Bangkok Post

Gucci’s Q1 rebound drives Kering sales

- SILVIA ALOISI

Revenue at Kering SA’s Gucci fashion label rebounded strongly in the first quarter, adding to signs of a comeback for the broader luxury goods industry as Covid-19 restrictio­ns ease in major markets like China and the United States.

Sales of high-end fashion and handbags are soaring again as vaccinatio­ns progress and stores re-open, although new coronaviru­s lockdowns in much of Europe are holding back momentum there, while internatio­nal travel is still on ice.

Kering’s overall sales rose and Gucci, which accounts for 60% of its revenues and 80% of its profit, posted comparable revenues up by 24.6%, ahead of analysts’ consensus forecast for 19% growth.

That is likely to soothe investor concerns that the brand is losing steam after five years of stellar growth, after it lagged some major rivals in 2020.

But fashion labels at arch-rival Moet Hennessy Louis Vuitton SE, which include Louis Vuitton, performed even more strongly in the first quarter.

Gucci is hoping to capitalise on its centenary year to attract fans with events and new collection­s, including one presented online last week where Gucci designs were crossed with silhouette­s and logos by Balenciaga, another Kering brand.

The show has had 205 millions views online, Kering finance chief JeanMarc Duplaix told reporters, adding it confirmed renewed momentum at the brand.

Harry Barnick, a senior analyst at research firm Third Bridge, said the catwalk show could help create buzz with some key customers.

“This is likely to be particular­ly successful in China,” he said.

Duplaix said Kering planned to invest to help boost momentum at Gucci this year, although the group would remain discipline­d on costs and margins.

For group as a whole, which also includes Saint Laurent, Kering posted sales up by 83% in the Asia-Pacific region and by 46% in the United States in the three months to March from a year earlier.

In Western Europe, however, sales fell 34%. Duplaix said the hit was most marked in some countries which had spent much of the quarter under a strict lockdown, such as the United Kingdom.

More than half of Kering’s European stores were closed in the first quarter, and that number increased at the beginning of April due to fresh lockdowns in France and Italy, he added.

Overall revenues reached €3.89 billion ($4.69 billion)in the quarter, up

25.8% when stripping out exchange rate swings and acquisitio­ns. They were up 5.5% like-for-like compared with prepandemi­c levels in the first quarter of 2019.

Some of the Paris-based conglomera­te’s other labels also performed well, including Bottega Veneta, which Kering

has been trying to revive under a new designer after several years of faltering sales.

E-commerce was also up sharply — with online sales now accounting for 14% of the total — as luxury shoppers become more comfortabl­e buying pricey goods remotely.

 ?? IMAGES/AFP GETTY ?? People wait in line to enter a Gucci store in the Union Square shopping district in San Francisco, California on April 15.
IMAGES/AFP GETTY People wait in line to enter a Gucci store in the Union Square shopping district in San Francisco, California on April 15.

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