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Operator
Good day, ladies and gentlemen, and welcome to the Under Armour, Inc.
fourth quarter earnings webcast and conference call.
(Operator Instructions)
As a reminder, this conference is being recorded.
I would like to introduce your host for today's conference, Mr. Tom Shaw, Director of Investor Relations.
Sir, you may begin.
Tom Shaw - Director of IR
Thanks and good afternoon to everyone joining us on today's fourth quarter conference call.
During the course of this call, we'll be making projections or other forward-looking statements regarding future events or the future financial performance of the Company.
We wish to caution that such statements are subject to risks and uncertainties that could cause actual events or results to differ materially.
These risks and uncertainties are described in our press release and in the risk factor section of our filings with the SEC.
The Company assumes no obligation to update forward-looking statements to reflect events or circumstances after the date on which the statement is made or to reflect the occurrence of unanticipated events.
Joining us on today's call will be Kevin Plank, Chairman and CEO, who will provide an overview of our business, including today's acquisitions of Endomondo and MyFitnessPal, followed by Brad Dickerson, our Chief Financial Officer, who will discuss the Company's financial performance for the fourth quarter and full-year 2014, followed by an update to our 2015 outlook.
After the prepared remarks, Kevin and Brad will be available for a Q&A session.
Finally, a replay of this teleconference will be available at our website at approximately 8:00 PM Eastern Time today.
With that, I'll turn it over to Kevin Plank.
Kevin Plank - Chairman & CEO
Thanks, Tom, and good afternoon, everyone.
Today, we reported outstanding financial results for 2014.
It was a record year in almost every aspect of our business, enabling us to continue our streak of now 19 consecutive quarters of revenue growth over 20% and five consecutive quarters of 30%-plus growth.
Heading into 2015, the confidence we have in our apparel and footwear business has never been higher, our execution never better, and our ambition never stronger.
We also announced the formation of the world's largest digital health and fitness community with the acquisitions of Endomondo and MyFitnessPal to supplement our existing MapMyFitness and Under Armour record platforms to create Under Armour connected fitness.
We believe this positions Under Armour to meaningfully benefit as the worlds of technology and health and fitness intersect, creating new ways of connecting with athletes, building equity for our brand, and additional levels of trust with our consumers.
So first, I want to spend a few moments covering how our performance this past year will inform how we will grow our business in 2015 and beyond and then spend some time on the future state of Under Armour and how the acquisitions we announced earlier this afternoon will help ensure two things: That we reach our consumer in the manner they expect now and in the future and that we continue to grow our business in the manner our shareholders expect, as well.
Crossing the $3 billion revenue mark in 2014 was an important milestone for our brand and we did so with the most balanced growth in our history.
While a lot of today's conversation will be about new growth drivers, we had a tremendous year in our core apparel business, growing total apparel revenues by more than $0.5 billion.
The growth was across all categories and genders, across our wholesale and direct businesses, in new categories and established ones and also across geographies.
We brought a new dimension to our brand in 2014 and laid the foundation for continued growth in women's with our I Will What I Want campaign.
We continued to drive innovation and premium pricing throughout our North American apparel business with large platforms like ColdGear Infrared, Charged Cotton, and Storm and in key categories like training, outdoor, golf, and women's studio.
We are focused on gaining additional floor space in these categories with our key wholesale sporting goods partners through improved merchandising and key initiatives like reinvigorating our core performance training apparel with the introduction of Armour, our reengineered base layer, featuring enhanced ventilation.
In addition, we see growth with our partners in the department store channel as we build out broader businesses there in women's and kids.
There are multiple parts to our apparel growth story for 2015, but they are consistent with what we've been planning and executing against for the past 21 quarters and in each of them, we've driven 20%-plus growth in our core apparel business.
We will continue to build out large platforms, drive better assortments, and strategically broaden our wholesale distribution in the right businesses.
Company net growth, with our wholesale partners and our continued focus on our direct-to-consumer business, where we grew 32%, coming at just under $1 billion for the full year.
We saw strong growth in our factory house stores as we increased our assortment of footwear and benefited from our new brand house stores in Tyson's Corner and Soho in New York.
In Q1, we are opening our largest brand house yet on Michigan Avenue in Chicago, where we will highlight the innovation, localization, and specialization; a product that we can only do in a 30,000-square foot brand house environment and you'll also see our connected fitness initiatives integrated into the store as well.
We know from our experience in the existing brand house stores, especially in Soho, that we are better positioned to tell great footwear stories and we'll expand on that as we build out new doors in 2015 and beyond.
Our footwear business helped accelerate our overall growth in 2014, with revenues up 44% for the year to $431 million.
As we've been discussing on these calls, we are most proud of the foundation and the team we are building in our footwear category, as we continue to gain share and drive innovation in large categories like running and basketball.
We significantly invested in footwear leadership in 2014 and the strength of the Under Armour brand continues to bring consumers to our footwear, while our focus on cushioning and fit is helping drive market share gains.
This past weekend Tom Brady won his fourth Super Bowl and third MVP award wearing red and white Run N Gun Under Armour cleats.
Next week, the biggest star in Under Armour's basketball universe and leading vote-getter for the NBA All-Star game, Stephen Curry, will be in New York City to debut his first signature shoe, the Curry One.
We'll be telling the basketball world about it when we introduce our holiday one commercial next week starring Stephen and a very special surprise guest.
This will be the largest campaign in our Company's history.
So big, in fact, that there will be a second part to it with a campaign to support the introduction of the Speedform Gemini running shoe.
With the Curry One retailing at $120 and the Speedform Gemini at $130, we are creating a sustainable platform for growth in footwear by focusing on premium innovative product for the best athletes in the world and we'll look back on 2014 as a pivotal year in the development of what may become our biggest engine for growth.
The last piece of 2014 that I'll discuss also happens to be the part of our business where we saw the greatest increase in growth, international.
Revenues grew 96% to $260 million in 2014, as we opened new markets around the globe, expanded our wholesale account base, and continued to build out our international brand house base with 68 brand house stores open outside the United States and rolling out underarmour.com in multiple new markets and languages.
As we head into another strong year of growth in our global business, we'll continue to invest in both local and global assets like our recent signing of Andy Murray, the number four ranked tennis player in the world and Australian Open finalist.
We will strategically grow with our wholesale partners around the world, continue to build out the international brand house stores, going from 18 stores at the end of 2013 to 68 stores in 2014, and adding more than 100 doors this year.
This growing global presence enables us to bring the full Under Armour story to our consumers outside the United States and illustrates the true breadth of our product innovations.
So summing up the year, 2014 was a period of great accomplishment for the Under Armour team and a great example of what's possible when we're successfully anticipating the needs of our consumer.
Our focus in 2015, as it has been since Under Armour's inception, is on making all athletes better and going well beyond our expectations.
That philosophy enables us to focus on what is written on the whiteboard in my office above everything else: Do not forget to sell shirts and shoes.
That is job one for our team in 2015 and will always be the foundation on which we grow the Under Armour brand's global footprint.
That being said, I want to transition now and provide some color on how the acquisitions we announced earlier today accomplished two very important things.
First, the immediate scale we gained by adding Endomondo and MyFitnessPal to the MapMyFitness and UA Record platform, positioning Under Armour as the world's largest digital health and fitness community.
