Good morning, good afternoon, and good evenings, ladies and gentlemen. Welcome to Samsonite Group 2025 annual results conference call. To ask a question during the session, you need to press star one one on your telephone. You will then hear an automated message advising your hand is raised. To withdraw your question, please press star one one again. Please note that this conference is being recorded. I would now like to hand the conference over to Mr. Alvin Concepcion, Vice President of Investor Relations. Thank you. Please go ahead, sir.
Thank you. Welcome to the Samsonite Group fourth quarter conference call. On the call with us today are Kyle Gendreau, Chief Executive Officer, and Tom Pizzuti, Chief Financial Officer. Before starting today's call, we would like to remind you that any forward-looking statements made on the call involve risks and uncertainties that are subject to the company's provisions as stated in disclaimers in the company's press release and earnings announcement, and that actual results can differ materially from those described in the forward-looking statements. With that, I'll now turn the call over to Kyle.
Okay, thanks, Alvin. Thanks everyone for joining us. We're sitting here in New York in our TUMI offices, and we're happy to talk about Q4. I'm on page five of the deck. In Q4, return to positive net sales growth for our business. Our net sales increased on a reported basis 2.2% and approximately 1% on a constant currency basis. The chart to the right of the page, you can see the sequential improvement that we were talking about as we exited Q2 into Q3 and then meaningfully accelerating to positive growth in Q4. That was driven by many things, but importantly, innovative products. We had some terrific products that launched at the back half of Q3 and Q4 and strong execution across our teams across the globe.
In particular, we had a strong portfolio of new products, as I said, and we had very strong growth in our D2C business and our non-travel business, despite headwinds, were key drivers from improving to positive net sales growth in Q4. Additionally, we saw sequential improvements in our travel category, driven by continued strength in global travel, and again, global operating execution. Despite tariffs, our gross margins expanded for the quarter. Q4 gross margin 60.3%, a 10-basis point improvement over last year due to regional mix, brand strength, and really strong mitigations of the tariffs that we saw in the United States. We continue to be focused on our key strategic growth pillars.
We will continue to execute the pillars and the roadmap to leverage our scale advantages in product innovation, increased marketing spend, and enhanced consumer engagement to drive our net sales in 2026. On page six, another lens of what we're talking about. We talked about the net sales growth and sequential improvement, really from exiting Q2, strong improvements in Q3 and again, back to positive growth, on a constant currency basis for Q4. You can see the gross margin improvement not just from last year, but from Q3 - Q4, very strong. That has to do a bit with mix and channel mix as our D2C business accelerated, and also, our higher brands delivered a meaningful improvement.
You can see on the EBITDA side, our EBITDA in dollars was flat to last year Q4 and as a margin percentage in the twenties, 20.3%, for the quarter. If I go by brand on the next page, you can see all brands delivering performance, meaningful improvement. As I said, strong sequential improvement in our Samsonite business that was driven across Asia, North America, and Europe, and meaningful improvements from Q3- Q4, just about positive for the quarter. TUMI held strong. We had a very strong Q3 and a very strong holiday season, and it's another quarter where all three of our major regions were positive in Q4 for brand TUMI. We saw some improvement in American Tourister, so I'd say sequential improvement Q3, Q4.
Importantly, our Asia business was back to positive growth. Asia is a big driver for American Tourister, and we saw a 2.3% growth in Q4 versus a -3.6% in Q3. Meaningful improvement in American Tourister. On page eight, if we look at regions, you'll see this, you know, steady movement in Asia. Asia meaningfully improved. This was a region that started to show meaningful improvement in Q3 and reached 5.1% growth on constant currency basis in Q4. We saw meaningful improvements in China, Korea, and strong performance in India and Japan. These are big markets that really move the needle for Asia.
As they started to move back to strong growth positions, we had a great result for Asia. You saw a tremendous shift in North America, still negative, facing tough prior year comparisons, but meaningful improvements in both U.S. and Canada, in both our direct-to-consumer and our wholesale businesses. Then I would label Europe as steady. You know, 1% growth both quarters. We saw very strong D2C performance, particularly in Q4 in Europe. Overall, 5.6% growth, D2C retail up 4.4%, and our e-com was up over 9%. So strong and steady improvement or performance in Europe. Then Latin America looks like it took a dip in Q4.
