SAN FRANCISCO, CALIFORNIA - FEBRUARY 13: The Levi's logo is displayed on Levi's 501 jeans on February 13, 2019 in San Francisco, California. Levi Strauss announced that it has filed paperwork for an initial public offering with plans to list on the New York Stock Exchange using the stock ticker LEVI. (Photo Illustration by Justin Sullivan/Getty Images)
Levi's CEO: Don't put jeans in the freezer
01:15 - Source: CNN Business
New York CNN  — 

Skinny jeans have had their moment.

Comfy clothing is what consumers want now, and Levi’s is ready to deliver with more generous-fitting and downright baggy jeans this year.

The iconic American denim brand said it’s helping facilitate the switch from skinny to baggy.

“I think we’re kind of leading this trend to some extent,” Levi Strauss (LEVI) CEO Chip Bergh told analysts Wednesday on a call discussing the company’s fourth-quarter results. “The line that we launched [is] a loose-fit line this past season. It’s in our stores now [for] both men and women. It’s sort of a loose, straight fit, and it’s off to a very, very fast start.”

Levi's says the time has come to wear comfy, baggy jeans.

Bergh also called out the “trend towards more casual, looser fitting clothes in general.”

That change in style still hasn’t been enough to lift sales.Levi’s on Wednesday reported fourth quarter sales, which included the year-end holiday shopping season, of $1.39 billion for the period ended Nov. 29, down 12% from the same period a year ago.

As with most retailers, Levi’s (LEVI) attributed the decline primarily to pandemic-triggered store closures and a drop in customer traffic in its own stores and other outlets that carry its branded denimwear. Levi’s (LEVI) stock was down 8% Thursday.

Looking forward to what factors will drive demand for jeans in 2021, Bergh said the need for “casualization” will be a prominent.

The iconic JNCO wide-leg jeans made a comeback in 2019 and saw demand surge through the pandemic.

Levi’s isn’t the only one seeing baggy jeans take off. Los Angeles-based JNCO, known for its wide-leg styles in the 1990s, relaunched its jeans in 2019. The jeans range from about $130 to $200 in price, and some pairs feature embroidery and distinctive stitching.

“While the pandemic overall has been a negative for many brands, it has lifted our sales,” said Camilla Revah, JNCO’s vice president of sales and marketing. “Our jeans are iconic, they are comfortable and it’s what people are looking for right now.

Correction: A previous version of this story misstated Levi's fourth-quarter sales. They were $1.39 billion.