Second, how this investment will enable us to better anticipate our consumers' needs, drive more informed purchase decisions, and authentically build brand loyalty by helping our consumers lead a healthy life.
So first, the facts.
Early last month, we purchased Endomondo, the Copenhagen-based company that has built one of the largest global connected fitness communities.
With approximately 20 million registered users, most of whom living in Europe, Endomondo provides the perfect strategic complement to the activity and workout tracking we currently have in our existing digital platform of MapMyFitness and UA Record.
With today's announcement to acquire MyFitnessPal, we have firmly established our connected fitness platform as the leading provider of everything an athlete needs to live a healthier lifestyle.
Based in San Francisco, MyFitnessPal is the leading resource for healthy living and nutrition with over 80 million registered users and world class nutritional resources.
By bringing this established leader into our connected fitness platform, we can offer the full suite of information, activity, and workout tracking, as well as nutritional expertise to truly make all athletes better.
So what have we bought and more importantly, why?
For starters, with MyFitnessPal and Endomondo added to our existing platform, we now have the world's largest digital health and fitness community with a combined audience among all our platforms of over 120 million unique people.
For perspective, there are approximately 20 digital communities in the world with more than 100 million members.
So the first thing to note is the sheer scale that we now bring to bear.
To give you a sense of that scale, one out of every five people in the United States has downloaded one of the apps in our platform.
Collectively, the three sites grew 46% last year, adding 40 million members and we continue to add over 100,000 registered users every day.
We have great geographic balance with 57% of our 120 million registered users in North America and the balance outside the United States.
We also have 72 million women registered on our platform, providing another great opportunity for us to grow our brand presence with both female athletes and athletic females.
Second, owning the world's largest digital health and fitness platform provides an incredibly unique opportunity for Under Armour to build a different type of relationship with our consumer over the long term.
Health and fitness is a part of your life from childhood onward and our goal in aggregating the three platforms is to make you better by making your health and fitness really easy to understand.
The truth is that you know more about how your car is performing than your own body and we see the potential to inform and inspire our consumer through these assets and its impact on our ability to sell shirts and shoes is unparalleled in our industry.
We built a $3 billion business by making great product and telling great stories, but there's nothing that says we must follow our competitors' playbook, especially when the way consumers digest media and make their purchase decisions is undergoing such dramatic shifts.
The net result of this shift is that our consumer is demanding more from athletic brands than just making shirts and shoes.
We embrace those higher expectations and believe these investments position us better than anyone in our industry to truly make all athletes better.
At the end of the day, the math is pretty simple.
The more active someone is, the more likely they are to buy athletic apparel and footwear.
For the month of January, the four sites in our connected fitness platform, MapMyFitness, Endomondo, MyFitnessPal, and UA Record, recorded more than 100 million workouts and added 4.2 million new unique users.
So how did we come to the decision to invest in these communities and strategically add another tool in how we interact with our consumer?
This chapter in the Under Armour story started at the NFL Combine in 2011, where we debuted the Armour 39, the first performance apparel that incorporated biometric measurements and was used to track the performance of top NFL prospects.
We saw the potential in measuring performance and how our consumers could benefit from it.
At the same time, a lot of different trackers and wearable technology started to hit the market and we were quick to realize that our core competencies lied in making shirts and shoes and understanding how to best incorporate technology to improve athletes' lives.
We also realized that for Under Armour, it wasn't as much about the hardware, as there would always be someone else working in a lab or a garage somewhere who might crack the code on the next great device and that we could create the most value by working closely with partners who understood the power of the Under Armour brand and our knowledge of the athlete.
At the same time, we started to understand that the true value for an athletic brand was actually in the community.
That crystallized for us when we started the conversation with Robin Thurston that led us to acquiring MapMyFitness in December of 2013.
As we started working with Robin's team in Austin, Texas, it only reinforced our belief that the value is in the community, especially one where the user is not just looking at their friends' pictures, but is providing you with data that empowers you to come back to them with an informed point of view to help improve their health and fitness.
We understood that there was tremendous value in becoming that trusted brand that set out to assemble all the elements that would enable Under Armour to be the one place to access all of that information.
From a geographic view, Endomondo was the obvious choice to complement MapMyFitness.
Their community of 20 million users, most of whom are based in Europe, provides a great opportunity for us to learn from and expands our ability to interact with a consumer who is still relatively new to us.
With MyFitnessPal their expertise in the nutritional space positions us to have a complete picture of our athletes and rounds out the data from which we will be able to provide the most informed and personalized input on our users' health and fitness.
So, how will all this come together?
All of the three existing platforms, MapMyFitness, Endomondo, and MyFitnessPal, will live as distinct platforms under the Under Armour connected fitness banner, but we have a longer-term point of view and vision and it's found in UA Record, the community we launched last month at the Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas.
Over time, we believe UA Record will eventually become the daily destination dashboard, aggregating all you want to know about your general fitness, sleep, steps, activity level, and, yes, nutrition.
We know that we are on the verge of remarkable developments in wearable technology, some of which are being worked on across the street in our own innovation lab right now.
Our recently announced partnership with HTC will enable us to help develop statement level products that demonstrates the full capabilities of UA Record.
But by focusing on an open platform and being device-diagnostic, we believe we are the best positioned among all athletic brands to benefit from the evolution of wearables.
So let me sum up what this investment will do for Under Armour and why we believe it's critical to our ability to sell shirts and shoes going forward.
Everything about our consumer is rapidly evolving.
The way they digest media, what influences their purchase decisions, how and where they buy things, we see that every day in our own business.
For example, this past December, we did 77% more e-commerce business on a mobile device than we did in December of just the year prior in 2013.
Brands that do not evolve, that do not offer their consumer something more than a product, will be hard-pressed to compete in 2015 and beyond.
We fully understand the massive shift in how our consumer will intersect with their favorite brands and these acquisitions firmly position us on the leading edge of that new paradigm.
With the world's largest digital health and fitness community, we now have a unique opportunity to build equity and consumer loyalty over the long-term.
We will be able to provide the most complete measure of a person's health and fitness and become the trusted brand that will help drive not only commerce, but also long-term value for our shareholders.
Are we ready for this next step?
Two years ago, I would've had to answer, no.
But since that time, we have assembled an incredible pool of talent, led by three entrepreneurs who literally helped create the entire category of connected fitness.
Robin Thurston, the founder of MapMyFitness, Mette Lykke, the Founder and CEO of Endomondo, and Mike Lee, the Founder and CEO of MyFitnessPal.
Prior to the MapMyFitness acquisition, we had four engineers working on our digital team.
With the two acquisitions announced today, that number is now over 300.
More important than the sheer numbers, we now have three of the best minds in the space, all adept at navigating in a rapidly shifting market and all with extensive experience understanding the needs of their communities.
Robin is going to run our overall connected fitness business and reporting to him will be Mette, who will drive our international business and initiatives, and Mike Lee, who will be running our North American business.
This breadth of experience will enable our core product leadership to focus on the business of selling shirts and shoes as we build out this new growth platform that will position Under Armour at the center of the world's health and fitness activities for years and years to come.
With that, I'll hand it over to Brad.
