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Zendaya effect helps sportswear maker On lift 2026 profit margin goal

By Thomson Reuters May 12, 2026 | 9:15 AM

By Helen Reid and Juveria Tabassum

May 12 (Reuters) – Sportswear brand On raised its profit margin forecast on Tuesday after strong first-quarter sales, as the Swiss company continues to gain ground in the sneaker and running shoe market long ​dominated by Nike and Adidas.

With Euphoria and Dune star Zendaya as a brand ‌ambassador, co-CEO Caspar Coppetti said On is targeting younger, female consumers, adding that a clothing range launched with the 29-year-old actor is performing well.

“In terms of the long-term growth, what we’re trying to do with apparel or on the sneaker side, we see early very encouraging signs from that,” Coppetti told Reuters.

First-quarter ‌sales ​grew 26.4% to 831.9 million Swiss francs ($1.07 billion) in ⁠currency-adjusted terms, beating analysts’ average forecast ⁠of 822.5 million francs in LSEG-compiled data.

On now expects an operating profit margin of between 19.5% and 20% for 2026, up from 18.5% to 19% previously, and a gross profit margin of at least 64.5%. It maintained its target of at least ​23% sales growth this year.

On was managing inflationary costs “very well” and could stand to benefit further from U.S. tariff refunds, said Rick Patel, analyst at Raymond James.

U.S.-listed On ⁠shares reversed premarket gains to fall about 4% in ⁠early trading as analysts highlighted a slowing rate of growth in ​the United States.

Sales in the Americas – accounting for more than half of On’s revenue – rose ​17.1% in the quarter, compared with a 28.6% gain a year ago.

Asia-Pacific ‌was the strongest region, with 61.4% sales growth, as On expands in China and South Korea.

Jefferies analysts said On’s management is emphasising growth in Asia, but warned a slowing growth rate in the U.S. risks ending its margin outperformance in the longer term.

STRONG LAUNCHES BOOST MARGINS

Coppetti ⁠said profitability was helped by successful new launches, with Cloudtilt sneakers – retailing at between 170 euros and 190 euros – the best-selling shoe across Foot Locker Europe in March. On’s operating profit ⁠margin rose to 21% in ‌the first quarter, from 16.5% a year ago.

On has changed ⁠its senior leadership, with co-founders David Allemann and Caspar Coppetti taking ​over ‌as joint CEOs on May 1, when Frank Sluis, previously at ​supermarket group ⁠Ahold Delhaize, also joined as chief financial officer.

On’s share price is near its lowest levels in two years, having fallen more than 20% since the start of 2026 as the energy price shock triggered by the Iran war dents consumer confidence in the U.S. and Europe.

($1 = 0.7797 Swiss francs)

(Reporting by Helen Reid in London and Juveria Tabassum in Bengaluru, Editing by Louise ​Heavens and Alexander Smith)