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Trying to stay in shape during a pandemic means lifting dumbbells in
front of the bedroom mirror, taking Pilates classes in the living
room on Facebook live, and long runs in the park wearing a mask.
By early April 2020, almost all of the 40,000+ health clubs in the
U.S. shut down.
1 out of every 5 Americans needed to find a new place to sweat.
Since the start of the pandemic, U.S.
gyms have lost more than $10 billion dollars in revenue as of August
1st, 2020.
And according to the International Health, Racquet and Sports Club
Association, without additional federal funds, about 25% of clubs
could close permanently.
In the meantime, Peloton's sales have surged as people convert their
apartments and houses into home gyms.
Covid-19 has thrown the gym industry into a tailspin, wreaking havoc
on some of the biggest names in fitness, including Gold's Gym and 24
Hour Fitness. Planet Fitness has also had to shut its doors for
months. But unlike its rivals, the company is poised to sprint past
the competition once the pandemic ends.
Planet Fitness is the purple and yellow gym, where a basic monthly
membership runs $10 bucks a month and the staff gives away free pizza
and bagels. "You know, I really feel that a situation like this,
people really realize how important fitness is in health and
wellness, and there are studies that show all the time that working
out does build your immune system.
You know, I think Planet Fitness, because of our economics our strong
franchise system, we're well-positioned to weather the storm."
Planet Fitness reported 53 consecutive quarters of positive same-store
sales growth before Covid-19 hit in March 2020.
But analysts say, without the rollout of a vaccine, it could be until
the end of 2021 before the company reaches pre-pandemic levels of
profitability. So despite the dire situation in the gym industry, can
Planet Fitness actually come out ahead?
And what does social distancing mean for the future of working out?
Planet Fitness's origins can be traced back to Dover, New Hampshire in
the early 1990s.
In 1993, brothers Michael and Mark Grondahl hired UNH student and
future CEO Chris Rondeau to work the front desk at their gym.
The club looked a lot like its competitors: stacks of free weights, a
juice bar and group exercise classes.
But the trio realized that to expand their clientele beyond the
limited pool of power lifters and Tae Bo enthusiasts, they would need
to go after the 80 to 85% of the population that didn't go to the
gym. They canceled classes, ditched oversize dumbbells, and shifted
resources to cardio and circuit training.
Planet Fitness was born.
"Back then, there was only 15% had a gym membership, today still only
20% have a gym membership.
So we said, well, maybe it's price.
So we started dropping prices that'd get people off the couch and
living out of desperation. We weren't going to make it anyway, so we
had to lose. So, we dropped the price and decided if we had a lot of
volume and really figured out the model of catering to first timers
and casual goers."
Planet Fitness is different than other gyms.
Its basic membership is $10 dollars a month, well below the industry
standard of $71 dollars.
It gives out free pizza and bagels once a month and has lunk alarms
as a reminder to power lifters who are grunting or dropping their
weights that they are intimidating their neighbors.
To keep costs low, Planet Fitness locations don't have perks like
pools and basketball courts, but the company spends big on
advertising, and that has helped membership soar.
As of June 2020, Planet Fitness had more than 15 million members at
its more than 2,000 locations, more than double the amount it had in
2015, making it one of the largest gyms in the U.S.
In the U.S., franchisees spend 2% of their monthly membership dues on
national advertising and 7% on local advertising.
From 2011 to 2019, Planet Fitness spent over $870 million dollars to
drive brand awareness, including sponsoring TV shows like "The
Biggest Loser" and "Dick Clark's New Year's Rockin' Eve with Ryan
Seacrest." As of 2019, 95% of Planet Fitness gyms were owned by
franchisees. "If you think about our our business model and our
marketing. A marketing machine is what I call it, okay?
So, every incremental member that joins, 9% of that dues goes to
marketing. Fueling the next join."
"And so the bigger they get, the more of a marketing force they
become. And so, it is going to be pretty difficult to compete with
that marketing bulk."
In addition to revenue it makes from corporate-owned gyms and
royalties from franchisees, Planet Fitness makes money selling all
those purple and yellow workout machines to its franchise partners.
In 2019, equipment sales made up 37% of the company's revenue, and
its banks on not a lot of people showing up to use them.
In 2019, Planet Fitness averaged over 7,000 members per gym.
That's a big number to fit in a 20,000 square foot space.
In fact, according to analysts, the average Planet Fitness gym member
visit only once or twice a week at most.
