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.
Fashion giant Zara’s owner Inditex reported on Wednesday its quarterly profit jumped 80 percent on the back of soaring sales as consumers stuck at home during the pandemic revamped their wardrobes.
Net profit for the February-April quarter rose to €760 million ($812.06 million), in line with analysts’ expectations as the company surpassed pre-pandemic levels while its gross margin hit a 10-year high, the company said.
First-quarter sales rose 36 percent to €6.7 billion as the company managed to offset higher costs with price increases at the beginning of the year.
In the first quarter of 2019, before the pandemic struck, Inditex reported a profit of €734 million and sales of €5.93 billion.
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Inditex’s CEO Oscar Garcia Maceiras said in a statement that this set of earnings is the result of a “well-differentiated model that is delivering strongly”.
The company said its gross margin came in at 60.1 percent, the highest level in a decade, while operating expenses grew 24 percent, a slower pace than sales.
The giant fashion retailer’s sales seemed to decelerate at the start of the second quarter as the company said its spring-summer collection sales were up only 17 percent in constant currency between 1 May and 5 June 2022.
“Inditex first-quarter results confirm that a reopening world has provided the ideal backdrop to the group’s affordable fashion offering”, Jefferies said on Wednesday in a note to clients.
The ongoing recovery in Britain, Europe and the United States helped Inditex make up for part of the lost revenue in Russia after the company closed its 502 shops there in March following Moscow’s invasion of Ukraine.
Excluding the €216 million related to store closures in Russia that were booked in the reported quarter, Inditex reported a profit of €940 million.
Russia was Inditex’s second-largest market in terms of shops and accounted for 5 percent of its sales growth from Feb. 1 to March 13, according to the company.
Best known for the fast-to-market Zara brand, which accounts for 71 percent of the company’s sales, Inditex outperformed its main rival H&M as the Swedish clothing company posted net sales of $5.1 billion in the first three months of its fiscal year 2022.
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The company’s board will propose a total dividend payment from 2022 profits of €0.93 per share.
By Corina Pons; Editors: Inti Landauro, Shounak Dasgupta and Louise Heavens
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