Brad Dickerson - CFO
Thanks, Kevin.
I'd now like to spend some time discussing our fourth quarter and full-year 2014 financial results, followed by our updated outlook for 2015.
Our net revenues for the fourth quarter of 2014 increased 31% to $895 million.
For the full year, net revenues increased 32% to $3.08 billion, which compared to our most recent full-year guidance of $3.03 billion.
As Kevin outlined, this $3 billion milestone was comprised of strong results across all of our growth drivers, with apparel up 30%, direct to consumer up 32%, footwear up 44%, and international up 96%.
Focusing on the fourth quarter, we grew apparel category 30% to $708 million compared to $546 million in the prior year's quarter.
Similar to the third quarter, our platform innovations of Storm, ColdGear Infrared, and Charged Cotton were key volume drivers across the categories, while new innovation like this year's Magzip showcased our ongoing ability to bring value to the consumer.
Areas of particular strength in apparel include training, golf, outdoor, and studio.
Fourth-quarter footwear net revenues increased 55% to $86 million from $55 million in the prior year, representing approximately 10% of net revenues for the period.
We continued to see success in running footwear across a broader price spectrum, including the $100 Speedform Apollo, driving market share gains within our core sporting goods distribution.
Basketball also continued to gain momentum, most notably around the $125 Clutchfit Drive.
These categories, along with our ongoing strength in areas such as cleated and slides, position Under Armour as the number two overall footwear brand in some of our top wholesale accounts in 2014.
Our accessories net revenues during the fourth quarter increased 22% to $79 million from $65 million last year.
Growth during the quarter was primarily driven by headwear offerings and gloves.
Our global direct-to-consumer net revenues increased 27% for the quarter, representing approximately 38% of net revenues.
Within North America, our factory house square footage grew 17% year-over-year.
This growth reflects a total of 125 factory house stores at the end of the year, up 7% from the end of 2013, as well as the upsizing of 14 existing locations during the year.
On the full price side, we remained at five brand house stores in North America.
In our e-commerce channel, where we continue to see a migration of traffic from desktop to mobile devices, we were encouraged by the conversion improvements from our new, responsive site launched at the end of September.
We also followed up our third quarter launches of local e-commerce sites in the UK, Germany, and France, with the fourth quarter debut of our site in Singapore, which is our first site in Southeast Asia.
International net revenues increased 123% to $82 million in the fourth quarter and represented 9% of total net revenues.
In the EMEA region, we saw continued strength in our three key markets in Europe: the UK, Germany, and France, and commenced our new distributor agreement covering the Middle East.
In Asia Pacific, we remain focused on accelerating growth with both wholesale accounts and distributors, including partner store openings throughout Greater China and Southeast Asia.
Finally, in Latin America, our business benefited from the early 2014 conversion of our Mexico distributor to an Under Armour subsidiary and our market expansions into Brazil and Chile.
This included our first South American brand house store, which opened in Santiago, Chile during the fourth quarter.
Moving on to margins, fourth quarter gross margins contracted 140 basis points to 49.9% compared with 51.3% in the prior year's quarter.
Three primary factors contributed to this performance during the quarter.
First, as discussed in our prior call, our sales mix adversely impacted gross margins by approximately 90 basis points for the period; primarily reflecting a higher mix of international net revenues, including the introduction of new lower margin distributor businesses during the fourth quarter.
Second, the strengthening of the US dollar negatively impacted gross margins by approximately 20 basis points for the period.
And finally, higher freight costs to better meet consumer demand negatively impacted gross margins by approximately 20 basis points in the period.
Selling, general, and administrative expenses as a percentage of net revenues levers 330 basis points to 33.6% in the fourth quarter of 2014 from 36.9% in the prior year's period.
As a reminder, we incurred higher incentive compensation expenses in last year's fourth quarter, which was the primary contributor of leverage in each of our four SG&A buckets.
Additional SG&A details are as follows: First, marketing costs decreased to 8.4% of net revenues for the quarter from 8.9% in the prior-year period.
Second, selling costs decreased to 11% of net revenues for the quarter from 11.6% in the prior-year period.
Third, our innovation and supply chain costs decreased to 8.4% of net revenues for the quarter from 9% in the prior-year period.
Finally, corporate services decreased to 5.8% of net revenues for the quarter from 7.4% in the prior period, inclusive of closing costs for the MapMyFitness acquisition in the prior-year period.
Operating income for the fourth quarter increased 49% to $146 million compared with $98 million in the prior-year period.
For the full-year, operating income increased 34% to $354 million compared to our most recent guidance of $348 million.
Operating margin expanded 190 basis points during the quarter to 16.3% compared to 14.4% in the prior-year period.
For the full year, operating margin expanded 10 basis points to 11.5% compared to 11.4% in 2013.
Interest and other expense for the fourth quarter increased to $4 million compared with $1 million in the prior-year period, primarily reflecting the negative impact of foreign currency, along with increased interest expense from our additional term debt.
Our fourth quarter tax rate of 38.3% was unfavorable to the 34% rate last year, primarily driven by the timing of a state tax credit received in the fourth quarter of 2013.
Our full-year effective tax rate of 39.2% was higher than the 37.8% rate in 2013, primarily due to increased international investments and the lapsing of the state tax credit.
Our fourth quarter net income increased 37% to $88 million compared to $64 million in the prior-year period.
Diluted earnings per share increased 35% to $0.40 compared to $0.30 in the prior-year period.
Full-year diluted earnings per share increased 27% to $0.95 compared to $0.75 in 2013.
On the balance sheet, total cash and cash equivalents at year-end increased 71% to $593 million compared with $347 million at December 31, 2013.
Total debt increased to $284 million from $153 million at December 31, 2013.
Both our cash and debt positions reflect an additional $100 million term loan drawn during the fourth quarter, used primarily for the closing on the $85 million Endomondo acquisition in early January.
Inventory at year-end increased 14% to $537 million compared to $469 million at December 31, 2013.
Looking at our cash flows, our investment in capital expenditures was approximately $59 million for the fourth quarter and approximately $145 million for 2014.
Moving on to 2015, we have three factors driving our updated outlook.
First, the impact of the two new connected fitness businesses we are acquiring; second, the negative impact of the strengthening dollar on our international results; and third, the continued strength of our existing business.
Starting with revenues, we are maintaining our prior guidance of approximately 22% net revenue growth.
It should be noted this is off of a higher number compared to three months ago as we exceeded our most recent 2014 targets by nearly $55 million.
This growth rate takes into account the strengthening of the US dollar over the past 90 days, which has negatively impacted our 2015 net revenues forecast by approximately 1 percentage point from our prior guidance.
However, revenues from the connected fitness acquisitions are expected to largely offset this currency impact.
As stated in our previous guidance, we expect solid growth across all of our growth drivers led by continued outperformance in our footwear and international businesses.
We expect the year-over-year growth rates across each of the quarters in 2015 to be relatively consistent, except for the fourth quarter where we will be lapping strong international growth, including new market entries.
Now, moving on to operating income.
We are now planning 2015 operating income in the range of $397 million to $407 million, representing growth of 12% to 15%.
This change from our prior guidance of operating income growth of 22% is largely due to the impact of our two connected fitness acquisitions.