If I exclude Mexico for much of this past year, we were talking about the wholesale customers being impacted with trade imbalances, particularly with the U.S. If I exclude Mexico for Q4, we're +8.2%, and encouragingly, as we get into the first quarter of 2026, we're seeing Mexico back to strong growth as these consumers, these wholesale customers are buying. Mexico's at or Latin America's in a good place for us, particularly as we step into Q1. On page nine, you've seen this slide before. I think the important pieces here is our net sales growth has historically tracked well with travel. As you remember in the coming out of pandemic, we had surged in growth.
2021 to 2024, we grew 6x the industry. We see demand for travel continuing to grow as we step into 2024 and 2025. Then importantly, as we get to Q4, return to growth, and really, I expect this business to continue to correlate to travel really well. A bit of the dip that we saw at the start of this year was really off the back of really strong performance coming out of COVID, the few years coming out of COVID. You can see our performance versus travel on the left of the page, global passenger miles up 109 or 9% to the 2019 levels, and our business is up 24% to 2019 levels.
We saw tremendous progress in our D2C e-commerce business. It's our fastest-growing channel, leading to significant increases in our D2C mix. If you look Q4 of last year to this year, our D2C is now 45.1% from 43.1% last year. D2C e-commerce overall was up 12%, and our D2C blended was up 5.2%. We saw a slight increase in our retail business, 2% growth with a comp that was slightly negative. We've had store openings as well that is feeding a good direct-to-consumer combined business. Wholesale was still a decline, down 2.3%, but we saw a sequential improvement from the prior quarter, which was down 4.5%.
We still have customers within the U.S. channel buying in a lumpy way, and that's part of the pieces that we've been seeing all throughout 2025. I mean, that carried a bit into Q4 as well. Overall, moving in a good direction, both wholesale and for sure retail. We've talked a lot about the opportunities in non-travel, and we've been steadily growing here. In Q4, we saw a non-travel category grow 6.7% versus the prior year. You can see as a percent of sales, this continues to move for us 37.6% of sales versus 35.5 last year. Continuing to move in a direction that we'd expect.
There's a slight decrease in travel, 2.2% versus the prior year, but sequentially improved from the - 5.3%. As we continue to see travel growth, and we start to get past the inflection point of revenge travel, and we see consumers leaning in and buying on the travel side as well. Page 12 just in one page clearly spells out the strategic priorities that we're focused on as a company across the entire company to drive accelerated growth. We really characterize these in four buckets, amplify and elevate the awareness of our iconic consumer-centric brands. I'll cover each of these in just a bit on the pages to follow. Be the clear winner in digital to further support our multi-channel growth.
When I talk about digital, it's our own D2C, e-com, wholesale, e-retailers, and across the network that help feed the entire channel growth for the business. Seize the white space opportunities in lifestyle bags and accessories. What I just talked about. We continue to grow there, and I think there's tremendous opportunities to grow more there. When we look at the market share in that channel, compared to our luggage channel, we see meaningful opportunities to evaluate and grow further, which we've been doing consistently for many years. I think we can do more. Then continue to win with products that resonate globally. I'll show you a few examples of that, as I go through the deck.
This is a meaningful effort on our part to be more coordinated in our product development and to have big winners across the globe on the luggage side. I'm on page thirteen. Elevating our iconic brands via world-class storytelling. We're very focused on elevating the level of storytelling. We've been doing this for a while, but we've added a new global function, global marketing and e-com office led by our new VP marketing and e-com to coordinate enhanced global brand building and digital efforts across the globe. We're very focused on amplifying our iconic consumer-centric brands, strengthening global brand consistency while ensuring regional flexibility for local relevance, which we've been doing for a long time, but harnessing the power of a global organization. Drive higher impact storytelling across channels to elevate awareness and brand perception.
