Burberry returns to profit as turnaround bears fruit


Burberry has swung back to profit after the luxury fashion firmโ€™s bet on Gen Z shoppers and move to revive its British heritage paid off, but it flagged worries over a possible Iran war impact on consumer spending.

The firm reported pre-tax profits of ยฃ49 million for the year to March 28 against losses of ยฃ66 million the previous year, with results boosted by a better-than-expected 5% jump in same-store sales over its final quarter and an overhaul to cut ยฃ100 million in annual costs.

But it said it was โ€œmindful of the uncertain geopolitical and macro-economic environment and its potential impact on consumer confidenceโ€.

Burberry said the Middle East accounts for around 2% of its annual group sales, with the disruption from the conflict contributing to a 2% drop in fourth quarter sales over the wider Europe, Middle East, India and Africa division.

The group said it was not yet seeing the impact extend outside the Middle East.

Joshua Schulman, Burberryโ€™s chief executive, said: โ€œThis financial year marks a meaningful inflection point for Burberry.

โ€œWeโ€™ve returned to profitable comparable sales growth, with a strong fourth quarter driven by momentum in Greater China and Americas.

โ€œOur strategy is working and there are clear opportunities for further growth.โ€

The results came as it also announced that chairman Gerry Murphy would retire in November as he nears the end of a nine-year tenure at the helm of the board.

He will be replaced by William Jackson, the founder and former chief executive and chairman of Bridgepoint Group.

Burberryโ€™s results come a year after it unveiled plans to cut a potential 1,700 jobs worldwide under a drive to cut costs by ยฃ100 million a year by 2027.

It achieved annual cost cuts of ยฃ80 million in the past financial year, with the remainder due over the year ahead.

Its โ€œBurberry Forwardโ€ strategy has also involved reviving the brandโ€™s heritage and focusing on bestselling items, such as its trench coats and scarvesand distinctive check pattern, after efforts to modernise failed to deliver a boost.

Founded in England in 1856, Burberry has come under pressure in recent years from weaker spending across the luxury sector and its key Chinese market being hit particularly hard.

But its latest results showed a bounce-back in China, with sales surging 10% in its final quarter, helping drive growth of 4% across the year as a whole in the region.

Despite the upbeat figures, Burberry shares fell 2% in morning trading on Thursday.

Richard Hunter, head of markets at Interactive Investor, said: โ€œThe shares are ahead by 31% since the appointment of the new chief executive.

โ€œHowever, there remains something of a mountain to climb, such that investors are ready to accept but are not yet fully convinced of a sustained recovery, as evidenced by a surprisingly downbeat reaction to the numbers.โ€

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