We estimate 90 basis points of operating margin dilution from these acquisitions, mostly within SG&A, offset with a slight gross margin benefit.
There are three components of this.
First, one-time deal closing costs recorded in the first quarter are expected to impact the full year by approximately 20 basis points.
Second, operating losses from the operations of the two businesses we are acquiring are expected to impact the full year by approximately 40 basis points.
Third, the intangible assets generated from the acquisitions will result in non-cash amortization charges, which are expected to impact the full year by approximately 30 basis points.
The recent strengthening of the US dollar also has had a negative impact on our 2015 operating income guidance, specifically in our gross margin line as we purchased the majority of our inventory for our international businesses in US dollars.
This has created an incremental 50 basis-point impact to operating margin just in the time of our prior guidance.
We anticipate to offset this currency impact through targeted improvements in gross margin and SG&A.
Our current guidance assumes no further significant strengthening of the US dollar compared to current exchange rates.
From a gross margin standpoint, we believe we can still generate a modest improvement from last year's 49% level, despite foreign currency headwinds, given ongoing supply chain opportunities as the year progresses.
Relative to timing, we expect this improvement to be generally consistent throughout the year.
On SG&A, we expect expense deleverage mainly driven by the connected fitness acquisitions.
The rate of SG&A expense deleverage is expected to gradually ease throughout the year from approximately 200 basis points deleveraged during the first quarter.
Factors weighing on expenses during the first quarter include higher year-over-year marketing expenses to support our first brand holiday of 2015, as well as the one-time deal closing cost for the connected fitness acquisitions.
Below the operating line, we expect higher year-over-year interest expense for the funding of our connected fitness acquisitions.
We anticipate funding these acquisitions through cash on hand and expanded term loan and revolving credit facilities.
The full-year effective tax rate is now expected to be slightly higher than our 2014 effective rate of 39.2%.
The impact of the strong dollar on our international results is negatively impacting our 2015 effective tax rate in excess of 100 basis points.
Our 2015 fully diluted share count is expected to be approximately 220 million.
Finally, as we indicated with preliminary 2015 guidance in October, we expect elevated capital expenditures during the year.
Part of this acceleration includes combined investments of approximately $90 million for our new domestic distribution center and the expansion of our corporate headquarters in Baltimore.
We also expect elevated capital expenditures tied to our global retail expansion.
In total, we are currently planning 2015 capital expenditures in the range of $280 million to $290 million.
In conclusion, 2015 has developed into an important investment year for our Company, as we create the world's largest digital health and fitness community.
We believe these investments will enhance and support our growth drivers and drive long-term value for our shareholders.
Even after factoring in the dilutive impact on 2015, we believe that our forward three-year operating income CAGR through 2017 will be in line with the 22% growth rate level that we provided in our prior 2015 guidance.
We will provide specific long-term guidance at our Investor Day, targeted for September 16th of this year.
We'd now like to open up the call for your questions.
We ask that you limit your questions to two per person so we can get to as many of you as possible.
Operator?
Operator
(Operator Instructions)
Omar Saad, Evercore ISI.
Omar Saad - Analyst
Thanks, guys.
Nice quarter, congratulations on the big acquisitions.
I wanted to ask about pricing, as you think about currency and some of the other things affecting your business.
Kevin, you mentioned premium pricing.
Are you guys seeing that or thinking about using that more as a tool or mixing up to the higher price product as a tool to drive the business and offset some of these currency and other issues that you've been discussing?
Kevin Plank - Chairman & CEO
I think you heard some the energy that we talked around footwear with the new step Curry One at $120, the Speedform Gemini at $130.
A philosophy for us two years ago was what can we do to just sell more product over $100 and that's not as easy as it's said.
So we've had to learn that the hard way.
But I think what you've seen and now we're in our 10th year of making shoes, our 8th year of selling shoes that we've actually gotten pretty good at it.
We can drive premium pricing.
It's something that's been familiar to us in apparel for a very long time.
So I think that we're thoughtful and there's a lot of factors oat play with oil and a few other things that are still working their way through the system.
But we're not seeing, number one, a great squeeze on the manufacturing prices that we're not enjoying any advantages just yet and we are feeling some of these currency pinches, but I think everybody's trying to figure out which is up with that.
At the end of the day, I'm not sure it's going to be any global or international market that will be dictating what price for Under Armour is.
It's going to be the relationship that we have with the consumer and I think that we're continuing to drive that and echo that in everything we do from our branding, our marketing, and frankly, highlighted today with the two acquisitions that we announced about a deeper and better understanding of that consumer.
Brad Dickerson - CFO
Omar, a couple of other things on that, too, on pricing and also, costing I guess I'd add into that mix, too.
On the pricing side, obviously, with the strengthening US dollar, we'll look at the ability to increase prices, potentially, on the international businesses, but obviously, that's probably more of a 2016 conversation at this point.
The teams are working through the impact of the strengthening dollar and how that will have on pricing on the international front.
On the costing side, kind of the same timeframe for the most part is we're about a year ahead of the selling season in locking in fabric pricing, so the locking in of our spring/summer 2015 product and obviously, our fall/winter 2015 product, too, really occurred a year to eight months ago to some degree when the oil prices were still elevated.
So with oil prices coming down, that is one of the input costs, obviously, that impact our cost.
We're locking in spring/summer 2016 fabric pricing today and we'll be locking in fall/winter 2016 over the course of the nest six months.
I think we have a better opportunity in 2016, both from a pricing perspective to the consumer and also, the costing perspective from the vendor.
Omar Saad - Analyst
Thanks, that's helpful.
If I could ask one quick question on the acquisitions announced.
For those of us who aren't as familiar with those two platforms, maybe help us understand the two businesses, the revenue algorithm.
It sounds like they're going to be an earnings drag and still in investment phase, although growing quickly, just kind of some of the basic fundamentals around those businesses from a financial or even just to help us understand what they are for those of us who don't know.
Thanks.
Kevin Plank - Chairman & CEO
Let me take a minute, then, because I think it's worth just letting me explain and go a little bit deeper so bear with me here, but let me just start with, first of all, why we thought that we could do this.
The basic reason is because, frankly, our business and our brand have never been stronger.
19 consecutive quarters of 20%-plus top line growth including the last 5 of which we delivered over 30%.
The year that we had in 2014, we saw strength across the business from, again, a core apparel business that grew by $0.5 billion, our footwear business that grew 44%, our international business grew 96%, just to name a few of them.
Frankly, at the end of the day, as we've said and you've heard me say, in my whiteboard, there sit lots of slogans, things that say, like, overpromise and deliver, and dictate the tempo and walk with a purpose.
The one note that's written in red very simply says, don't forget to sell shirts and shoes.
The reason that we did what we did today was because we believe, ultimately, this will help us sell more shirts and shoes and reach more athletes to make them better.
So what we really did -- this exercise began for us a little more than a year ago in December of 2013 when we announced the acquisition of MapMyFitness and we paid $150 million for them.
It really helped us establish a beachhead in digital and, as I said, I think, in my script, you heard me talk about how we didn't really have a presence.
Combined between our internal connected fitness team and our e-commerce team, we had less than 50 people in that group and today, we have roughly 400 people in the group and we'll add another 100 this year.