Importantly, related to this, drive marketing efficiency and impact. We expect to increase our marketing spend. I think I talked about this on the last call. You should expect me to step this up. We're planning and targeting 6.5% of net sales in 2026 to be deployed with greater consistency and impact across all of our brands. We're leveraging scale and experience to become the clear winner in digital. What do I mean by that? This is really focusing on digital execution strategy, drive engagement, conversion, and customer lifetime value. We're investing in a more unified digital experience with personalized user journeys across both D2C and e-retailer channels. We're promoting e-commerce excellence through the newly created GMEO resources, and we're leveraging data-driven capabilities to align digital marketing strategies across channels and brands.
Everything with an enhanced focus as we move to be a leader, the clear leader in digital. As I said, there's tremendous opportunity in what we label the white space of non-travel within our business. We have exciting new products that we've launched in this cycle. TUMI Alpha 4 is a top collection. I'll cover it in another page. We launched this in January 2026 with very good reception, and this backpack is a driver for the TUMI business and is really well-received and off to a great start. We've talked about Samsonite Paralux in our last calls. This is an award-winning design, two-in-one backpack. This continues to perform. Samsonite Ecodiver, you can see the bag on the right, that's a top collection.
Within the top five of our Europe overall collections, continuing to grow, and we're expanding the offering. I think importantly, this space, we plan to take a deeper dive into defining the opportunities within this lifestyle bag space, with resources dedicated to exploring the full potential. On the product side and products that have global resonance, I have a few examples in the pages here. This is Nexis, launched in Q1 in Europe. It'll launch in Q2 across the rest of the world, and it's off to an amazing start, exceeding our expectations. This is a product that's offering lightweight with Samsonite materials. It's really one of these next global collections. It looks and feels like Samsonite. It's crafted using our Roxkin technology, one of our most advanced shell materials.
Manufactured in our European facilities, and it really combines exceptional strength with ultra-lightweight performance. You'll start to see this across the globe as we step into Q2. Again, it's off to a tremendous start. Last year, we talked about Paralux, and Paralux has been a really amazing global launch. We launched this in Q3 of last year. It was so successful in certain styles, we ended up out of stock by the time we stepped into the start of 2026. We're in the midst of replenishing right now, and I expect this to really capture pent-up demand and be a big driver of our sales for the year. It's generated $18 million of sales in a very short order in 2025.
This is a collection that demonstrates success in combining award-winning innovation, design with all of our designers across the globe with high impact, cohesive media campaigns. We brought both of those together, and it speaks to what we're capable of doing when we get products that have global recognition. We're adding new colors here, and we're adding new collections on the non-travel piece for this as well. I expect this to be a big driver for us in 2026. Then we're messaging with younger consumers. This was an exciting I don't know if you're a Stranger Things fan, but I'm a Stranger Things fan. In Asia, we launched Expanding Your Stranger Side, a collaboration with the Stranger Things. Both pieces really interesting.
My son's traveling with the blue one there and gets comments all the time. It really drives and captures the imagination of a younger consumer with brand American Tourister. This was really well-received, well-placed within Asia, and talks about the capabilities across all of our brands to really message to consumers we're looking for. Then, lastly on the product, we introduced the next generation Alpha 4 collection. This is a meaningful collection, top collection within our TUMI portfolio, and it really speaks to our ability to launch these collections. It's a more streamlined product, streamlined pocketing, silent magnetic closures, intuitive access points, and really engineered, and I might even say, engineered with a lighter construction.
It's really noticeably different, both on the travel pieces, and the backpacks, and it's off to a good start. Particularly in the backpack side, well-received across the globe. You can see campaigns, two campaigns. We have our global ambassador, Lando Norris, on the left, and an Asia Pacific brand ambassador, Wei Daxun, that we've added, and both have been well-received as we launched this product. You couldn't have missed it in Q1 of this year. Just lastly on sustainability, just two things. One, we're being recognized, okay. I won't go through all of what we've accomplished. Our ESG report will come out next month, and I always tell people, read the ESG report.
