H&M casts doubt over margin target as June sale drop, shares fall By Reuters


By Marie Mannes

STOCKHOLM (Reuters) -H&M cast doubt over its full-year profit margin target on Thursday after missing quarterly earnings forecasts and predicting a fall in June sales, sending shares in the world’s No.2 listed fashion retailer down almost 14%.

Sales this month are likely to fall 6% in local currencies versus a year earlier, partly due to poor weather in many markets, the Swedish company said.

CEO Daniel Erver said the group still believed in its 10% operating margin goal for 2024 but that this had got harder to reach.

“External factors that influence our purchasing costs and sales revenues, including materials and foreign currency, will have a more negative impact than we expected in the second half,” he said.

“The most important prerequisite for achieving our goal is that sales growth is further strengthened in the second half of the year compared with the second quarter increase,” he added.

H&M (ST:) has often fallen short of Zara owner Inditex (BME:), while China-founded fast-fashion group Shein is expanding rapidly in Europe and plans a London stock market listing.

Shares in the group fell nearly 14% at market open.

JPMorgan said the report was disappointing and expected a negative share reaction.

“We….indeed think that the June sales and margin commentary could weigh on the wider sector,” the broker said.

The Swedish group has struggled to win back customers, with its core of cost-conscious shoppers reluctant to spend as inflation ate into purchasing power.

H&M said net sales in its March-May second quarter rose 3% in local currencies versus a year earlier, with growth in all customer groups and a positive trend in all regions.

© Reuters. People walk past a branch of fashion retailer H&M in Copenhagen, Denmark, March 26, 2024. REUTERS/Tom Little/ File Photo

Operating profit was 7.1 billion Swedish crowns ($672.5 million), up from 4.74 billion a year earlier but below a mean forecast of 7.37 billion in an LSEG poll of analysts.

($1 = 10.5564 Swedish crowns)





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