So the world of digital and, again, some of the anecdotes that lead to that thinking and you hear me give the stat about 77% more people going to mobile, we also have another stat for you, we had 11% of our orders on Cyber Monday last year we saw come across mobile devices.
And in just one year, in 2014, the same day, apples to apples, that number had grown to 27% of people that place orders at UA.com were on mobile devices.
So we recognize that having relations there is incredibly important.
With this acquisition, though, the one thing that we learned was about having additional functionality was we knew what we had, dealing with Robin and the team of the last 12, 13 months, but also, we realized what we didn't have.
If our ultimate goal was to build a complete picture of the athlete, there were two things that we were missing.
Number one, we have an incredibly North American outlook and so global scale was something that we were looking for.
Secondly, something that we thought would be much easier for us to buy than try to build was the idea of nutritional expertise.
Announcing the purchase of two of the world's leading platforms, Endomondo in Copenhagen and MyFitnessPal in San Francisco, in one fell swoop, we created the world's largest connected health and fitness community with 120 million unique members and the largest by a factor of two and arguably three.
So there is no real person in second place that we've basically aggregated this community all at once.
Just as importantly, it's growing at over 100,000 people a day and just a little fact, and January is obviously a big month, particularly for people as they start thinking about health and wellness and measuring themselves, we average 136,000 people joining and registering every single day, totaling 4.2 million people in the 31 days of January.
Just as impressively, as you heard me mention, over 100 million workouts were logged.
100 million workouts.
So when you talk about the one thing that we emphatically know is that the more someone exercises, the more that they work out, it's just logical that the more apparel and footwear they're going to ultimately buy.
The mission that we have says, let's make athletes better.
And with that information people choose to share with our connected fitness platforms, we think it creates a piece of the puzzle that's going to allow us to have that total complete picture of the athlete.
How much they're exercising, how much they're sleeping, how much activity they have, what they're putting in their body, and what their nutrition habits are.
So with all that, it basically comes down to why we did it and really what it means for Under Armour.
The thing that, as I thought, and look, this was not an easy decision and as we talked about this, we debated this heavily internally, had lots of conversations and at the end of the day, we kept coming back to the same thing is that, this will help drive our core business.
This will help with our five core growth drivers.
And frankly, the idea of standing here and looking and saying should we do it or not, to me, it felt incredibly obvious.
It reminded me of when I made that first stretchy t-shirt and looking around and saying, has anybody ever done anything like this and why is everyone still wearing a short-sleeve cotton tee in the summer and a long sleeve cotton tee in the winter?
And I look and say no one has aggregated and put all these pieces together.
We don't see anything coming.
So the ability we had was incredibly new.
But while I saw this really white space with what we were doing making t-shirts, the opportunity that we have here is a bit different, just because there's so much energy and excitement around wearables and biometric measurement.
But the surprise that I have is that, frankly, no one is leading or addressing what we are today; the power of a truly connected fitness community.
There's this massive shift that's happening in the way that consumers are interacting with their favorite brands as the world goes digital and we don't see anyone appropriately addressing the needs of consumers.
So now, when you look and just think about what's happening and frankly, for myself, coming back from CES, in 2009, there were roughly 1 billion quote-unquote connected things in the planet.
And estimates, depending on who you listen to, by 2020, that number will be somewhere between 25 billion to 50 billion.
So who does the best job of synthesizing that data and making it easier for the consumer to understand are the ones that will win.
Activity, sleep, exercise, and nutrition and that's a place where we think that we can win, particularly with our UA Record dashboard.
Again, the vision there is to become the daily dashboard that people check the same way you check your bank balance, the same way you check the weather, the same way that you get an update on the most important asset of your life, your own personal health.
So finally, this conversion that we see happening, the digitization of kids as we look and we talk to people and see that they've forgotten about -- no one's looking and wondering what's happening in the newspaper.
You have one device that a 20 year old cannot live with today and it is not a magazine in print.
It is without question it is a wearable -- it is a handheld device.
What we see is with the acceleration of wearables and what's happening there, that we feel like we are positioned squarely in the center of what is supposed to happen.
Community and platform is the right play and because of the acquisitions that began December of 2013, we're sitting in the middle of it.
This aggregation provides us with the opportunity to build a long and sustainable relationship with our consumer and ultimately we think we're going to sell a lot more shirts and shoes.
I was waiting for that question, Omar, so thank you.
Omar Saad - Analyst
Thank you.
Kevin Plank - Chairman & CEO
Thanks very much, Omar.
Operator
Camilo Lyon, Canaccord Genuity.
Camilo Lyon - Analyst
Thanks, good afternoon, guys.
Nice job on the quarter.
Shifting gears a little bit, Kevin, it looks like you're making a bigger push into the outdoor category.
If you could just talk about the opportunity that you see and how you think you'll differentiate from some of the well-established brands in that category and what you're doing to go after that consumer in a much bigger way?
Kevin Plank - Chairman & CEO
Thanks, Camilo.
So I think it's a massive opportunity for us and frankly, it's one of those silent businesses that we don't get a lot of credit for, but that we are one of the pure player leaders in the space.
Walk into any Cabela's, Bass Pro Shop and the Under Armour presence is overwhelming.
First of all, as I dive into the question on outdoor, I think just giving a nod, I think, to the brand that's been established with the elasticity that we demonstrate.
With the same Company that can come out with probably one of most talked about commercials of 2014 featuring Misty Copeland and Gisele in our women's business with our I Will What I Want campaign, it's, frankly, the same company that has a relationship with Willie from Duck Dynasty.
When you walk in and you see what we have in the outdoor and the fishing and the mountain business, there's a need for a brand like Under Armour.
I think we're continuing to innovate.
We're fresh off the outdoor retailer show out in Salt Lake and amongst other things, we won best product, most innovative product for a new shoe that we have coming out called the Fat Tire shoe.
It's a partnership that we did with Michelin and it puts us against clearly, with a shoe that's fashioned, if you've seen those big oversized bikes that ride on snow or can ride on sand.
I think it's just another approach that we're taking from a very consumer-centric approach that demonstrates we know what we're doing.
From an ability to win there, you're going to start seeing our outerwear, which we've been making, frankly, for the last seven and eight years.
Among that time, we've, of course, built a better relationship with the consumer, understanding them, but we've also built a better relationship with the factories building better product, taking and incorporating the ethos, the essence that is Under Armour that makes us special on an athletic playing field makes us just as special on a ski mountain, just as special in the woods, just as special on saltwater flat fishing boat.
So I think what you're seeing from us is that what gives us the greatest elasticity is the ability to apply the principles that make something so incredibly Under Armour and apply it to a market that make sense.
We have an authentic team here.
We have it on the grassroots side, we have it on the product side, especially, we have it on the marketing side.
I think that we see a great opportunity with the business now that's clearly well over $300 million for us, that surprises people when they hear that number, and frankly, growing north of our internal growth -- or external growth rates as a company, too.
So we see great upside there and frankly, we think we can be a player in the outdoor space for a long time to come and we think that we've got a good relationship now that's just going to keep getting better and better.
Camilo Lyon - Analyst
Great.
Brad, I just had a question for you on the 2015 revenue outlook.
So the fourth quarter had pretty impressive growth on top of what was a very strong growing quarter last year.
