H&M seeks to Lure US Shoppers as Fast-fashion Rivals Hike Prices Due to Tariffs

A woman is reflected next to the logo of the H&M fashion retailer in the newly opened Mall of Berlin shopping center in Berlin, Germany, in this September 25, 2014 file photo. REUTERS/Thomas Peter
A woman is reflected next to the logo of the H&M fashion retailer in the newly opened Mall of Berlin shopping center in Berlin, Germany, in this September 25, 2014 file photo. REUTERS/Thomas Peter
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H&M seeks to Lure US Shoppers as Fast-fashion Rivals Hike Prices Due to Tariffs

A woman is reflected next to the logo of the H&M fashion retailer in the newly opened Mall of Berlin shopping center in Berlin, Germany, in this September 25, 2014 file photo. REUTERS/Thomas Peter
A woman is reflected next to the logo of the H&M fashion retailer in the newly opened Mall of Berlin shopping center in Berlin, Germany, in this September 25, 2014 file photo. REUTERS/Thomas Peter

H&M is trying to win shoppers from rivals in the United States by holding prices steady while Zara and Shein raise theirs, as US tariffs disrupt the fast-fashion industry that relies on imports of low-cost clothes from China, Vietnam, and other Asian countries.

H&M CEO Daniel Erver said on Thursday constantly changing tariffs had created turbulence, with the world's second-largest listed fashion retailer planning for multiple scenarios.

In an interview, he told Reuters that the challenge in the coming months is "to understand the consumer sentiment, which we see has dropped in the US due to all the turbulence... with the fact that some will be forced to raise prices more, and what (that creates) as an opportunity".

"Different competitors are acting in different ways, some more aggressively, some more cautiously," he added.

H&M has around 500 stores across the US, its second-largest market after Germany in terms of sales, accounting for 13% in 2024.

As US tariffs add to costs for retailers, relative price positioning is front of mind for executives, and the timing of price increases is key, with companies watching the competition closely to see who will blink first.

For H&M, which is trying to improve its profitability, sticking to current prices for longer carries risks as rising costs eat into margins.

But it also provides an opportunity to take market share from rivals.

"Maybe they are going to raise prices in the US... but just to a lesser extent as compared to competitors," Pareto Securities analyst Alexander Siljestrom said.

H&M can also mitigate the tariff impact by shifting production of US-bound clothes from China, which faces the highest tariff rate, to Bangladesh and elsewhere, he said.

Across categories including dresses, jeans, and shirts, the average US price at H&M's bigger competitor Zara was up by 28% this month from a year ago, according to data from price tracking firm EDITED, while prices at H&M in the US were on average down 3% year-on-year.

Zara prices were up across the board in June compared to January this year, EDITED found, while H&M has kept prices more or less stable, even though its chief financial officer Adam Karlsson said in March that price hikes were likely to offset tariffs.

Shein, which sends clothes direct to US shoppers from factories in China, has also had to raise prices and suffered weaker customer growth since Trump ended the "de minimis" duty-free treatment of low-value parcels.

SOURCING FROM FEWER, CLOSER SUPPLIERS

As it aims to improve its supply chain and get new styles to stores faster, H&M has spent the last 18 months consolidating its supplier base, Erver said, aiming to order more from a smaller number of big suppliers who also operate factories in multiple countries.

"We look at each individual order to decide what's the best sourcing market depending on the craftsmanship, the skills, the pricing situation, but also now more than ever the geopolitical situation with trade barriers," he told Reuters.

"That has led us in certain cases to take the decision to move things to different markets."

H&M also aims to be below full capacity with all of its suppliers, so it can easily increase production if needed when an item sells well, Erver said.

As part of its "nearshoring" strategy of sourcing products from suppliers closer to main consumer hubs, H&M is looking to increase its supplier base in markets like Türkiye, Egypt, Jordan, and Morocco for Europe, Erver said.

H&M will also add suppliers in Brazil, where it is opening its first stores in the second half, he added.



Burberry Shows Early Signs of Recovery as 1st Quarter Sales Fall Less than Expected

FILE PHOTO: A Burberry store is seen in London, Britain, January 16, 2023.  REUTERS/Peter Nicholls/File Photo
FILE PHOTO: A Burberry store is seen in London, Britain, January 16, 2023. REUTERS/Peter Nicholls/File Photo
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Burberry Shows Early Signs of Recovery as 1st Quarter Sales Fall Less than Expected

FILE PHOTO: A Burberry store is seen in London, Britain, January 16, 2023.  REUTERS/Peter Nicholls/File Photo
FILE PHOTO: A Burberry store is seen in London, Britain, January 16, 2023. REUTERS/Peter Nicholls/File Photo

Burberry's retail sales fell by a less-than-expected 1% in the first quarter, it reported on Friday, in early signs of a recovery for the British luxury brand struggling with underperformance.

Shares in Burberry, which have more than doubled since September, rose 5% in early London trade.

Known for its trench coats and check pattern scarves, Burberry is using its British heritage designs to try to win back customers under the leadership of CEO Josh Schulman, who took over a year ago.

Comparable sales returned to growth in Europe, the company said, while trading in the Americas strengthened. Sales fell in China and in the rest of Asia, but the rate of decline was around half the level seen in the previous quarter.

"The improvement in our first-quarter comparable sales, strength in our core categories, and uptick in brand desirability give us conviction in the path ahead," Schulman said, adding that the autumn collection was being "well received".

Burberry has issued several profit warnings in recent years, and as part of its turnaround drive since Schulman took over, it plans to cut a fifth of its global workforce, a radical cost-cutting measure that investors have welcomed.

The 1% drop in overall comparable retail sales in the first quarter, which ended on June 28, beat analysts' forecasts for a 3% decline in a consensus provided by the company, and improved on a 6% fall in the previous quarter.

According to Reuters, analysts at Citi said the brand had reported its third consecutive quarter of like-for-like improvement since Schulman launched its new strategy last November, implying comparable sales could turn positive in the current quarter.

"In a quarter marked by further macro and geopolitical pressures and weaker tourist spending in Europe and Japan, Burberry has likely held up better than peers quarter-on-quarter," they said.