"Our average members use it about 5 to 6 times a month, believe it or
not. So they use it.
It's very it's kind of like their second or third priority.
They've got kids, they've got a second job, they've got yard work to
do. But they get it in when they can get it in.
So it's not that 7-day-a-week person; it's a very different
customer." To help bring in new members that were unlikely to become
gym rats, the company commissioned a 2019 study that said 61% of
Americans believe a "dad bod" is sexy.
"I think the biggest thing that they've done is they don't compete
directly, for the most part, with other gym chains for customers.
They acquire the majority of their customers from the couch, so to
speak. Meaning their customer is the non-gym goer.
They're able to be extremely profitable despite the fact that they're
only charging $10 or $20 dollars a month because they have so many
customers per club.
And that, I think, is really the key to the business model."
In August 2015, the gym operator debuted on the New York Stock
Exchange, and the stock soared 450% to $88 dollars by February 20th,
2020. As of October 26th, 2020 Planet Fitness had a market cap of $5.9
billion dollars. "On the idea of convenience, the way that Planet
Fitness is winning that war is that every year they're growing about
200 new units per year, which means they're getting closer and closer
to where we all work and live.
And that's a key reason why people join a gym as well."
The fitness industry in the U.S.
is a $32 billion dollar market with more than 41,000 gyms and 64
million members. In addition to independent mom and pop clubs, gym
chains like L.A. Fitness, Lifetime Fitness, Snap Fitness and of
course, Planet Fitness, were forced to shut down most all their
locations in March 2020 to curb the spread of Covid-19.
"It's a cataclysmic event.
It's a major hurricane.
It's a major problem."
"I think longer term, what this has probably created, you know, the
silver lining behind all of it is horrible situation we're all in, is
that I think it will probably accelerate probably 10 years of
cleansing the industry in a matter of probably 12 months.
There's a lot of mom and pops up here; it's a very fragmented
industry. There's 41,000 gyms in the country.
If you take us and LA Fitness and 24 Hour Fitness, the big national
guys out, you still have 35 or 36,000 mom and pops.
Old club's have been around for 20 years, you know, lack of capex,
old equipment. So you know, I think it would really cleanse the
industry, and the cream will come to the top, and the good guys will
survive longer term."
55-year-old Gold's Gym filed for bankruptcy in May 2020 and said it
would shut down 3 company-owned gyms due to financial stress caused
by the coronavirus pandemic.
According to a statement, the move would not impact franchise gyms.
In July 2020, Germany's RSG group, a leader in the European fitness
space, was selected as the winning bidder for Gold's in a
court-approved auction for about $100 million dollars.
It's a similar story for 24 Hour Fitness, which filed for bankruptcy
in June 2020.
The company plans to use bankruptcy to eliminate debt and close clubs
that were either out of date or in close proximity with other 24 Hour
Fitness clubs. And Planet Fitness has faced major headwinds, too.
The company reported second quarter 2020 revenue decreased by 78%
from the year prior to $40 million dollars due to gym shutdowns.
According to analysts, Covid-19 may have accelerated a trend in
fitness that was already taking hold prior to the pandemic: working
out at home. "I think a lot of the bigger gyms were probably already
struggling to some degree.
I think this secular shift away from traditional gyms and towards
at-home fitness had already started."
In a survey published in June 2020 by TD Ameritrade, almost 60% of
Americans polled said once the pandemic ends, they would not renew
their gym membership. One of the main reasons?
Affordability. Respondents said that Americans who choose to live a
healthy lifestyle shell out an average of $177 a month on personal
trainers, fitness classes and gym memberships.
More than half the people surveyed said the pandemic helped them find
a cheaper way to live healthier.
As gyms shut down because of lockdown orders across the U.S., demand
for fitness equipment soared.
According to NPD Group, fitness equipment sales rose 130% in March
2020 compared to the prior year.
Sales of exercise bikes were up 170% and weight bench sales were up
259%. Suddenly, there was a shortage of dumbbells and kettlebells on
e-commerce sites. One company that was well-positioned in the at-home
workout space was exercise bike-maker Peloton.
The company has seen sales surge.
In the third quarter of 2020, Peloton had revenue of $520 million
dollars, more than 66% higher than a year earlier.