So, you basically proved that you could comp on the comp.
You're looking at 22% growth for 2015, maybe you can just help us understand why that momentum that you're seeing in the business shouldn't sustain at some elevated level above that.
Brad Dickerson - CFO
Sure.
If you kind of walk from our 2014 32% top line growth to our 22% guidance for 2015, I think the first place you have to look is our international business which grew 96% in 2014.
And that really included a lot of new launches into new markets like Brazil, Chile, Southeast Asia, and the Middle East.
Most of those launches happening more from the middle to the back half of the year.
So although we still anticipate very strong growth in our international businesses, we will be comping those market entries year over year.
In addition, on the international side, the foreign currency, the strengthening of the US dollar, I mentioned in my prepared remarks a 1% decline in revenue just from the last 90 days activity in foreign currency.
For the full year, it's a 2 percentage point growth hit with the strengthening dollar, full year, year over year for us.
So if you take both of those factors, the international business comping those market launches and the impact of the strengthening dollar, you're probably at more than half of the walk down from 32% to 22%.
On the North America side, obviously, we have this planned deceleration of our factory house growth we've been planning for over the course of the last few years.
We talked about adding less new doors and focus more on square footage growth, so although we are focusing on square footage growth, that square footage growth year over year, as you saw in Q4, also it declined in 2014 from 2013, it will be declining throughout 2015 compared to 2014 also.
So that's another factor that's really kind of driving us down.
On the wholesale side, I've always been pretty clear in I'm going to take a look at the information I have today when we give our guidance and forecast going forward.
Obviously, we have our Q4 results in, but the data points that I don't have today for the back half of 2015 is all of our bookings and orders on the wholesale side, specifically again, in our largest business which is North America wholesale, don't have those bookings in for a good part of the back half of the year, especially the fourth quarter.
So obviously, taking a cautious approach to our forecast.
And from that aspect based on the fact that we don't have that data in place right now.
Camilo Lyon - Analyst
Just quickly on that, a follow-up on that, there was a question that I think Omar asked about pricing.
It sounds like with new technologies, new innovations, new product introductions that there's a positive ASP contribution that we should expect to see, at least in the back half, introducing Gore-Tex into some of the outerwear, the new innovations on the footwear side.
Is that a fair way to think about it?
If so, maybe help talk about the magnitude of the ASP increase?
Brad Dickerson - CFO
Yes.
It's a little hard to forecast an ASP increase because a lot goes into that growth, relative to mix and the expectation of mix.
Obviously, it's an important part of our story from an innovation perspective and obviously, as we innovate those are mostly coming in at premium price points when we innovate so it will definitely have a positive impact on our ASPs as we get to the back half of the year and continue to innovate.
But obviously, our price point increase over the course of the last few seasons has been kind of in the low to mid single-digit range, so our story is growth, it's unit growth, it's less about ASP growth.
That ASP growth is important from an innovation perspective for us, but our brand's all about unit growth.
Kevin Plank - Chairman & CEO
Under Armour's a front porch brand, and so what you'll continue to see us do is take class A partners that we can bring in that have incredible technology, like the Gores and like the Michelins and frankly, like the HTCs that we can use that to leverage our existing platform of storytelling and we can take it in a meaningful way to our consumers that helps improve them and make an athlete better.
So we'll continue to stay with that, we'll continue to find the right partnerships.
When you make great product that actually works, price is not your issue or your problem.
So I think going back to the first question that Omar asked as well is that we've got a lot of room for our consumer that trusts us and what we do and we focus on every single day here is making sure we never violate that trust and keep delivering best in class product.
Camilo Lyon - Analyst
Perfect.
Thanks, guys.
Kevin Plank - Chairman & CEO
Thanks very much.
Operator
Jim Duffy, Stifel.
Jim Duffy - Analyst
Thanks.
Good afternoon, everyone.
I look forward to watching the connected health and fitness efforts evolve.
That's quite a portfolio you've built.
Kevin, with that mind, can you speak to opportunity to leverage Endomondo's European user base to help accelerate development of the shirts and shoes business in Europe?
Kevin Plank - Chairman & CEO
Of course.
First of all, what we're doing on a global basis right now is pretty extraordinary.
We're up 123% in the quarter, 96% for the full year and it's the first year where we saw Europe surpass $100 million.
Really, hats off to our team and particularly, Matt Shearer, who was there before who we pulled out of our Canadian business and sent over there to really get the ship righted, which was a place that we took a lot of hits in Europe for a long time before we figured out how to make things happen.
We really took one of our own who'd built an amazing $100 million-plus business in Canada and asked him to do the same thing in Europe and then handing the reins in the last eight months or so to an industry professional, a guy named Chris Bate -- we've got the leadership established and in place.
But there's a lot of things that are at play there, so of course, first and foremost, it's leadership, but I really like the assets that we've been signing and frankly, the global perspective that we've taken.
Things like Tottenham Hotspur and being in the EPL has been really important for us.
Continuing to double down with athletes and with assets on the outside and being relevant to that consumer, but like anything, Europe does not happen overnight and it takes a little bit longer and so, as we sit here in our ninth year doing business over there, it's been a long run.
What we're seeing, though, is the partnerships that we have on the wholesale side, a lot of really good things that have been going on.
Some of the milestones, again, we surpassed the $100 million, it's actually north of $130 million in Europe for 2014.
The plans that we have are even to breakeven for the first time in Europe, we took some -- Europe was difficult for a very long time, so going from not having that negative actually to being a breakeven and actually looking at having line of sight to make money is incredibly powerful for us.
The aided and unaided brand awareness that we have basically tripled year over year in key markets like the UK and Germany.
The launch of our e-commerce site for the first time in the UK meant a big deal, same thing in Germany, same thing in France and then we expect to add the Netherlands to the EU in 2015.
Our market focus providing the visibility and the opportunity to drive deep account connections.
We've been in some of the right places.
We still have opportunity to go from a wholesale standpoint.
It's a difficult wholesale environment, to say the least, in Europe, but we see ourselves really driving and moving and frankly, the partnership that we felt from people is that we're now getting recognized as that Under Armour is an incredibly key brand to have in your store and you cannot live without us.
Frankly, what we recognize is that we can't live without that either, which is a very healthy relationship and one that we probably share in our wholesale environment here in the United States.
We're looking forward to some of those new partnerships we have.
But that global story doesn't stop at the borders of Europe, either.
The good news is that what Charlie and our team in the international group have done are really driving Under Armour toward that vision of someday we expect, in order to find ourselves as a global brand, that definition means that more than half of our revenues must come from outside of our home country.
So, we've got a shot and we love the execution our team's taking to make it happen.
And we've got Andy Murray now, finalist of the Australian Open, so it's a good Scott on our team.
Jim Duffy - Analyst
Great.
Staying on the international topic, which of the regions are you most optimistic about growth for 2015?
Is it Europe or some the other regions which maybe you didn't mention overdelivering?
Kevin Plank - Chairman & CEO
Let me lay out.
So Latin America really began as Charlie's wheelhouse for us, but we're looking at these markets and things that we thought would be nice countries to do business in, we're now looking at and saying, what's our roadmap to $100 million?
