Spain's Mango Clothing Chain Ramps Up Global Expansion

After a slowdown sparked by the Covid-19 pandemic, Mango has in recent months inaugurated several large stores around the globe. Angela Weiss / AFP/File
After a slowdown sparked by the Covid-19 pandemic, Mango has in recent months inaugurated several large stores around the globe. Angela Weiss / AFP/File
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Spain's Mango Clothing Chain Ramps Up Global Expansion

After a slowdown sparked by the Covid-19 pandemic, Mango has in recent months inaugurated several large stores around the globe. Angela Weiss / AFP/File
After a slowdown sparked by the Covid-19 pandemic, Mango has in recent months inaugurated several large stores around the globe. Angela Weiss / AFP/File

Spanish fashion retailer Mango, founded 40 years ago in Barcelona, is ramping its global expansion despite economic uncertainties that have shaken some other global mass-market apparel giants.
After a slowdown sparked by the Covid-19 pandemic, the family-owned company has in recent months inaugurated several large stores around the globe, said AFP.
They include a 400-square-meter (1,300-square-foot) space in Los Angeles, a similar-sized one in Manchester, England, and a flagship store in India's tech hub of Bengaluru.
Mango has opened a total of 115 stores over the past year, mainly in the United States where its sales outlets have tripled, the company's global retail director, Cesar de Vicente, said in an interview with AFP.
It has more than 2,700 stores in over 115 countries, compared to nearly 6,000 worldwide for Zara-owner Inditex, Spain's other clothing retail success story.
The expansion has helped boost turnover with Mango expecting to post over three billion euros ($3.3 billion) in sales in 2023 -- a record -- when it announces its yearly results on Monday, De Vicente told AFP as he stood in front of prototypes of new garments at the company's sprawling headquarters in a Barcelona suburb.
It is at this building -- dubbed the "campus" -- that the textile group which employs 500 stylists designs and tests its future collections.
The company sells nearly 160 million items of clothing and accessories a year.
Star ambassadors
Mango traces its origins to 1984 when a young man of Turkish origin, Isak Andic, opened his first shop on the Paseo de Gracia, Barcelona's famous shopping street, with the help of his older brother Nahman which was hugely successful.
Spain had just emerged from a decades-long dictatorship which ended with the death of General Francisco Franco in 1975 and consumers were hungry for more modern clothes.
"He saw that we needed color, style," said De Vicente.
Andic quickly opened dozens of more stores in Spain and then abroad, starting in neighboring Portugal and France, all under the name Mango.
To help boost sales the company has hired big stars such as British model Kate Moss, Spanish actress Penelope Cruz, and French footballer Antoine Griezmann for its marketing campaigns.
Like its main domestic rival Inditex, the world's biggest fashion retailer whose other store brands include Bershka and Pull&Bear, Mango strives to quickly adjust its production to the latest fashion trends while offering affordable prices.
The two groups "have many similarities" because they "developed at the same time" but there are some significant differences, said Marcel Planellas, a strategy professor at Barcelona business school Esade.
Mango has just a single brand and it does not own any factory, outsourcing its production mainly to lower-cost Türkiye and Asia, he added.
500 new stores
The company, which employs some 14,000 people and aims to differentiate itself from low-cost brands such as Shein and Primark by accelerating its move upmarket, will present its new strategic plan on Monday along with its annual results.
It is expected to confirm its international ambitions, with 500 new stores planned by 2026.
These openings will mostly take place in the United States, the UK and France, the group's second-largest market after Spain, said De Vicente.
This dynamism contrasts with the sluggishness seen elsewhere in the sector in Europe where US retailer Gap has closed shops and French retail clothing company Camaieu, which made and sold its own collections of women's fashion, closed down at the end of 2022.
Mango enjoys a "solid situation" unlike some of its competitors, said Planellas, who predicts the company will list on the stock market in the coming years as Inditex did in 2001.



Hugo Boss Sees Broadly Stable 2025 Sales, Flags Muted Demand in 1st Quarter

FILE PHOTO: Men's shoes are on display at the Boss store in London, Britain, May 30, 2024. REUTERS/Chris J. Ratcliffe/File Photo
FILE PHOTO: Men's shoes are on display at the Boss store in London, Britain, May 30, 2024. REUTERS/Chris J. Ratcliffe/File Photo
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Hugo Boss Sees Broadly Stable 2025 Sales, Flags Muted Demand in 1st Quarter

FILE PHOTO: Men's shoes are on display at the Boss store in London, Britain, May 30, 2024. REUTERS/Chris J. Ratcliffe/File Photo
FILE PHOTO: Men's shoes are on display at the Boss store in London, Britain, May 30, 2024. REUTERS/Chris J. Ratcliffe/File Photo

Hugo Boss said muted consumer sentiment was having an impact on its business in the current quarter as it forecast 2025 sales broadly in line with last year's level on Thursday.
The upmarket fashion company has sought to boost the popularity of its brand through selected marketing investments, while increasing profits by limiting costs, despite weakening consumer demand and a polarization of consumer preferences towards either high-end luxury or cheaper fast-fashion offers.
It sees annual sales development between a 2% decline and a 2% increase, to a range of 4.2 billion to 4.4 billion euros ($4.57 billion to $4.79 billion), following 3% growth to 4.3 billion euros in 2024, Reuters reported.
"Macroeconomic and geopolitical volatility remains high, weighing on consumer sentiment and impacting our business performance since the beginning of the year," CEO Daniel Grieder said in a statement.
Analysts had estimated annual sales of 4.26 billion euros for 2024 and 4.44 billion euros for 2025, a company-provided poll showed.
The Hugo Boss shares were up 3.8% in early Frankfurt trade despite the cautious comments, with Baader Helvea's analyst Volker Bosse pointing to a solid outlook for operating profit.
The company expects full-year earnings before interest and taxes (EBIT) to rise between 5% and 22%, coming in between 380 million and 440 million euros, compared to a 12% decline to 361 million euros last year.
At its midpoint, the guidance would imply EBIT of 410 million euros, against analysts' estimate of 414 million euros.
The company also said sales growth was "particularly robust" in the last three months of 2024, boosted by a successful holiday season.
Group sales were 1.25 billion euros in the fourth quarter, beating analysts' expectations of 1.20 billion euros, with currency-adjusted sales in the Americas region rising 8% helped by a high single-digit percent uptick in the key US market.
"Sales in China remained below the prior-year level, reflecting overall muted local consumer demand," it added.