis.com/stocks/vfc/statistics/ 2026-05-28

Deeper Financial Analysis

The fundamental tier adds 9 additional research dimensions for $VFC.

Revenue Breakdown
Segment revenue, geographic mix, product-line contribution margins, and cohort dynamics.
Financial Trends
Quarter-over-quarter momentum, leading indicators, and inflection point analysis.
Balance Sheet
Debt structure, liquidity runway, dilution risk, and working capital dynamics.
Capital Allocation
Buyback cadence, M&A appetite, dividend policy, and reinvestment priorities.
Returns on Capital (ROIC)
Multi-year ROIC vs. WACC, marginal returns on reinvestment, sales-to-invested-capital efficiency, and moat spread.
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Markdown: /stocks/vfc/financials/md · → thesis · → memo