Places like Mexico, Brazil, Chile, where it begins, as always, with great, great leadership.
But in Brazil right now, we've got over 100 branded spaces that we opened in 2014, we'll have more than 250 spaces in 2015.
Obviously, the energy and excitement with the Olympics coming there next year is going to be a big deal.
Mexico continues to move for us.
We've got a new master franchise agreement that's going to magnify our distribution approach that we have there.
Big assets like Toluca and Cruz Azul and the Mexican football league there and then in Chile, where we announced probably what felt like was a bit premature but Colo-Colo, which is one of the top football clubs in Chile, we opened our first brand house in the fourth quarter and it's doing incredibly bigger than we thought it would do.
China is -- when we talk about store growth opening over 100 stores, the majority of those stores will actually come out of China and many of them partner run, but it's not like it makes a difference as we expand from just two cities to more than 10 cities across China.
We want to get into the roots of the country and we want to make sure that they understand our authenticity and our commitment to China.
But again, China, from where it was when we launched in 2008/2009, China, again, is going to be another international breakeven story for us.
So the line of sight that we have toward making money in global markets is something it's incredibly time consuming, it's an incredible amount of sacrifice, money, energy, all those things, but we have an international team that is building out and giving us that global perspective as a company.
The new Southeast Asia distribution agreement that we came to, as well, we have these terrific partners based out of Singapore that have been really incredible, markets that you didn't think of.
One of the imagery we show when we talk about global growth is when we opened a roughly 2,000-square foot store, 200 square meter store in downtown Manila in the Philippines and there's 700-plus people waiting in line to get into it.
So we're seeing that there is a pull and there is an absolute demand for our brand.
Throughout Asia, our partners in Japan continue to move and grow.
Currency's been a struggle with them, but on an apples to apples basis, their business is incredibly healthy and growing at a real rate.
The last thing I'd like to say, just about international growth and expansion, in tying it back to the announcements that we made today, with, frankly, 52 million people outside of North America that now have Under Armour's connected fitness, one of our connected fitness platforms on their mobile or their digital device, it's the opportunity for us to have a different type of introduction with this consumer.
It's a different type of handshake that we're going to introduce the Under Armour brand to them and we think we can do it in an incredibly digital way, but we think it's going give us the opportunity to tell an incredibly complete story of who we are and just as importantly, where this brand is headed.
So a lot of energy and excitement around what's happening with Under Armour on a global basis, to the point where people here are knocking on my door and saying, can I go move to Australia, can I move to China, can I move to these other markets?
So, I think it's a lot of energy and excitement and I think that vision of painting our global brand is something that we expect to bring to life.
Jim Duffy - Analyst
Thanks for the regional profitability perspective.
Kevin Plank - Chairman & CEO
You bet.
One at a time, Jim, one at a time.
Operator
Michael Binetti, UBS.
Michael Binetti - Analyst
Hey, guys.
Good evening, great quarter.
Kevin Plank - Chairman & CEO
Thanks, Michael.
Michael Binetti - Analyst
Just on the guidance, Brad, maybe this is a good one for you.
If I strip out what you're telling us the guidance looks like for the acquisitions and maybe FX, it looks like a pretty meaningful increase to the EBIT dollars here.
You pointed quickly to supply chain efficiencies, those kinds of things.
But the number looks a little bit big to me so maybe we could just get a little bit more color on that, please?
Brad Dickerson - CFO
Yes, you're talking about the offsets, basically, to what I talked about in my prepared remarks?
Michael Binetti - Analyst
Yes, it seems like some pretty good efficiency rolling through there.
Brad Dickerson - CFO
Yes.
I think part of it was us looking at some opportunities that were really driven by the impact of the strengthening dollar to some degree.
A lot of our initiatives are focused on things in the supply chain.
So, the fact that the dollar strengthened pretty significantly here in the last 60 days, really, I think gives us some opportunities, potentially within the supply chain, to take advantage of some of that, especially towards the back half of this year.
Obviously, the front half of this year is locked in, so part of that, part of the initiative there is to look at ways to get some money out of the supply chain because of the strengthening dollar.
Obviously, you kind of have some offsets in SG&A with the strengthening dollar, too, in the international business from a cost perspective, too, that just kind of come naturally and there's just things within SG&A itself as we did the acquisitions, there are some things that made sense to scale back a little bit because we felt the investment of the acquisitions was a complementary thing to be doing to some of the things that we're planning on doing initially, anyway, so some synergies there to some degree.
Although it seems like big items that are offset, most of them are pretty natural because of the strengthening dollar.
Some synergies in the acquisitions that we're doing compared to some other investments we were going to make and some things naturally truthfully, just in SG&A made sense for us to kind of go after, again, just from a bottom-line perspective.
Michael Binetti - Analyst
Okay.
That's helpful.
If you wouldn't mind, just a couple of other modeling questions.
We obviously got a one-time step up change in the revenue growth rate for international as you rolled in some businesses this year, but I think one of the more complicated things for the modelers is to figure out what the run rate of these international businesses.
Is there any way you could give us some guard rails to think about between US growth versus international growth for the year within your guidance?
Maybe even DTC versus wholesale just so we have some guardrails?
Brad Dickerson - CFO
Yes.
I can probably point you more directionally then giving you actual numbers, but again, if you think about our overall growth as a company in 2014 of 32% and our international growth at 96%, there's an even three times number, basically, there, international versus overall company growth.
Obviously, as we talk about, again, lapping some of those market entries last year, again, the impact of foreign currencies on international revenues, that growth rate will come down much more so.
Instead of a three times number, it might look more like the two times number or something like that.
But again, I'm painting you more directionally here versus giving you an exact number.
On the DTC side, the real change here is going to be on the factory house side.
That real change is, again, planned business.
We've been talking all along the last couple years of the ability to really focus more on our brand house initiatives and our e-commerce business as growth drivers and really planning on taking our, especially North America factory house growth, down as we started to limit our new door growth and focus on square footage growth.
Again, I think that's going to be a piece that if you look at DTC growing 32% this year, you would expect, with factory house being the largest portion of that, you would expect that growth rate to come below 30% to some degree.
Michael Binetti - Analyst
Thanks a lot, guys.
Operator
Eric Tracy, Janney Capital Markets.
Eric Tracy - Analyst
Hey, guys.
Thanks for squeezing me in and I'll add my congrats.
Kevin, let me tee you up on footwear here.
I don't think we've really talked about that.
It just feels like this was the year that you've gotten permission from the consumer, clearly reflected in the pricing migrating higher, this huge brand campaign around Steph Curry getting ready to hit.
Maybe just talk to, again, the inflection, how we think about the innovation sort of emerging, and then maybe most importantly, adding Peter here to the leadership team, what we should be thinking about directionally for the overall business?
Kevin Plank - Chairman & CEO
Of course.
Like everything, it always begins with leadership.
First of all, that starts with my original partner, Kip Fulks, who's been driving footwear for the last several years.
Kip is really the heart and soul of this company and I think we we're always looking for is for that heart and soul to come out through our products.
It's something we've been very proud in our apparel, but something I think the consumer is seeing come out and really articulate in the voice of our footwear product, too.
A lot of big stories, a lot of good things to build on.
