ASOS Revenue Down 3% In Key Christmas Period 

A model walks on an in-house catwalk at the ASOS headquarters in London April 1, 2014. (Reuters)
A model walks on an in-house catwalk at the ASOS headquarters in London April 1, 2014. (Reuters)
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ASOS Revenue Down 3% In Key Christmas Period 

A model walks on an in-house catwalk at the ASOS headquarters in London April 1, 2014. (Reuters)
A model walks on an in-house catwalk at the ASOS headquarters in London April 1, 2014. (Reuters)

Online fashion retailer ASOS reported a 3% fall in revenue over the four months to the end of December, hurt by weaker demand and delivery disruption in its biggest market Britain and making it one of the laggards in the sector. 

Britain is in the midst of a cost-of-living crisis but rival retailers with physical shops such as Next outperformed ASOS in the period as consumers prioritized festive spending and chose to visit stores rather than worry about delivery issues. 

ASOS said UK sales were down 8% in the period which it blamed on weak consumer sentiment, earlier cut-off dates for Christmas deliveries due to the delivery problems and a tough comparison against last year when the pandemic favored online. 

José Antonio Ramos Calamonte, ASOS's chief executive who took over last year, wants to overhaul the company's business model after profits dived following the end of pandemic restrictions and after a string of operational problems. 

Britain's delivery network was hamstrung during the final months of 2022 by more than a dozen days of postal walk-outs. 

Illustrating the challenge for online-only retailers, data from IMRG showed that online retail sales in the UK fell for the first time ever last year, down 10.5% year-on-year, partly because shops opened up after COVID-19 closures. 

ASOS said in its statement on Thursday it was making good progress with its plan to improve profitability although it would make a loss in the six months to the end of March. European sales grew 6% in the period.  



Prada's Brand CEO Gianfranco D'Attis to Quit

FILE PHOTO: People walk past the store of Italian luxury fashion house Prada on 5th Avenue in New York City, US, May 23, 2025. REUTERS/Adam Gray/File Photo
FILE PHOTO: People walk past the store of Italian luxury fashion house Prada on 5th Avenue in New York City, US, May 23, 2025. REUTERS/Adam Gray/File Photo
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Prada's Brand CEO Gianfranco D'Attis to Quit

FILE PHOTO: People walk past the store of Italian luxury fashion house Prada on 5th Avenue in New York City, US, May 23, 2025. REUTERS/Adam Gray/File Photo
FILE PHOTO: People walk past the store of Italian luxury fashion house Prada on 5th Avenue in New York City, US, May 23, 2025. REUTERS/Adam Gray/File Photo

Prada's brand CEO Gianfranco D'Attis will leave the Italian luxury firm at the end of the month by "mutual agreement", Prada said on Sunday.

Prada Group's CEO Andrea Guerra will take on the role of brand CEO on an interim basis, the company told Reuters.

The news was first reported by fashion trade publication WWD.

Luxury fashion has seen several changes in senior leadership and creative directors.

Luxury goods giant Kering, which owns Gucci, last week named Renault boss Luca de Meo as its new CEO, replacing Francois-Henri Pinault, who has led the heavily indebted family firm since 2005.

Top luxury houses are also betting on a new design direction to help rekindle interest from shoppers, who have pulled back on fashion as prices rise.

Earlier in June, LVMH-owned Dior appointed its menswear designer, Jonathan Anderson, to also head womenswear designs and haute couture, replacing Maria Grazia Chiuri.

Kering in May appointed former Valentino designer Pierpaolo Piccioli as creative director of Balenciaga, replacing Demna, who was taking up the chief design job at Gucci.

Designer changes have also taken place at Chanel, Versace, Valentino and LVMH-owned Celine among others.