Hermes Defies Luxury Slowdown with Strong Sales 

Rachel Koffsky, International Senior Specialist at Christie's Handbags & Accessories, poses with a piece titled "A rare, fauve barenia leather & bog oak Kellywood 22 with palladium hardware, Hermes, 2020" which is on display as part of "Handbags Online: The London Edit" at Christie's in London, Britain, November 18, 2021. (Reuters)
Rachel Koffsky, International Senior Specialist at Christie's Handbags & Accessories, poses with a piece titled "A rare, fauve barenia leather & bog oak Kellywood 22 with palladium hardware, Hermes, 2020" which is on display as part of "Handbags Online: The London Edit" at Christie's in London, Britain, November 18, 2021. (Reuters)
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Hermes Defies Luxury Slowdown with Strong Sales 

Rachel Koffsky, International Senior Specialist at Christie's Handbags & Accessories, poses with a piece titled "A rare, fauve barenia leather & bog oak Kellywood 22 with palladium hardware, Hermes, 2020" which is on display as part of "Handbags Online: The London Edit" at Christie's in London, Britain, November 18, 2021. (Reuters)
Rachel Koffsky, International Senior Specialist at Christie's Handbags & Accessories, poses with a piece titled "A rare, fauve barenia leather & bog oak Kellywood 22 with palladium hardware, Hermes, 2020" which is on display as part of "Handbags Online: The London Edit" at Christie's in London, Britain, November 18, 2021. (Reuters)

Sales at Birkin bag maker Hermes accelerated in the second quarter, lifted by continued growth in the United States and a sharp acceleration in China, showing the resilience of global demand for the group's high-end leather goods despite a clouded economic backdrop.

Group sales for the three months to the end of June came to 3.32 billion euros ($3.65 billion), up 27.5% at constant exchange rates, above a Visible Alpha consensus for 22% growth, with double digit growth in all regions.

Hermes' results come as luxury stocks have come under pressure due to uncertainty over the pace of China's post-pandemic recovery while a months-long spending frenzy in the US market cools amid rising inflation.

Lackluster economic figures for China and more cautious outlooks from Cartier-owner Richemont and industry bellwether LVMH pushed down shares of luxury companies down in recent days.

Hermes, which targets wealthier consumers with handbags like the coveted $10,000 plus Birkin model, is known for weathering economic turbulence better than rivals.

"We've seen no interruption in (growth) trends," Hermes Executive Chairman Axel Dumas told journalists, adding there had been a "flight to quality" by shoppers preferring to buy at the very top end of the luxury market.



UK Fashion Group ASOS Confident on Growth amid Tariff Uncertainty

FILE PHOTO: A woman stands at an InPost locker with an ASOS package at her feet in Hackney, London, Britain, January 26, 2021. REUTERS/Simon Newman/File Photo
FILE PHOTO: A woman stands at an InPost locker with an ASOS package at her feet in Hackney, London, Britain, January 26, 2021. REUTERS/Simon Newman/File Photo
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UK Fashion Group ASOS Confident on Growth amid Tariff Uncertainty

FILE PHOTO: A woman stands at an InPost locker with an ASOS package at her feet in Hackney, London, Britain, January 26, 2021. REUTERS/Simon Newman/File Photo
FILE PHOTO: A woman stands at an InPost locker with an ASOS package at her feet in Hackney, London, Britain, January 26, 2021. REUTERS/Simon Newman/File Photo

British online fashion retailer ASOS reported half-year earnings ahead of expectations and forecast further growth in 2025, adding that it could also switch sourcing and distribution if needed to avoid the fallout from US tariffs.
While the jump in earnings on Thursday showed ASOS's long-term plan to return to growth and rebuild its fast fashion credentials with its 20-something customer base was starting to work, the retailer faces a new threat from global tariffs, Reuters reported.
The company said its more agile commercial model, which focuses on providing shoppers with new styles more quickly, put it in good shape to respond to the upheaval in global trade.
"We continue to closely monitor the evolving US tariff outlook and see opportunity to respond as necessary through improved agility and flexibility of our sourcing and distribution model," ASOS said in its statement.
For the 26 weeks to March 2, ASOS posted half-year adjusted earnings (EBITDA) of 42.5 million pounds ($56.43 million), higher than the 34 million pounds consensus forecast, and said it was on track for annual earnings to come in at between 130 million pounds to 150 million pounds.
ASOS, which is facing growing competition from Chinese-founded fast fashion giant Shein and Chinese online retailer Temu, in January said it would mothball its US warehouse, meaning most US sales are shipped from Britain in individual packages.
Analysts expect its US business to generate about 300 million pounds of revenue in the current financial year, or about 10% of total sales.