Side-by-side comparison of AI visibility scores, market position, and capabilities
Vancouver BC premium athletic apparel (NASDAQ: LULU) ~$10.6B FY2024 revenue (+11%); women's yoga apparel leader, China +41%, US slowdown, men's 22%+ of revenue, competing with Nike and Alo Yoga.
lululemon athletica inc. is a Vancouver, British Columbia-based premium athletic apparel company — publicly traded on the NASDAQ (NASDAQ: LULU) as an S&P 500 Consumer Discretionary component — designing, making, and distributing technical athletic apparel (yoga, run, train, swim, golf) and lifestyle products for women (primary market), men (growing), and youth through 700+ company-owned retail stores and e-commerce at lululemon.com through approximately 36,000 employees. In fiscal year 2024 (ending February 2025), lululemon reported revenues of approximately $10.6 billion (+11% year-over-year), continuing its decade-long consistent double-digit revenue growth as the brand expanded internationally (China mainland growing 41% in FY2024, Rest of World growing 28%) while US growth slowed to low single digits as the premium yoga-adjacent apparel market reached maturation levels in core US metro markets. CEO Calvin McDonald's strategy has focused on building the international business (China, Europe, rest of world) to replicate the North American penetration that drove lululemon's exceptional 2014-2023 growth, while managing the Mirror connected fitness acquisition write-off ($500 million full goodwill impairment of the Mirror home fitness acquisition completed in June 2020 for $500 million — mirror business essentially wound down by 2023) and navigating US market saturation challenges that required product innovation investment to sustain domestic revenue growth. lululemon's core women's leggings business (Align, Wunder Under, Fast and Free pants — $100-148 price point, premium Luon and Everlux fabric technology) anchors the brand's category authority in performance athletic bottoms.
Dearborn MI automaker (NYSE: F) at $185B 2024 revenue (+5%); F-150 #1 US truck 40+ years, Ford Pro $7.4B op profit (9 months), EV losses ongoing, $2B aluminum supply disruption competing with GM and Tesla.
Ford Motor Company is a Dearborn, Michigan-based American automaker — publicly traded on the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE: F) as an S&P 500 Consumer Discretionary component — designing, manufacturing, marketing, and financing a full range of passenger cars, trucks, and commercial vehicles under the Ford and Lincoln brands through approximately 177,000 employees worldwide. In fiscal year 2024, Ford reported annual revenue of $185 billion (+5% from 2023) and net income of $5.88 billion, with Ford Pro (the commercial vehicle division serving fleet operators, government agencies, and small businesses with F-150, Super Duty F-250/F-350/F-450, and Transit vans) generating $7.4 billion in operating profit in the first nine months alone — making Ford Pro the company's most profitable and fastest-growing business. The F-150 pickup truck remains the best-selling vehicle in the United States for more than 40 consecutive years, generating the revenue foundation that finances Ford's EV and technology investments. CEO Jim Farley's "Ford+" strategy organizes the company into three segments: Ford Blue (profitable ICE vehicle business — Bronco, Explorer, Ranger, Maverick, F-150), Ford Pro (commercial vehicles — market leadership in commercial trucks and work vans), and Ford Model e (EV program — F-150 Lightning, Mustang Mach-E, future EV products). Ford Model e accumulated approximately $5 billion in operating losses in 2023 as battery costs, pricing competition from Tesla, and slower-than-expected EV adoption compressed EV margins. A supply chain challenge in 2024-2025 — an aluminum supply disruption expected to cost up to $2 billion in EBIT — highlights Ford's exposure to raw material and trade policy risks as aluminum tariff policy creates supplier volatility.
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