You get a lens into our business on what we're capable of doing from an innovation perspective and from a sustainability perspective. We're recognized. I think importantly, we were recognized in Time as World's Best Companies in Sustainable Growth 2025 and 2026. We were number 74 out of 500 and number six in retail, wholesale, and consumer goods. You know, that is a meaningful recognition of what we're doing. Paralux, which I covered earlier, was a winner of two Red Dot awards, one on sustainability design and one on overall design. Speaks to what we're doing in this space. Then from a ratings perspective, my view is we're right where we wanna be. From an MSCI rating, a double A. That's a step up. In CDP, we continue to be a climate score B, which is exactly where we'd wanna be.
We're being recognized. We're getting special mentions across many industries or many lenses on what we're doing on the sustainability side. Again, last point before I hand off to our new CFO, Tom Pizzuti, definitely take a look at the report. It'll be out in April. I'll hand off to you, Tom, and I'll come back for some outlooks at the end.
Thank you, Kyle. While it's only been seven weeks since I've joined the company, I served as an advisor for the past several years. Over those years, I became impressed by the strength and resilience of the company with a team that has stepped up no matter how challenging the environment. I'm thrilled and grateful to be in a position to help the company enter into its next exciting phase of growth. I'm sure someone will ask about my initial observations and what my priorities are, so I'll go ahead and address those now before reviewing the financial results. It's clear to me that this is a very well-run organization with a large runway for continuing its profitable growth track record.
The company is in a good position to capitalize on the strong consumer demand for travel with our iconic and innovative brands, as Kyle mentioned, as well as continuing to grow in the underpenetrated non-travel category with stylish and functional lifestyle bags and accessories. The empowered local teams across the globe do a great job leveraging our advantages in product innovation, market leadership, platform, and scale. These teams are nimble and decisive, which is a big reason why financial performance has been so resilient regardless of the macro environment. The organization is brimming with highly talented and motivated employees around the world and is hyper-focused on successfully executing on the strategic growth pillars that Kyle described earlier. I've been impressed by the quality, dedication, and professionalism of the global finance team and the company's commitment to maintaining a strong control environment and robust corporate governance.
This is empowered by our local teams in coordination with global leadership and oversight. All these reasons are why I'm highly confident that we'll be able to create significant shareholder value over many years to come. With a potential dual listing in the U.S., we're excited by the prospect of more investors being able to join us on this journey. As for my priorities, I'd like to ensure that we take a balanced approach towards driving sustainable sales with a robust margin profile. Two, leverage our asset-light business model to invest in growth, return cash to shareholders, and further deleverage what is already a very healthy balance sheet. Three, continue to evaluate strategic acquisition opportunities that align with our long-term value creation goals.
Lastly, to underpin all of this, promote continued discipline of the global finance function, a strong control environment, and good corporate governance while ensuring continued investment in best-in-class systems for our finance colleagues across the world. With that, I'll now go into the financial review. Starting at slide 23, this will be just a brief recap, as Kyle has already covered a lot of this in his review. Constant currency growth in Q4 improved sequentially from Q3 to nearly 1% growth, despite a sequentially tougher prior year comparison. Overall, we saw broad-based improvement across our regions and brands in the second half of the year compared to the first half of the year as the market returns to a more normal growth pattern. Gross margin was 60.3%, up 10 basis points, despite comparing to a strong Q4 margin last year.
We're proud of the discipline that we've had on promotional activities to drive net sales and benefited from favorable geographic, brand, and channel sales mix, as you heard from Kyle earlier. We also effectively mitigated U.S. tariff impacts, thanks to the teams across the globe who managed these so well all year long. As the U.S. tariff landscape continues to evolve, I'm confident we will continue to manage it well with our highly experienced teams and deep and long-standing relationships with suppliers. Distribution expenses as a percentage of sales were 30.3% in the fourth quarter, up from 29.1% last year. The increase was primarily due to the addition of 31 net new company-operated retail stores added in 2025, as well as increased salaries and employee benefits.
Marketing expenses as a percentage of sales were 5.7%, in line with the prior year. G&A expenses as a percentage of sales were 5.7%, down 30 basis points from the prior year. As a result, adjusted EBITDA margin was 20.3% in the fourth quarter of 2025. Q4, as you know, is typically a strong EBITDA quarter for us, and we clearly delivered on that while still investing in opportunistic new store openings to help us elevate our brand presence and drive long-term sales growth. Adjusted net income was $106 million compared to $116 million in the prior year. Overall, we're happy that we were able to maintain an efficient cost structure while finding smart opportunities to invest in our long-term growth in an environment where many consumer businesses were pulling back.
