Bangkok Post

H&M appoints new CEO in reshuffle

- ANNA RINGSTROM

STOCKHOLM: Sweden’s Hennes & Mauritz AB said yesterday that its chief executive officer, one of its founding family members, was stepping down to replace his father as chairman, as the world’s second-biggest fashion retailer races to keep pace with a fast-changing market.

The news came as H&M reported its first rise in annual profit since 2015 following heavy investment­s, and a rise in fiscal fourth-quarter pretax profit that beat market expectatio­ns.

“H&M veteran Helena Helmersson, currently chief operating officer, succeeds Karl-Johan Persson as CEO,’’ the company said in a statement.

“It is a natural change, after 20 years as chairman, to hand over to KarlJohan, who has been CEO for more than 10 years,” chairman Stefan Persson, son of the group’s founder, said in a statement.

“The timing is favourable for making this change now, since we have gradually improved profits and have a strong position with many well-establishe­d brands, millions of customers worldwide and good financial strength,” he added.

“We have long anticipate­d that Karl-Johan would eventually assume the position as chairman once turnaround had been achieved, and expect this will be clearly positively received by the market,” analysts at Carnegie said in a note.

“Still, we believe the effect had been even more positive if the company had recruited a strong external name. That said, we have a rather positive view of Helena Helmersson, from presentati­ons made during her time as head of sustainabi­lity.”

“I think it is a sensible succession. Karl-Johan is not going anywhere, in reality he has just got a change of mandate, and Helena has been around for some time.

“It strikes me as a similar move to that of Inditex with Carlos Crespo becoming CEO and Pablo (Isla) moving to the executive chairman role,” said Santander analyst Rebecca McClellan.

Zara owner Inditex SA, a rival to H&M, announced its management change in May 2019.

Profit in the September through November quarter was 5.40 billion crowns ($568.6 million), up from a year-ago 4.35 billion. Analysts had on average forecast a profit of 4.78 billion crowns, according to Refinitiv data.

In the full fiscal year, profit grew to 13.4 billion crowns from 12.7 billion as sales rose on the back of big investment­s in logistics, digital technology, new store concepts and independen­t brands to meet changing shopping habits and tougher competitio­n.

“The ongoing transforma­tion work has contribute­d to continued positive sales developmen­t with more full-price sales, lower markdowns and increased market share,” H&M said.

“The compositio­n and level of the stock-in-trade continue to improve, and we expect a decrease in markdowns again in the first quarter, for the sixth successive quarter,” Karl-Johan Persson said.

The group reported in December that its fourth-quarter sales rose 5% in local currencies.

It said yesterday that its sales in December through Jan 28 grew 5% in local currencies.

While its quarterly gross margin narrowed to 54.0% from 54.2%, markdowns decreased for a fifth straight quarter, by 0.5 percentage points in relation to sales.

Meanwhile, inventorie­s shrank by 6% adjusted for currency effects for a second straight quarter.

 ??  ?? Persson: From CEO to chairman
Persson: From CEO to chairman

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