It also reported more than 170,000 paying digital members, up 64%
from the previous year. In September 2020, Peloton announced new
products, including a lower priced treadmill and a more expensive
bike option. The price of the original Peloton bike will drop by $350
dollars. Peloton hit a market value of $35 billion dollars in October
2020. And it's not just Peloton that is making inroads into home
fitness. In June 2020, yoga pants-maker Lululemon said it was
acquiring fitness company, MIRROR, for $500 million dollars.
MIRROR offers live classes in its wall mounted device, which retails
for $1500 dollars.
Subscribers pay $39 a month to stream classes.
Apple is planning to get in on the at-home workout boom as well.
In August 2020, it was reported Apple was working on an exercise
video subscription service for the iPhone and Apple TV that could
include activities like indoor running, cycling, rowing and strength
training. Planet Fitness thinks it may have a future in your living
room, too. The gym launched the Planet Fitness app in the summer of
2019. "We launched our app last summer, and we loaded in 500 workout
videos and exercises to do, whether you're in club or at home, and
saw some good traction with that. But literally the day we close our
gyms in March skyrocketed the consumption and really interesting, we
saw is: 24% of the consumption were non-members."
And because of its low monthly membership fees, analysts say Planet
Fitness is a natural fit for people who like to workout at home but
also want to occasionally hit the gym.
"Historically, there's been an 80% positive correlation with at-home
fitness sales and fitness club memberships, indicating that they both
rise together. And actually, people who work out of fitness clubs are
more likely to have at-home fitness.
That kind of makes sense, right?
Because you want to have that optionality."
With clubs reopening, Planet Fitness announced on August 1st, 2020,
masks would be required inside gyms except when members were actively
working out. The company suspended Pizza Mondays and Bagel Tuesdays,
started live streaming at-home workouts on the company's Facebook
page and blocked off equipment in gyms to create social distancing.
But even with all the precautions, is it safe to work out in the gym
during a pandemic? A study from Norway said it just might be.
The research started in May 2020 included 5 gyms in Oslo with over
3,700 members who did not have underlying medical conditions.
The results? No one at the gym got infected.
The study surmised that with good hygiene and social distancing
measures, there was no spread of Covid-19 in gyms.
Planet Fitness said that since May 1st 2020, with over 45 million
check-ins only a fraction of people have tested positive for
Covid-19. That's 1 in 354,000, and there's no evidence anyone
contracted the virus in its clubs.
"I do also think, though, that this will also create a renewed sense
of awareness of wellness.
I think people really realize from all the news reports you see
that, geez, the people that this is affecting the most?
Are people that are obese or chronic diseases or diabetes, heart
disease, and I think this will get people to really say, 'Hm.
We've been hearing it for 20, 30 years, maybe I should really
listen.'" But what about boutique fitness studios that tend to have
larger classes in smaller spaces?
Boutique studios like Barry's, SoulCycle and Orange Theory are one of
the hottest trends in fitness and pre-pandemic were a go-to social
destination. "And what's interesting is that, up until about last
year, the boutique industry accounted for about 30% of fitness spend,
which is up dramatically from about 10% of fitness spend about 5, 10
years ago. "Barry's, formerly Barry's Bootcamp, known for its Red
Room, has more than 70 locations in 14 countries.
The company normally charges $25 to $38 dollars per class, but on
March 17th, began offering free Instagram live workouts while some
venues remained closed.
As of October 27th, 2020, Barry's had 13 U.S.
studios and 23 international clubs open for indoor workouts and 12
open for outdoor workouts.
SoulCycle, the indoor cycling studio owned by the Equinox Group, said
it was moving some studios outdoors for the summer, and clubs that
have reopened will have an upgraded air filtration system, and every
bike will be disinfected after each class.
The company also sells a bike for your home that costs $1,650
dollars. And with brick-and-mortar studios shut, ClassPass has made
some moves out of the gym as well.
The fitness class subscription service has over 4,000 free on-demand
digital workouts available, including boxing classes from Shadowbox
to meditation sessions from Unplug.
With less people booking sessions, ClassPass announced in April 2020,
it was laying off or furloughing over half of its employees.
But despite these challenges, analysts think Planet Fitness is
well-positioned to take market share in the future as the overall gym
space tightens. "Planet Fitness, I think, is far and away the best
traditional gym company out there, arguably the best ever in terms of
growth, growth prospects, profitability not only of the company
itself, but of the franchisees which make up the vast majority of the
chain. The question becomes: is their strength within the traditional
gym space going to be enough to offset what I think is a secular
shift away from the traditional gym space?"