With a return to sales growth combined with a robust margin profile, I think these were good results for the quarter. Moving to slide 24, we present our full year 2025 results. The first half was challenging, as you heard earlier with Kyle, as we faced weakening consumer sentiment due to significant macroeconomic and geopolitical uncertainty. We remained focused, however, on launching new and innovative products with impactful marketing campaigns. We improved our sales mix towards higher margin regions in the direct-to-consumer channel. We successfully mitigated tariff cost pressures, and we invested in our business for long-term growth. As a result, in the second half of the year, constant currency net sales growth improved sequentially, and gross margins expanded year-over-year. Adjusted EBITDA margin was solid at 17.3%, which is normalizing from two higher margin years in 2023 and 2024.
Reflecting the normalization of the adjusted EBITDA margin, adjusted net income was $293 million, down from $370 million in the prior year. Moving to slide 25, we provide a few other highlights that showcase our ability to navigate a challenging demand environment and invest in our long-term growth while also generating solid free cash flow and strengthening our balance sheet. We generated operating profit of $528 million in 2025 compared to $629 million in 2024, as we strategically invested in 67 and 31 net new company-operated retail stores in 2024 and 2025 respectively, which increased distribution and G&A expenses by 2.8% to $1.3 billion.
This increase was partially offset by a reduction in advertising spend from 6.3% of sales in 2024 to 5.9% of sales in 2025 as we flexed our spending in light of lower net sales on a reported basis while still ensuring adequate marketing investment to drive future sales. With this financial performance, we delivered strong adjusted free cash flow of $246 million for the year, and in Q4, it was $170 million, which is an improvement of $35 million from the same period in the prior year. The balance sheet remained healthy with a net debt position of approximately $1.1 billion at the end of the year, which is a leverage ratio of 1.8x adjusted EBITDA.
That's after returning $193 million to shareholders via a dividend of $150 million and $43 million of share repurchases during the year. As we detailed in our last earnings call, we successfully executed a comprehensive refinancing of our senior notes and senior credit facilities, which significantly extended debt maturities across all tranches, increased available liquidity, and significantly reduced near-term refinancing risk. Speaking of investments, turning to slide 26, we continue to invest in new stores, as you heard, remodels, as well as in our strategic initiatives. Full year 2025 capital expenditures were $93.8 million, down from $111.5 million in the previous year, as we were more selective on strategic store openings and remodels.
We plan to increase capital expenditures to a range of $135 million-$140 million next year as we invest in a multi-year project to enhance our European distribution center, make ERP and e-commerce software additions, and add 30-40 net new company-operated retail stores. That said, we will be nimble and flexible in our spend and spend appropriately based on the changing market conditions. In summary, we returned to sales growth in Q4, effectively navigated uncertain trade policies, and delivered solid margin performance. We also continued to generate significant cash flow. We de-risked and strengthened our balance sheet, and we continued to invest in the business while returning a sizable amount to shareholders. With that, I'll turn it back to Kyle for the 2026 outlook.
Okay, thanks, Tom. I'm on page 28. We continue, we are confident in the long-term tailwind supporting our business, including continued growth in travel, as well as our ability to execute our strategic priorities and accelerate growth. Further, as the industry leader, we expect to benefit significantly from renewed consumer demand in luggage and travel bags over the next several years, following a more recent period of moderated growth followed off the back of revenge travel that we saw in 2021 to 2023. Near term, we expected a continuation of our net sales growth momentum during Q1 of 2026 prior to the onset of the conflict in the Middle East. As the conflict continues, we now expect Q1 to be approximately flat on a constant currency basis compared to Q1 of 2025.
