Bangkok Post

Operator of Uniqlo posts record net profit

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The operator of Japanese casualwear giant Uniqlo reported a record annual net profit yesterday and predicted an even better performanc­e this year as pandemic-related restrictio­ns ease further worldwide.

Fast Retailing Co said business had “recovered markedly” as infections were contained around the world, including a sharp recovery in sales in Europe and North America after virus lockdowns were lifted.

In the 12 months to August 2021, the firm posted a better-than-expected net profit of 169.8 billion yen ($1.5 billion), up 88% on-year.

A surge in demand for casual clothing and cost-cutting fuelled the bumper results, with sales up 6.2% to 2.13 trillion yen, the company said.

Recovery of demand in key overseas markets across Asia, North America and Europe should compensate for expected falls in domestic Uniqlo operations in the current financial year, it said.

“In the second half, we expect restrictio­ns to ease and normal business operations to resume,” chief financial officer Takeshi Okazaki said at a press conference. “Therefore we forecast increasing sales and a significan­t increase in profit.”

The firm predicted net profit of 175 billion yen for the current year to August 2022 on expected annual sales of 2.2 trillion yen.

However, the firm’s mainstay Uniqlo operations in Japan are expected to experience a drop from the strong demand seen a year ago, when loungewear and other “stay-home” items were snapped up en masse.

“There was also a high demand for masks. Those factors are expected to disappear during this fiscal year,” Okazaki said.

Going forward, CEO Tadashi Yanai said the company would put renewed focus on building stores near residentia­l areas, in addition to urban shopping districts.

He voiced concerns about rising rawmateria­l prices, the ongoing pandemic and on-and-off local lockdowns in some countries.

“For (the past) year, I believe everyone in the company worked hard in this difficult environmen­t,” Yanai said. “But the coronaviru­s pandemic has not ended. We just cannot tell what will happen when.”

 ?? AFP ?? Motorists ride past a Uniqlo store in Hanoi.
AFP Motorists ride past a Uniqlo store in Hanoi.

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