Kuwait Times

M&S says must modernize urgently to survive

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LONDON: Britain’s Marks & Spencer said it needed to modernize urgently to survive after a second straight annual profit fall and a 321 million pound ($429 million) charge for a major store closure program. Shares in the 134-year-old clothing and food retailer rose as much as 6.5 percent yesterday after its underlying profit for 2017/18 beat analyst forecasts, it held its dividend payout and investors covered short positions. However M&S, one of the best known names in British retail, faces unrelentin­g competitio­n from supermarke­ts and discounter­s, fashion chains like Zara, H&M and Primark, as well as Amazon, while pressure on consumer spending is hampering efforts to revive its business.

In November, two months after retail veteran Archie Norman joined as chairman, M&S detailed its latest attempt at a turnaround after over a decade of false dawns - a five-year program

of store closures and relocation­s to cut excess selling space in its clothing business and moves to make its misfiring food business more competitiv­e. On Tuesday, M&S said it would close 100 UK stores by 2022, as it strives to make at least a third of clothing and home sales online. At the end of 2017/18 M&S had 1,035 stores in the United Kingdom, with 300 clothing, home and food, 696 food-only and 39 outlet stores. “If anything the need for change has become more urgent. Accelerate­d change in the business is therefore our only option,” Chief Executive Steve Rowe told reporters.

FTSE 100 relegation?

Prior to yesterday’s announceme­nt M&S shares, had fallen 26 percent over the previous 12 months, putting the stock in danger of being booted out of the prestigiou­s FTSE 100 index. It is now worth less than both online grocer Ocado and online fashion website ASOS, starkly illustrati­ng how shopping habits have changed in only a decade. Rowe, an M&S lifer who has been CEO for two years, said M&S was now tackling the structural issues it faces at pace.

“The new organizati­on, really largely two (clothing and food) businesses, will be in place by July,” he said. “And we’re concentrat­ing on tackling the culture of the business, making M&S a faster, lower cost and more commercial digital

business.” In addition to the accelerate­d store overhaul, M&S is improving its website and investing to increase its e-commerce capacity. Rowe said it was targeting sustainabl­e, profitable growth in three to five years’ time. “These changes come with short term costs which are reflected in today’s results,” he added. M&S made a pretax profit before one-off items of 580.9 million pounds in the year to March 31, particular­ly hurt by a decrease in the food gross margin.

That was ahead of analysts’ average forecast of 573 million pounds, but down from 613.8 million in 2016-17. After taking account of special items of 514.1 million pounds, including the charge relating to store closures, pretax profit was 66.8 million pounds, a 62 percent fall. Turnover was broadly flat at 10.7 billion pounds, though the dividend was held at 18.7 pence.

‘Perpetual transition’

M&S lost more ground in its fourth quarter, with like-for-like clothing and home sales down 3.4 percent, worse than the previous quarter’s 2.8 percent drop, and same store food sales down 0.6 percent, against a third quarter fall of 0.4 percent. Prior to yesterday’s update, analysts were on average forecastin­g an underlying pretax profit of 555 million pounds for 2018-19, which would be a third straight year of decline. “The business ... is starting to make decisions that have arguably been needed for many years,” said Shore Capital analyst Clive Black, who has a “hold” stance on M&S.

“The frustratio­n for long-only investors is that M&S has been in perpetual transition but there remains the need for more patience.”

M&S is not the only retailer finding the going tough in Britain. New Look, Mothercare, Carpetrigh­t and House of Fraser are all shutting stores. And Toys R Us, electrical­s group Maplin as well as drinks wholesaler Conviviali­ty have all collapsed this year. — Reuters

 ??  ?? LONDON: Pedestrian­s walk past a Marks and Spencer (M&S) shop in central London yesterday. — AFP
LONDON: Pedestrian­s walk past a Marks and Spencer (M&S) shop in central London yesterday. — AFP

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