Burberry Shares Dive, Pointing to Scale of CEO's Task -- 3rd Update
10 November 2017 - 6:39AM
Dow Jones News
By Saabira Chaudhuri
LONDON -- Burberry Group PLC's reliance on struggling department
stores in the U.S. has hurt sales and its longer-term outlook,
helping to send shares of the British fashion house tumbling.
Burberry reported falling revenue in the U.S., its biggest
market, for the six months to Sept. 30, and said it doesn't
forecast global sales and margin growth until fiscal 2021. That
dire warning coincides with fresh uncertainty about Burberry's
strategic direction.
Newly appointed Chief Executive Marco Gobbetti is looking for a
creative chief to replace Christopher Bailey, who last week said he
would step down in March, after 17 years in the role. Meanwhile,
the U.S. is shaping up to be one of the toughest problems for Mr.
Gobbetti, who took the reins this summer.
The U.S. accounts for more than a fifth of Burberry's global
revenue. It makes about 30% of that by selling to retailers like
department stores and outlets. That's a far higher percentage than
at rivals like Prada SpA, and Kering Sa-owned Gucci, and Hermès
International SCA.
Burberry has long complained about department store markdowns
and poor product placement. More recently, e-commerce has sapped
malls, department stores and other brick-and-mortar outlets of foot
traffic, sending sales hurtling downward.
Burberry said both domestic and tourist spending in the Americas
remains depressed. "Clearly the U.S. remains quite a challenging
market overall, " said Chief Financial Officer Julie Brown.
Burberry warned that for fiscal 2019 and 2020, revenue and
operating margin would be broadly flat, mostly due to costs related
to restructuring and to its effort to scale back its presence in
what it call non-luxury locations. Only in fiscal 2021 does Mr.
Gobbetti now expect an uptick.
Shares fell as much 13% in early London trading Thursday, before
recovering somewhat and closing down 10%.
Mr. Gobbetti -- whom Burberry plucked from Celine, a small,
ultra-luxury brand owned by LVMH Moët Hennessy Louis Vuitton SE --
said Thursday his fix for Burberry would be to become "firmly
luxury." He said that meant pulling out of undesirable locations,
pushing up prices in some areas, cutting costs and refreshing its
brand. He admitted that would take years to implement.
"It will take a reasonable amount of time," he warned.
The turnaround effort comes as much of the rest of the industry
is enjoying decent growth. The global luxury market is currently
growing at 6% from a year earlier, according to Exane BNP Paribas,
its fastest rate in four years. That is driven by higher disposable
income and improving consumer confidence in China. A corruption
crackdown there and general worries about the economy had weakened
demand until recently.
Growth remains sluggish in the U.S., however, where big
department stores, once the curators of high fashion, are closing
stores and slashing prices. Mr. Gobbetti said he plans to reduce
sales to some department stores. He promised to try to reduce
discounting and upgrade to locations that bolster the high-end
image Burberry is chasing.
Net income for the six months rose 29% to GBP92.9 million ($122
million), buoyed by a strong showing from Burberry's core Chinese
consumers and a good response to new rainwear and bags. Revenue
rose 9% to GBP1.26 billion, or 4% adjusted for currency
fluctuations.
Burberry reported strong growth in mainland China and said the
Hong Kong market grew in the second quarter. Sales in Hong Kong
had, for several quarters, been under pressure from dwindling
Chinese tourism triggered by unrest and new visa restrictions.
Write to Saabira Chaudhuri at saabira.chaudhuri@wsj.com
(END) Dow Jones Newswires
November 09, 2017 14:24 ET (19:24 GMT)
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