Zara Owner Inditex’s First-Half Sales Surge Ahead of Potential Slowdown

Zara's logo is displayed on a window, at one of the company's largest stores in the world, in Madrid, Spain, April 7, 2022. (Reuters)
Zara's logo is displayed on a window, at one of the company's largest stores in the world, in Madrid, Spain, April 7, 2022. (Reuters)
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Zara Owner Inditex’s First-Half Sales Surge Ahead of Potential Slowdown

Zara's logo is displayed on a window, at one of the company's largest stores in the world, in Madrid, Spain, April 7, 2022. (Reuters)
Zara's logo is displayed on a window, at one of the company's largest stores in the world, in Madrid, Spain, April 7, 2022. (Reuters)

Fashion brand Zara's owner Inditex said on Wednesday that profit for the six months to July jumped by 41% and sales rose by around a quarter, putting it on a strong footing ahead of second half likely to see rampant inflation hitting demand for clothing.

In the first set of results since its founder's daughter, Marta Ortega, took over as new non-executive chairman, the company said revenue for the period rose to 14.84 billion euros ($14.82 billion) from 11.9 billion euros a year earlier. It booked a net profit of 1.79 billion euros from 1.27 billion euros last year.

CEO Oscar Garcia Maceiras said sales were rising in the most recent weeks. However, the annual growth rate slowed slightly since the end of the first half to 11% in constant currency terms from Aug. 1 and Sept. 11.

The results were in line with analyst forecasts, which flag that autumn and winter will likely be challenging as the soaring cost of living weakens demand for fashion and leaves shoppers less keen to buy clothing at higher prices.

Inditex had decided to increase its prices early in the year to cope with inflation at a time when shoppers worldwide were buying more clothes for holidays, events and the return to the office after the lifting of COVID restrictions.

"Inditex has delivered a very strong absolute and relative performance," Deutsche Bank analyst Adam Cochrane said.

"But the lower consumer confidence is likely to see clothing sales decline in the second half of the year and into 2023 although price increases in the cost of clothing will help revenues", he added.

Inditex has broadly maintained its strategy of producing at least half of its garments close to its headquarters in Spain and the higher proportion of proximity sourcing benefited the company during the supply chain crisis.

Analysts are expecting negative earnings momentum and weaker sales for Inditex's biggest rival, Sweden's H&M, and consider the Spanish retailer better placed than competitors to face the challenges.

Inditex said its gross margin reached 57.9% during the first half of the year, the highest in seven years. The company added that has temporarily sped up its inventory to avoid supply chain snags. As of Sept. 11, inventory levels were 33% higher than a year earlier.



Waste Not: Taiwan Workshop Turns Trash into Sunglasses 

Arthur Huang, founder of Miniwiz, the company that runs Trash Kitchen, holds a pair of sunglasses made with plastic waste in Taipei, Taiwan, August 19, 2024. (Reuters)
Arthur Huang, founder of Miniwiz, the company that runs Trash Kitchen, holds a pair of sunglasses made with plastic waste in Taipei, Taiwan, August 19, 2024. (Reuters)
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Waste Not: Taiwan Workshop Turns Trash into Sunglasses 

Arthur Huang, founder of Miniwiz, the company that runs Trash Kitchen, holds a pair of sunglasses made with plastic waste in Taipei, Taiwan, August 19, 2024. (Reuters)
Arthur Huang, founder of Miniwiz, the company that runs Trash Kitchen, holds a pair of sunglasses made with plastic waste in Taipei, Taiwan, August 19, 2024. (Reuters)

Plastic bottle caps, food packaging, single-use utensils and scrapped toys are just some of the throw-away items that have been given a new life at a zero-waste workshop in Taipei.

Customers get hands-on experience in the recycling process, taking plastic waste brought from home, and melting and molding it into a pair of sunglasses within two hours.

"What we are trying to show in the Trash Kitchen is to let you see, feel, touch within minutes how this process can actually work without secondary pollution, and you can actually turn it into something of value directly in front of you," Arthur Huang, founder of Miniwiz, the company that runs the workshop, told Reuters.

The Taiwan company also produces tiles, bricks, hangers and other daily necessities from plastic and organic waste, using a "miniTrashpresso", a machine it developed in 2017, Huang said.

Kora Hsieh, editor-in-chief for fashion magazine Harper's Bazaar Taiwan, said the sunglasses project is a good initiative to promote sustainable fashion.

"I think environmental protection and fashion still have a long way to go. As for consumers, it is important for them to get first-hand experience, so a workshop like this is very helpful," she said.

Participants said the workshop inspired them to think twice about producing trash and pay more attention to reusable items.

"I have two children. I need to think about their future," said business owner Debbie Wu, 40.

"If you throw away trash without thinking, you kick the problem down the road. So if everyone can do their best, recycle and use less plastic, that will make a big difference," Wu said.

Taiwan produced a record 11.58 million metric tons of waste in 2023, including 6.27 million tons of recyclable trash, according to data from the Ministry of Environment.