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H&M shares surge after first quarterly profit rise in two years

H&M shares surge after first quarterly profit rise in two years

STOCKHOLM: H&M posted its first rise in quarterly pretax profit in more than two years on Thursday as the world’s second-biggest fashion retailer said its drive to meet rapid changes in the market were on track.

H&M has been spending heavily on reviving its business after years of falling profits and growing inventories due to slowing sales at its core H&M branded stores.

Shares in H&M, which is controlled by the founding Persson family, with the founder’s son the chairman and his grandson the CEO, were up 6.5 percent in early trade.

“H&M delivered its first strong quarterly earnings in over four years, which could raise confidence in the turnaround,” investment bank Carnegie said in research note.

The shares are up 56 percent this year after hitting a 13-year low in 2018 though they remain at about half the peak levels they hit in 2015.

Pretax profit for the June to August quarter beat expectations, rising to 5 billion crowns ($507 million) from 4.01 billion a year earlier.

Analysts had on average forecast a rise to 4.93 billion crowns, Refinitiv data showed.

The increase was the Swedish retailer’s first since the second quarter of 2017.

“The continued development of more full-price sales and reduced markdowns contributed to a 26 percent increase in operating profit in the third quarter, all while maintaining a high level of activity in our transformation work,” CEO Karl-Johan Persson said in a statement.

Profit growth was also helped by accelerating sales growth.

H&M had said on Sept. 16 that sales growth in the quarter was the steepest in three years, buoyed by well-received summer ranges and increased market share.

But analysts cautioned that investment might again squeeze profit margins, and shares fell on that day.

H&M’s gross margin actually widened to 50.8 percent from 50.3 percent, and its operating profit margin rose to 8 percent from 7.1 percent.

Zara owner Inditex, H&M’s biggest rival, has been weathering challenges in the sector better than most, yet its first-half results on Sept. 11 revealed disappointing margin growth that overshadowed a strong rise in sales.

Smaller brick-and-mortar rival Forever 21 filed for bankruptcy on Sept. 30.

H&M’s inventories increased 9 percent to 42 billion crowns at the end of its third quarter, equivalent to 18.5 percent of sales.

However, H&M said that, measured in local currencies, they shrank by 1 percent while the composition of the stock had kept improving.

The group in 2018 announced a target to cut inventories to 12-14 percent of sales by the end of 2020. CEO Persson on Thursday told analysts and media on a call that that range was still reachable, but did not say when.

Markdowns decreased for a fourth straight quarter, by 2 percentage points in relation to sales.

H&M had in June predicted a 1.5 percentage point decrease. The company unusually did not provide an outlook for markdowns in the current quarter.

“We believe we have reached an inflection point for margins and foresee the potential for further markdown recovery over the next 2-3 years,” said RBC analyst Richard Chamberlain, who recently raised his rating on H&M to “outperform.”

H&M said sales in September, the first month of its fourth quarter, grew 8 percent in local currencies.

Persson said on the call with analysts and media that favorable weather had helped to boost sales.

Executives also said on the call that activity to transform the company would remain high in coming quarters in an indication investment would stay elevated.

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