We saw strong momentum as we started the quarter, and we saw impact as we get to the middle of March. We believe we have an opportunity to achieve sequential constant currency net sales growth as 2026 progresses. However, inherent uncertainties around the duration and potential impact of the conflict makes it impractical for us to provide a specific outlook for the full year. We do believe our scale advantages, our supplier relationships, and our ability to effectively navigate through uncertain political, geopolitical and macro environment conditions will continue to enable us to maintain strong gross margin growth on 2026 and beyond, despite the uncertain conditions in the market. FY 2026, our marketing spend as a percentage of sales is expected to increase as we lean in our strategic priorities.
I plan to bring that up to 6.5% to make investments to elevate awareness for iconic brands and to drive long-term growth. With that said, we continue to maintain flexibility and can adjust that if needed, but I have a high intention to continue to push the business in the back half of the year. We're focused on continuing to leverage our asset-light model, as Tom just went through, with an investment in growth, returning cash to shareholders, and further deleveraging our balance sheet as we go forward, while continuing to evaluate strategic acquisition opportunities that align with our long-term value creation goals. Our preparation for a dual listing in the United States continues.
Our board of directors and management firmly believe a dual listing will enhance shareholder value creation, over time and will continue to improve with the continued improvement in our business, we intend to complete our dual listing in 2026, while being conscious of the current market conditions around us. With that, I'll turn it back over to you, Alvin, and we'll take some questions. Thanks everybody.
Thank you, Kyle and Tom. Operator, we can go into Q&A now.
Thank you. As a reminder, to ask a question, please press star one one on your phone and wait for your name to be announced. To withdraw your question, please press star one one again. Please stand by as we compile the Q&A roster. Just a moment as our first question, please. First question comes from Anne Ling from Jefferies. Your line is now open.
Hi, management team. Thank you very much for doing the call. I have two questions here. First, you know, Kyle, thank you very much for sharing the year-to-date, you know, performance and also the first quarter update. If you could share a bit more in terms of like, you know, performance by market, you know, how we are seeing, like, you know, the trend, you know, by different markets, you know, whether like, you know, whether there's any other market that is more resilient. That's my first questions. Secondly is on the cost side.
You know, given the current conflicts in the Middle East, oil price increase, you know, if you could share with us, like, you know, the cost, some of these, you know, raw material price, is there any like, you know, risk that, you know, the margin might be under pressure because of this short term product raw material volatility, and how are you able to mitigate that? That would be my second question. Thank you.
Yeah. No, two good questions. I would say we're seeing sequential improvement across all of our business as we're going into Q1. Where we saw some immediate impacts in our business was largely in the Middle East. Middle East is around 1.8% of our sales, so a pretty small piece, but we saw a meaningful decline as we stepped into March, as you'd expect. We saw a bit of halo of that in India, so we saw our India business impacted a bit more than other parts of the region. We saw strong growth and we talked about it in Q4. We saw continued strong growth in the markets of Japan, Korea, and Japan and China, I meant. Did I say China? Japan, China, Korea were very strong.
Southeast Asia continued to be strong. We saw some resilience in Q1 across those impacted by what we saw and as you'd expect, the immediate impacts of that. Our EMEA business was generally steady in Q1, and our North America business was, you know, I would say, sequential improvement is what we're seeing as we went through the quarter. It's a bit early to tell, right? You know, I think as we step out of Q1 and in Q2, that's really where the uncertainty comes. There are real pockets of resilience, but I don't think we've really and the consumers have really felt or reacted to the ultimate impact.
As I said, the duration of the conflict and resolution, it's hard to predict today what that looks like. From the cost side, we saw some early indications, as you'd imagine, anything tied with fuel. We've seen some short-term kind of impacts on shipping costs pretty quickly. They're in kind of a range that won't really affect us. They're in ranges that we typically anticipate. As you know, on shipping we enter into forward arrangements and agreements on that. I think we're in a very good place there as of now. I do think there'll be some impacts on things like plastic costs. We saw some meaningful increases in India fairly quickly. The reality is that takes just a bit of time to pass through.
You know, as we've faced this in past crisis, we'll be working with our suppliers and working with our sourcing teams on that relationship. We typically have five-six months of inventory to manage, so we have plenty of time to navigate that. Our intentions would be to navigate that and do the best we can to maintain margins, and that's what we're focused on. Again, it's early to tell the impacts, you know? We've seen some of the early indicators on the areas that you'd anticipate, and we'll react to that as we manage the business with those suppliers along with the positioning of our products.
