Selling Teen Spirit

At clothing retailer Pacific Sunwear, the surf is up--and so are profits. Can it hold the hip-hop crowd?

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Regular readers of the financial pages might be forgiven for thinking the sun has not set for the past few fiscal years. In describing the improving fortunes of teen-clothing retailer PacSun, pun-happy headline writers have frequently alluded to the company's tendency to rise, shine, blaze and heat up. Pacific Sunwear, as it is more formally known, continued the perpetual daylight when it announced last week that its second-quarter profits jumped 84% compared with the same period last year. Sales also increased at hefty double-digit rates, up nearly 23%, to $234.4 million.

The performance was especially impressive in light of the generally sluggish retail environment. But Pacific Sunwear, perhaps more than any other retailer, seems to have figured out how to cater to the fashion desires of that fickle yet reliably profligate demographic group, American teenagers. By stocking only the hottest surf-and skate-clothing brands--and by being willing to dump them the moment they start to cool--the once laid-back West Coast retailer has expanded into a 650-store monster with outlets in 49 states and Puerto Rico (a store in the 50th state, Arkansas, should open soon). And it has done this without losing cachet with its target market. Pacific Sun, says shopper Heather Brentlinger, 17, of Omaha, Neb., "has the surfer look I like."

Brentlinger has never surfed. She doesn't even swim, which might have disturbed the company's founder, dedicated surfer Tom Moore. He managed to find time for his first love even as the Newport Beach, Calif., surf-gear shop he opened in 1980 grew to an 11-store chain. In the late 1980s the business caught the attention of venture capitalists who were convinced that brands made by Southern California manufacturers for a Southern California lifestyle could work outside the area. After the merchandise was slightly tweaked (some suppliers had to start making long pants and outerwear for East Coast customers), the concept took off. In 1993, with 60 stores, the company went public on the NASDAQ market. Today Pac-Sun plans to have 1,000 stores by 2007. (Gap, by contrast, has almost 3,000 stores worldwide.)

PacSun stores are located almost exclusively in suburban malls. A good portion of customers, like Brentlinger, don't live anywhere near a large body of water. But that has not diminished the appeal of PacSun's surfwear. Thanks to MTV and movies like Blue Crush, kids from Alaska to Alabama are eager to look as if they spend the day with sand between their toes. In addition to its private label, PacSun stocks brands like Billabong, Quiksilver and Hurley, lines that pro surfers and skaters wear. Even though teens can get some of these brands at mass merchandisers such as Wal-Mart and Target, "they think shopping at PacSun is cooler," says Jennifer Black, a retail-stock analyst for Wells Fargo Securities. She adds that there is little danger of the surf trend's evaporating, as it has been around since the 1950s.

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