The Business of Fashion
Agenda-setting intelligence, analysis and advice for the global fashion community.
Agenda-setting intelligence, analysis and advice for the global fashion community.
PARIS, France — Investors welcomed supermarket retailer Carrefour's acquisition of a stake in online fashion retailer Showroomprive.com, and analysts added on Friday they wanted more moves by the company in this area.
Carrefour's new boss Alexandre Bompard will present a strategy plan on January 23, and his ambitions regarding digital and online businesses could form a key part of this.
Carrefour said late on Thursday it will buy 17 percent of Showroomprive.com for €79 million ($95 million), from Steinhoff-owned furniture chain Conforama.
The acquisition helped lift Carrefour shares by around 1 percent on Friday, outperforming a 0.6 percent rise in the broader European retail sector, while Showroomprive shares jumped 50 percent.
ADVERTISEMENT
Analysts at brokerage Bryan Garnier said the deal was "hopefully ... a first step towards more announcements on 23rd January," and kept a "buy" rating on Carrefour shares.
Last July Bompard, former boss of France's top electronics retailer Fnac Darty, became chief executive at Carrefour, the world's largest retailer after Walmart.
Carrefour issued a profit warning in August and Bompard is under pressure to improve results in its core French market.
Carrefour has been losing market share to unlisted rival Leclerc, and investors also want Bompard to speed up an expansion into e-commerce where its lags domestic rivals and faces competition from online giant Amazon.
He has also faced pressure after French rival Casino agreed to use Ocado's e-commerce platform to expand its online grocery business.
"A partnership with a web bulge-bracket might lend more credibility to Carrefour's digital project, as would a partnership, if not a tie-up with Galeries Lafayette," Bryan Garnier analysts added in a research note.
The Moulin family, which owns department store Galeries Lafayette, is the top shareholder in Carrefour with a near 10 percent stake.
Bernstein analysts said the Showroomprive deal could boost traffic in Carrefour stores, although they added it was nevertheless "fairly negligible" and Carrefour faced bigger issues over its underperforming food retail business.
ADVERTISEMENT
Fears About Big Job Cuts
Bompard is also expected to back a restructuring on January 23 that some analysts estimate could involve €1 billion.
Options for the French market include turning some stores into franchises, moving others to lease management, closing loss-making ones as well as Sunday opening.
There could also be some head office restructuring and more price cuts to attract shoppers, union sources have said.
The CGT and Force Ouvriere trade unions fear the restructuring could lead to 4,500 to 5,000 job cuts in France. Carrefour has declined to comment.
Dejan Terglav, FO secretary general, told Reuters on Friday his union was calling for a day of protests on February 8.
"If the plan does not suit us, it will be war," he warned.
By Dominique Vidalon; editor: Sudip Kar-Gupta and David Evans.
From analysis of the global fashion and beauty industries to career and personal advice, BoF’s founder and CEO, Imran Amed, will be answering your questions on Sunday, February 18, 2024 during London Fashion Week.
The State of Fashion 2024 breaks down the 10 themes that will define the industry in the year ahead.
Imran Amed reviews the most important fashion stories of the year and shares his predictions on what this means for the industry in 2024.
After three days of inspiring talks, guests closed out BoF’s gathering for big thinkers with a black tie gala followed by an intimate performance from Rita Ora — guest starring Billy Porter.