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Primark sees improving UK outlook after Omicron dented Christmas

Mark White by Mark White
January 22, 2022
in Supply Chain
0


Customers walks with shopping bags, as retail store Primark in Birmingham, Britain reopens its doors after a third lockdown imposed in early January due to the ongoing coronavirus disease (COVID-19) pandemic, April 12, 2021. REUTERS/Carl Recine

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  • Primark’s sales up 36% yr/yr in 16 weeks to Jan. 8
  • Sales down 5% on a two-year basis
  • Expects boost to sales from lifting of COVID restrictions
  • Pledges not to raise Primark prices
  • To cut 400 Primark in-store management jobs

LONDON, Jan 20 (Reuters) – Associated British Foods (ABF.L) said on Thursday the lifting of COVID-19 restrictions in England had boosted prospects for its Primark clothing business after December sales were dented by the rapid spread of the Omicron coronavirus variant.

The group said Omicron had interrupted an improving trend in Primark’s customer numbers but it was now seeing a recovery in UK and Ireland footfall.

“In the UK and Ireland I think we’re looking at an improving consumer outlook,” John Bason, AB Foods’ finance chief, told Reuters, pointing to falling COVID-19 infection rates and the end of restrictions in England. read more

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He said he expected Primark’s city centre stores to get a boost from workers returning to offices, while the business would also benefit from more people planning holidays.

Bason also pledged that, unlike rivals such as Next (NXT.L), Primark would not raise prices for spring/summer stock despite inflationary cost pressures.

He said a plan to improve efficiency in Primark stores would result in the loss of about 400 management jobs. read more

Shares in AB Foods were down 1.9% at 1017 GMT.

Primark trades from 401 stores in Europe and the United States but does not have an online business.

Its sales for the 16 weeks to Jan. 8 were 2.67 billion pounds ($3.64 billion). On a constant currency basis that was 36% ahead of last year when there were widespread closures of its stores in the UK and Europe.

While sales were 5% lower than pre-COVID levels in the same period two years ago, its operating profit margin was ahead of management expectations.

All Primark stores remained open throughout the period, except for short periods in Austria and the Netherlands, which cost it 30 million pounds of sales.

AB Foods also owns major sugar, grocery, ingredients and agricultural businesses, where revenue in aggregate was 6% ahead of last year.

The group said all businesses had experienced inflationary pressures in raw materials, commodities, supply chain and energy. That has impacted margins in grocery and ingredients where price rises have lagged the effects of input cost inflation.

However, the group still maintained its guidance for “significant progress”, at both the half and full year, in adjusted operating profit and adjusted earnings per share.

($1 = 0.7335 pounds)

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Reporting by James Davey Editing by Jason Neely and Mark Potter

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.



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Mark White

Mark White

Mark White is the editor of the ProcurementNation, a Media Outlet covering supply chain and logistics issues. He joined The New York Times in 2007 as an commodities reporter, and most recently served as foreign-exchange editor in New York.

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