Okay. Got it. Thank you very much.
Yep.
Thank you. Just a moment for our next question, please. Next, we have Akshay Gupta from HSBC. Please go ahead.
Hi. Thanks for taking my question. I have two. The first one you mentioned about Q1 sales expected to be around flat constant-currency. Maybe can you share some color on the margin expectations for the quarter? Second is on the store expansion plan. You mentioned about adding 30-40 stores this year. If you can talk about which markets will be the key focus for the year? Thank you.
Sure. Our gross margins are generally holding strong. You know, if not for conflict, I would tell you that our margin profile for the full year would continue in the ranges that we've at. As we were looking at the quarter, it looks like it was holding there. I'd expect not a meaningful impact in Q1 on margin profile. Mix will have some pieces to do with that, but I think it'll be in a consistent lane to what you saw for 2025. For the back half of the year, it's hard to predict on that front. As I just got done saying, we would be looking to mitigate impacts that we might see. Again, we have a strong history of managing that.
As far as store expansion plans, they're kind of in line with what we've been talking about. We have opportunities within Asia and Europe. We have opportunities within Tumi. We've been actively looking at Tumi locations and expanding on the Tumi side. I would weigh that within Asia and next, Europe, and there'll be a handful of stores in the U.S.
Thank you.
Yep.
Thank you. Just a reminder. To ask a question, please press star one one on your telephone. Next, we have Perry Yeung from UBS. Please go ahead.
Thank you very much for the opportunity, and congratulations, Tom, for the new role. We look forward to hearing the insights in the coming quarters. I just have two questions. One is related to the revenue trend. I hear Kyle has mentioned that we've seen a broad-based growth momentum coming through in Q1, but there's been some disruptions coming through due to the Middle East conflicts. More specifically, not sure if you can provide some colors in terms of the trend in North America. Obviously, we know one of the biggest threat last year is really the wholesale channel.
Do we see the appetite or the sentiment has changed across our wholesale customers in North America? That's my first question. My second question is related to shareholder return. I guess during the call, we make a lot of emphasis on the shareholder return and also the strong free cash flow generation. After the standard listing, what sort of expectations should we have, especially given that it might be more cash efficient for the share buyback? What sort of size or scale or the payback that we should expect in terms of the future shareholder return? Thank you.
Okay. Revenue trend for North America. I think wholesale customers are still buying a little bit lumpy. What we can see in North America is sell-through is strong, but particularly off the back of kind of the recent tensions, I think wholesale customers are buying in a careful way. Like what we were experiencing last year, it's a bit lumpy and that continues. Our North America business, excluding TUMI, looks like it's trending to be an improving trend. What we saw in North America in Q1 is our TUMI business was a little bit softer. We saw other luxury players particularly as we get into February and March. There's a little bit of weather. We're a bigger retail presence, that has some impact.
A softer trend for TUMI North America, and our TUMI Samsonite business, an improving trend, though lumpy. Blended, it looks to be in a consistent level to what we saw in Q4 for North America, is what I would say. As far as shareholder returns, we'll have a dividend program that kind of lines up with what we've historically done. We have a typical payout ratio of around 45% of adjusted net income. That will be the case as we step into this year. We're still evaluating shareholder buyback.
I think in the midst of working on our dual listing, we're not actively in that market, but once we get to the other side of that listing, we'll come back and evaluate the blend of shareholder buyback or share buyback versus dividend. I think we'll have a foundation of a dividend policy. We've had a long history of dividend since we've listed the company. You should expect that to continue, and then we'll be added on share buyback once we get to the other side of the listing is how I'm thinking about it. We have plenty of cash flow capacity to do both.
Thank you very much.
Okay. Thank you for the wishes.
Thank you. At this time, we will conclude our Q&A session.
Okay. Alvin, anything to add?
That's it. Thank you, everyone.
Okay.
For joining the call.
Good. Thanks, everybody. Appreciate it. Have a great morning, afternoon, evening. Thanks.
This concludes today's conference call. Thank you for participating. You may now disconnect.