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.
BURY, United Kingdom — JD Sports Fashion Plc reported better-than-expected full-year earnings on Tuesday, benefiting from acquisitions in a challenging retail environment at home.
The company has bulked up over the past year with the purchase of US-based Finish Line and smaller rival Footasylum, and has gained from the "athleisure" trend, which sees people sporting gym clothes at work, school and other social occasions.
Britain's retail industry has been hurt by lower consumer spending given uncertainties from the nation's impending exit from the European Union, higher costs as well as a shift to shopping online.
JD Sports, with more than 2,400 stores that sell brands including Nike, Puma and Adidas, has weathered the storm thanks to its international footprint. Rival Sports Direct has faced a series of failed takeover attempts including Debenhams and Findel.
ADVERTISEMENT
JD Sports, the owner of Footpatrol and Cloggs, did not cut prices in the Christmas period despite the difficulties in Britain that had other retailers scrambling to attract shoppers through heavy discounts.
Britain's biggest sportswear retailer, which was founded in 1981 with a single store in the North West of England, said headline pretax profit jumped 15.5 percent to £355.2 million for the 53 weeks ended February 3, while revenue surged 49.2 percent to £4.72 billion.
As per company-supplied consensus, analysts had estimated a pretax profit of £349.2 million and revenue of £4.56 billion.
By Muvija M; editor: Bernard Orr.
Antitrust enforcers said Tapestry’s acquisition of Capri would raise prices on handbags and accessories in the affordable luxury sector, harming consumers.
As a push to maximise sales of its popular Samba model starts to weigh on its desirability, the German sportswear giant is betting on other retro sneaker styles to tap surging demand for the 1980s ‘Terrace’ look. But fashion cycles come and go, cautions Andrea Felsted.
The rental platform saw its stock soar last week after predicting it would hit a key profitability metric this year. A new marketing push and more robust inventory are the key to unlocking elusive growth, CEO Jenn Hyman tells BoF.
Nordstrom, Tod’s and L’Occitane are all pushing for privatisation. Ultimately, their fate will not be determined by whether they are under the scrutiny of public investors.