Zara Owner Inditex Pledges Support for Fashion Supply Chain amid Pandemic

FILE PHOTO: People walk past a Zara store, an Inditex brand, in central Madrid, Spain, December 13, 2017. REUTERS/Susana Vera/File Photo
FILE PHOTO: People walk past a Zara store, an Inditex brand, in central Madrid, Spain, December 13, 2017. REUTERS/Susana Vera/File Photo
TT

Zara Owner Inditex Pledges Support for Fashion Supply Chain amid Pandemic

FILE PHOTO: People walk past a Zara store, an Inditex brand, in central Madrid, Spain, December 13, 2017. REUTERS/Susana Vera/File Photo
FILE PHOTO: People walk past a Zara store, an Inditex brand, in central Madrid, Spain, December 13, 2017. REUTERS/Susana Vera/File Photo

Spanish fashion group Inditex (ITX.MC) on Wednesday pledged to maintain workers’ rights throughout its supply chains and the stability of payments to suppliers, as the garment industry wrestled with a plunge in orders during the COVID-19 crisis.

In a joint agreement with global workers’ union IndustriALL, Inditex reiterated a commitment to ensuring health and safety standards were met and collective bargaining rights and workers’ rights to unionise maintained throughout its supply chains.

It has also committed to stable payment terms in a way that allows suppliers to honour payments to workers, it said, Reuters reported.

The agreement builds on a partnership first signed in 2007 and last renewed in 2019, Inditex and IndustriALL said in a joint statement.

The pandemic and associated lockdowns have ripped a hole through the garment manufacturing sector, with many retailers cancelling orders as they closed stores around the world, leading to the shuttering of thousands of factories and huge job losses.

In May, as stores closed across Europe and the United States in response to the coronavirus, Inditex said it had paid for all orders with suppliers, whether finished or in production.

Inditex and IndustriALL, which represents 50 million mining, energy and manufacturing workers, said they would strengthen their commitments in order to minimise the impacts of the pandemic.



Pandora’s 2024 Operating Profit Growth Now Seen at Upper End of Guided Range

Pandora said it now expects full-year organic operating profit growth of between 11% and 12%. (Getty Images for Pandora Jewellery)
Pandora said it now expects full-year organic operating profit growth of between 11% and 12%. (Getty Images for Pandora Jewellery)
TT

Pandora’s 2024 Operating Profit Growth Now Seen at Upper End of Guided Range

Pandora said it now expects full-year organic operating profit growth of between 11% and 12%. (Getty Images for Pandora Jewellery)
Pandora said it now expects full-year organic operating profit growth of between 11% and 12%. (Getty Images for Pandora Jewellery)

Denmark's Pandora , the world's biggest jewellery maker, said on Wednesday it now expects operating profit growth this year at the upper end of its forecasted range while it reported quarterly operating profit a tad below forecasts.

"We are very pleased with our strong results this quarter, particularly in the context of the current macroeconomic backdrop," CEO Alexander Lacik said in a statement.

Operating profit rose to 980 million Danish crowns ($140.87 million) in the third quarter from 920 million a year earlier, slightly below the forecast of 991 million in a company-compiled poll.

Pandora said it now expects full-year organic operating profit growth of between 11% and 12% compared to its previously guided range of 9-12%. The company also raised its outlook in May and August.

It still expects an operating margin this year of around 25%.