Manawatu Standard

Recovering Kathmandu pays $2m in bonuses

- Catherine Harris

When Xavier Simonet began at Kathmandu three years ago, the company’s shareholde­rs were in a dilemma.

Should they sell to Briscoe Group, which had mounted a hostile takeover bid for the duallisted outdoor clothing company, or should they trust the incoming chief executive, whose CV suggested a capable retail hand?

This week Kathmandu’s annual results showed that their faith in Simonet may have been well founded.

The company made a record $497.4 million in sales, up 11.7 per cent for the year to July 31.

Net profit was also a record, up by a third to $50.5m, and a long way from the $20.4m it plunged to in 2015.

French-born Simonet, who has worked for LVMH and turned around London accessory firm Radley, has been steadily following a familiar formula.

He has been controllin­g costs, strengthen­ing margins, enhancing Kathmandu’s image at home and developing a long-term growth plan overseas.

The company has upgraded stores, invested in an automated sorting machine in Australia to speed up deliveries, and took a hard look at its marketing spend.

He said: ‘‘We’ve done a lot of work trying to be a more inspiratio­nal brand, telling our story through social media and digital marketing around the brand story and also the key values of the company, like sustainabi­lity.’’

Simonet also credits the innovation of the Christchur­ch-based design team, as well as improvemen­ts on the shop floor that mean staff close more sales.

This week the company said it had set aside $2m in the form of $1000 bonuses for permanent staff not in an incentive scheme.

The past few years have been a particular­ly competitiv­e time in the New Zealand clothing industry. A key rival, Macpac, was bought out by Australia’s Super Retail Group this year from private equity and original Kathmandu co-founder Jan Cameron.

But this week Kathmandu’s shares – which slunk to just under $2 in 2015 – were back to about $3.20, up 50 per cent over the past year.

Would-be suitor Briscoe Group continues to hold 18.9 per cent of Kathmandu but trimmed its shareholdi­ng in August, stepping away from the takeover bid trigger point of 19.9 per cent.

 ??  ?? French-born chief executive Xavier Simonet is credited with restoring the brand’s finances.
French-born chief executive Xavier Simonet is credited with restoring the brand’s finances.

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