Launching the Speedform platform was one of those leading launches that we had and its best debut, Runner's World and I think, a lot of accolades that made us all incredibly proud of what we did last year.
The highlight cleat, I feel like we always get caught up talking about our success in cleats, but that is really a big deal, from where began all the way back in 2006 until today, we are clearly the number two player in the market with somewhere in the mid-30%s in terms of market share.
And our line of sight is being the number one football cleat in America.
We say that from the standpoint of if it bleeds, we can kill it.
What we heard was that we would never have the ability to be successful in these markets, we could never, we can never and all we've done is come back with better product every single year, winning more consumers that are choosing our brand.
So what you're seeing happen and play out in our longest-standing business in footwear, which is American football cleats is happening in the same way in baseball cleats, it's happening in the same way in training shoes, in running shoes, and in basketball shoes right now.
So, the big place that we're looking for is -- again, one thing I definitely want to say is when it comes to footwear, we have a solid footwear company.
With the growth that we saw, the 44% growth that we saw, we're over $400 million today and growing at an incredibly healthy pace.
We're the number two market sharer in overall footwear at several of our key accounts.
So there are lots of places around this country and frankly, places we're working on around the world that Under Armour is absolutely winning in footwear.
Also, things like anecdotally doubling our basketball footwear business this season, led by things like the Clutchfit Drive that you saw and three of the teams we have in the Top 25 in the AP Men's Poll and I think three of the Top Five in the Women's AP Poll, as well.
So Under Armour it's great quality shoes.
Especially when you talk about things like basketball, we have the leading vote getter by 40,000 votes for the NBA All-Star game.
Like Stephen Curry has been an unbelievable human being to begin with, but his play on court is something that's just flat-out inspirational.
So we're incredibly proud of what that means.
In addition with Kip, we talk about Peter joining the team, so you're just bringing a professional in.
You're bringing an absolute vet who comes in who's basically seen the big movie before and someone could help us as we start guiding ourselves through that where the law of big numbers start playing in.
I don't see the growth rate slowing in footwear and I'll temper myself when I say that, but I think that we have an opportunity, as impressive as 44% is, I'd say that our opportunity is still much larger than that.
In 2014 alone, we added 60 teammates to our team.
We really reinforced our office in Portland in a place that we'll continue to add talent and bring people toward as well as bring Peter Ruppe in as our SVP of Footwear.
The 25 years of industry experience that Peter brings is something that complements the brand knowledge that Kip has plus the expertise that we've built here.
Beyond that, just a really great team and a really positive energy in Under Armour footwear.
With cleated, we'll continue to lead and attack there; football, baseball, all these categories.
Speedform is actually a product in a platform that we're taken into our cleated businesses as a whole.
The highlight continues to be the top-selling premium product sold at key accounts like Eastbay and frankly, places where kids shop.
Go to a football field and you'll find our product showing up there.
Running is really the next chapter for us.
It's a place that we really focus.
The Speedform that debuted last year was pretty impressive.
The Gemini, you'll hear from people, it's not only the best running shoe that Under Armour's ever built, it could be one of the best running shoes ever.
It is that good of a product that at $130, we're really reinforcing ourself, I think, as a premium player.
What we're seeing from some of the, especially the key accounts that we have with the run specialty shops getting refills and things that the kind of reaction we haven't had from Under Armour in a very long time.
Basketball, we mentioned it, Stephen is a signature shoe kind of an individual and as I said in my script earlier that Stephen will be -- we'll be featuring him next weekend at the NBA All-Star game where we're launching a new commercial, the new Stephen Curry One.
A lot of energy and expectation around that and I think the campaign is one of the best that we've done in our history.
As I mentioned on the earlier question as well, footwear isn't something that stops at sporting goods, either.
What we're doing in the outer space, our outdoor footwear line is one of the most impressive, frankly, anywhere in the world.
That shoe that we won best new product and best innovation at the outdoor retailer, the fat tires shoe, that thing is cool.
You should get one for your kids, they're going to go crazy for it.
But I think it also demonstrates our ability to start leveraging our partnerships with people like Michelin and people like the Gores of the world that we don't have to do all the heavy lifting ourselves and that we're taking this platform that we have as the consumer wants our brand, we're making sure that we just put the best around it all the time.
Lastly, from a distribution standpoint in footwear, we're going to continue to broaden our footwear business inside of our existing terrific partners that we have.
We don't believe that we need necessarily new doors today as much as we just need to be excellent in the doors where we're doing business.
For us, that begins with sporting goods and it also means extending some of our key partners at places like Finish Line at Foot Locker.
One quick note as well is just support that we felt from the executive team at Foot Locker, and particularly Ken Hicks and wishing him well in his retirement and welcoming Dick Johnson who is the first person who bought Under Armour back at Eastbay when he ran that in 1999.
So long story, we've been at this for a long time.
We feel pretty proud of what we've done and thankfully we think we're just getting started.
Eric Tracy - Analyst
I tried to sneak out of OR with a pair of Fat Tires, not for my kids, for me, and it didn't work.
Let me just really quickly follow with Brad, again, if we could, from a modeling perspective, if we strip out currency and supply chain efficiencies sort of offset there and think through, again, just the mix shifts on the accelerating footwear and still outsized international growth.
At what point are we at where it's -- we really start to inflect and it is at least neutral?
Is it this year, is it next year?
Just trying to think through the dilution accretion for those businesses.
Brad Dickerson - CFO
Yes.
I think the one thing we should take into account is the fact that we have been investing in the connected fitness business over the last couple years, even before these two acquisitions.
So the reality is that our operating margin has been relatively flat over the last couple of years in that 11.4%, 11.5% range.
The reality is the mix of that is that connected fitness, obviously, has been an investment, an increasing investment the last couple years even before these acquisitions, and then on top of that, obviously adding a 90 basis point dilutive impact in 2015.
So, the reality is the last couple of years we have been leveraging our core business, even though we are investing in places like international and innovation and product creation and footwear.
We're still seeing some leverage across other points in our existing business and connective fitness has been an investment perspective.
So as you look going forward, I think what you would expect to see is continued investment in places like I just mentioned, international, although becoming profitable and although leveraging within the business unit itself, it's still really an overall investment point in our overall company.
Things like brand house is kind of just getting off the ground, whether it be brand house on the international front or specifically brand house here in North America is definitely an investment road for us.
Again, connected fitness with the acquisitions on top of the existing models will be in investment mode.
I think what you're seeing here is a kind of a continuation of leverage in our core business in the places you would expect us to leverage and balancing that leverage with needed investments to continue to drive long-term sustainable growth for our brand.
Eric Tracy - Analyst
Perfect.
Thanks, guys.
All the best.
Kevin Plank - Chairman & CEO
Thanks very much, Eric.
If I could just take one moment and thank everyone for joining us today.
We're incredibly proud of our results and performance and consistency that we've demonstrated throughout 2014, as well as the defining steps taken today to drive our leadership in the connected fitness space.
We look forward to providing further details on our connected fitness efforts at our presentation and webcast next Tuesday, February 10, live from New York City, beginning at 10 AM and you're all invited.
Thank you all very much and have a great year.
Operator
Ladies and gentlemen, thank you for your participation in today's conference.
This concludes your program.
You may now disconnect.
Everyone have a great day.