Next shares rise as retailer holds forecasts amid tough market

FILE PHOTO: Pedestrians walk past a Next shop in Oxford Street in London, Britain, January 6, 2009.  REUTERS/Andrew Winning/File Photo

 

Bloomberg

Next Plc held its profit forecast and said it can mitigate a tough U.K. clothing market by improving ranges and switching suppliers, reassuring investors worried about the retailer’s price pressures and product challenges.
The clothier maintained its forecast that profit will fall this year to between 680 million pounds ($849 million) and 780 million pounds, defying some analyst predictions that Chief Executive Officer Simon Wolfson would lower it. The shares rose as much as 8.6 percent in their biggest gain since June.
“The numbers confirm no additional weakness, which is a relief as the market was fairly pessimistic and expecting guidance to be taken down,” said Vinod Nair, co-chief investment officer at Altavista, which has 2 percent to 3 percent of its $200 million-plus fund in the chain’s shares.
Since 2015, Next’s shares have slumped as Wolfson has issued a series of frank assessments of the challenges facing the retailer, which also sells home furnishings at shops in malls and central shopping districts throughout the UK Against a backdrop of weakening apparel spending, the fall in the pound since the vote to leave the European Union has spurred inflation and squeezed disposable incomes, even as British consumers shift spending away from their wardrobes to weekend entertainment. “Trading conditions this year have confirmed the cautious approach we have been taking was the correct one,” Wolfson said by phone. “There’s been a continuation of the shift in spending away from clothing and into experiences and we think that will continue for the rest of the year.”
Next’s earnings fell for the first time in eight years. Pretax profit declined 3.8 percent to 790.2 million pounds in the year through Jan. 31, meeting analysts’ estimates.
“Next faces a tough UK consumer outlook and some structural issues but the results look broadly reassuring,” Richard Chamberlain, an analyst at RBC, said by email.
In an effort to shield profits, Next has raised clothing prices by about 4 percent. The company said it would focus on speeding up its response to consumer trends and invest in its online operations.

Price Pressure
Next said it’s dealing with price pressure stemming from the weakness of the pound by working with new suppliers and negotiating with existing ones for better deals, taking advantage of excess supply in the market. Pressure from the weak pound should ease in the second half of the current year if the fall in the currency proves to have been a one-time response to the June 2016 Brexit vote. Battling against the likes of Inditex’s Zara and nimble online-only rivals that constantly update product ranges, Next has been striving to reduce the time it takes to get its designs into stores.
In focusing on trendy fashions, Next cut staples such as easy-to-wear work blouses. After initially blaming the retailer’s disappointing Christmas sales on a malaise in clothing spending, Wolfson said that the company’s own missteps played a part, adding that Next’s ranges won’t be fully corrected until September.
“We have a much better understanding of what we can do to improve our own performance than we had two months ago,” Wolfson said. “We focused too heavily on the new and exciting and took our eye off that heartland product.”

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