Zara-Owner Inditex Q1 Profit Beats Forecasts as Sale Boon Continues 

Shoppers walk past a Zara clothes store, part of the Spanish group Inditex, in Las Palmas de Gran Canaria, Spain, December 13, 2022. (Reuters)
Shoppers walk past a Zara clothes store, part of the Spanish group Inditex, in Las Palmas de Gran Canaria, Spain, December 13, 2022. (Reuters)
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Zara-Owner Inditex Q1 Profit Beats Forecasts as Sale Boon Continues 

Shoppers walk past a Zara clothes store, part of the Spanish group Inditex, in Las Palmas de Gran Canaria, Spain, December 13, 2022. (Reuters)
Shoppers walk past a Zara clothes store, part of the Spanish group Inditex, in Las Palmas de Gran Canaria, Spain, December 13, 2022. (Reuters)

Zara-owner Inditex said on Wednesday sales of its spring-summer collection jumped by 16% over the past month, in a sign the fast fashion retailer can continue its strong run despite higher wage costs and the loss of its Russian business.

The results came as the world's biggest fast fashion company reported a better-than-expected 54% rise in first-quarter profit, as sales kept pace after a strong 2022, when it outperformed other retailers during the cost of living crisis.

Net profit came in at 1.2 billion euros ($1.24 billion) for the quarter that ended in April, exceeding analysts' average expectations of 980 million euros in a Refinitiv poll.

The results suggest Inditex, whose market capitalization exceeded 100 billion euros ($107 billion) for the first time last week, has successfully navigated the challenges of keeping prices competitive despite cost pressures, including a 20% rise in average wages for shop workers in Spain.

Inditex reported solid sales, in line with analyst expectations of 7.56 billion euros, even after selling its profitable Russian division in 2022 and absorbing higher labour costs.

Rival H&M has struggled to compete for shoppers impacted by a cost of living crisis. H&M's sales had also been hit by bad weather in its home market.

Inditex's in-store and online sales rose 13% to 7.6 billion euros in the first quarter, inline with the 13.5% in the first six weeks of the 2023 financial year reported earlier in the year.

Part of Inditex's strategy, which also owns Pull&Bear and Massimo Dutti, is to maintain higher prices outside the Eurozone. In countries such as the United States and Mexico some clothes are up to 91% more expensive than in its home market.

Lower demand in the US caused by a tougher macro environment has been offset by less weather-affected sales in southern Europe.

The gross margin reached a record 60.5%, showing it has been able to pass on higher prices to shoppers. The company sees its gross margin remaining stable in 2023.

Last year, the fashion company benefited from successfully passing on higher prices to shoppers despite a cost of living crisis squeezing margins at most retailers. Inditex also began to charge online returns in more countries with no impact on sales, the company said.

Inditex plans to open 30 more stores in the US in two years. Analysts believe only the strongest global fashion retailers will gain market share in an environment where consumers are becoming more discerning.

Inditex also took the decision to invest more in the customer experience at stores with new self-scanning checkouts and replacing hard anti-theft tags with chips sewn into garments to avoid long queues.



Zara Owner Inditex Sees Good Holiday Season after Weak Third Quarter

FILE PHOTO: People shop during the opening of a Zara store after fashion giant Inditex resumed its operations in Venezuela under a franchise agreement, in Caracas, Venezuela April 25, 2024. REUTERS/Leonardo Fernandez Viloria/File Photo
FILE PHOTO: People shop during the opening of a Zara store after fashion giant Inditex resumed its operations in Venezuela under a franchise agreement, in Caracas, Venezuela April 25, 2024. REUTERS/Leonardo Fernandez Viloria/File Photo
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Zara Owner Inditex Sees Good Holiday Season after Weak Third Quarter

FILE PHOTO: People shop during the opening of a Zara store after fashion giant Inditex resumed its operations in Venezuela under a franchise agreement, in Caracas, Venezuela April 25, 2024. REUTERS/Leonardo Fernandez Viloria/File Photo
FILE PHOTO: People shop during the opening of a Zara store after fashion giant Inditex resumed its operations in Venezuela under a franchise agreement, in Caracas, Venezuela April 25, 2024. REUTERS/Leonardo Fernandez Viloria/File Photo

Zara owner Inditex said the start of the holiday season had got off to a good start after it reported weaker than expected quarterly results as rainy weather hit some key European markets.
The company behind Zara and other brands said its sales rose a slower than expected 7% to 27.4 billion euros ($28.84 billion) during the period, below the 8% expected by analysts.
Its net profit of 4.44 billion euros for the first nine months of 2024, up 8.5% from a year earlier, was below analysts' average expectation of 4.52 billion euros.
The company however reported a better start of the holiday season, with revenues rising 9% during the six weeks to Dec. 9 as the world's biggest fast-fashion retailer kept drawing in shoppers even as rivals struggled.
Revenue growth in the period, which includes the key Black Friday sales, was slower than the 14% increase reported a year ago, though.
"We had a strong start to the last quarter against a demanding comparable in the same period of 2023," Inditex's capital market director, Marcos Lopez, told Reuters.
He stressed that in constant currency sales growth was 10.5% in the first nine months of the fiscal year and the growth in constant currency during the third quarter was the faster of the year.