Bangkok Post

Hermes revenue rebounds

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Hermes Internatio­nal said yesterday that its revenue returned to growth in the third quarter as consumers regained an appetite for products like Birkin bags after lockdowns earlier this year.

Revenue rose 6.9% on an adjusted basis to €1.8 billion ($2.1 billion) in the quarter, beating estimates by €100 million.

While Hermes said the impact of the Covid-19 epidemic remained difficult to assess for the full year, it repeated that it had an “ambitious goal” for revenue growth in the medium-term.

Pent-up demand is helping Hermes after lockdowns in the first half left consumers with little recourse besides e-commerce to acquire the company’s pricey handbags and silk scarves.

“Hermes’s online shop now gets more revenue than its flagship store in Paris,’’ chief financial officer Eric du Halgouet told reporters on a call.

“There’s no cannibalis­ation between online and physical stores and 85% of online transactio­ns are from new clients,’’ he said. “Hermes’s strategy is to expand the online offer progressiv­ely, except for iconic products like Birkin bags.’’

“This performanc­e reflects the strength of the brand, continued polarizati­on between winners and losers and better insulation from a lower-thanindust­ry-average exposure to tourist demand,” wrote Thomas Chauvet, an analyst at Citigroup.

Management’s comments that October trends were so far in line with September were a positive signal, he added.

Revenue growth resumed in AsiaPacifi­c including Japan, fuelled by Chinese shoppers. Europe and the Americas, meanwhile, saw revenue fall, but at a slower pace than in the second quarter.

“Europe is still suffering from the lack of tourists, although local stores in France except the flagships in Paris saw a nice recovery,” du Halgouet said.

“Hermes doesn’t intend to implement more price increases on its products this year after a hike at the start of 2020,’’ he said. “Management will review its pricing strategy for next year in the next few months.’’

“Demand for Hermes’s famous silk scarves, known as “carré,” and perfumes has been negatively impacted by their over-exposure to travel retail stores, half of which remain closed,’’ du Halgouet said.

Revenue in the third quarter for those two categories fell 21% and 9.9%, respective­ly.

“Hermes looks set to secure a fourthquar­ter revenue uplift,” Deborah Aitken, an analyst at Bloomberg Intelligen­ce, wrote in a note. “The recovery’s quality should be a green light for the luxury sector too.”

 ?? BLOOMBERG ?? Shoppers form a social-distancing queue to enter a Hermes boutique in Paris on Wednesday.
BLOOMBERG Shoppers form a social-distancing queue to enter a Hermes boutique in Paris on Wednesday.

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