Daily Mail

Festive fashion flop rocks M&S

But sparkling food sales lift Covid gloom

- Mark Shapland

MarKS & Spencer remains two businesses rolled into one as its food and clothes divisions put in very different performanc­es in the run up to Christmas. Food sales – boosted by the High Street giant’s partnershi­p with Ocado – soared 8.7pc over the festive period as customers snapped up smaller turkeys and hampers. But again clothes proved to be the chain’s undoing as sales fell 19.4pc in December and 25.1pc across the whole third quarter. a strong performanc­e online and a spike in women buying pyjamas as Christmas presents could not plug the gap. ‘the great British public are back in their pyjamas,’ quipped M&S chief Steve rowe ( picturedbe­low). Under the 53-year- old, M&S had tried to make its food more affordaby ble, while maintainin­g premium quality, and analysts said in this part of the business the results show the strategy has worked. rowe said: ‘Given the on-off restrictio­ns and distortion­s in demand patterns, our trading was robust over the Christmas period. Beneath the Covid clouds we saw a very strong performanc­e from the food business including Ocado.’ But the poor clothing figures meant overall group sales in the month of December were down 3.6pc, while for the three months to December 26 sales of £2.52bn were 8.2pc lower than last year. ‘It wasn’t what we had hoped or planned for,’ conceded rowe.

M& S clothing was expected to take a hit given that it relies heavily on in- store sales in town centres and like many retailers it had been forced to close shops in England for the whole of November due to the second lockdown. But analysts warned that many of M& S’s clothes remain unfashiona­ble, despite rowe’s efforts.

Jonathan Pritchard, analyst at Peel Hunt, said: ‘M&S has never solved the issue. they are trying to be all things to all women.’ to makes matters worse the results come days after rival Next recorded a barn- storming online performanc­e to cushion the blow of its town store closures. analysts said M& S could follow Next’s lead and look to sell clothes from third parties online and in store. the retailer recently bid for lingerie firm Victoria’s Secret UK but was beaten by Next. Jaegar, which M& S was linked with earlier this week, could be part of that plan, although rowe refused to confirm whether he had bought the fashion brand from administra­tion.

But despite the disappoint­ing clothes sales, rowe remained upbeat and reassured shareholde­rs that M&S was in the right place to weather the latest national lockdown.

He said: ‘We worked very hard over the summer to get our stock in the right shape.’

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