H&M invests in supply chain
as fashion rivalry intensifies
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[March 30, 2017]
By Anna Ringstrom
STOCKHOLM
(Reuters) - Cost controls helped H&M to limit a drop in quarterly pretax
profit but the fashion chain said it was increasing investments as it
tries to keep pace with its larger rival, Zara owner Inditex.
H&M, the world's second-biggest fashion company, said conditions
remained very tough in key European markets and in the United States,
with shopping behavior and expectations changing rapidly.
After years of hectic expansion across the world, the Swedish company's
profitability has faltered as Inditex and online specialist ASOS <ASOS.L>
gain an edge in "fast fashion" - turning over more new styles each year
and helped by having production closer to customers so they can quickly
boost supplies of fast-selling items.
H&M's supply chain lead times are around double those of Inditex,
according to a report this month by Goldman Sachs, which recommended
that investors "sell" H&M shares.
"To meet the rapid change that is going on in fashion retail we need to
be even faster and more flexible in our work processes, for example as
regards buying and allocation of our assortment," Chief Executive
Karl-Johan Persson conceded on Thursday.
"We are therefore investing significantly in our supply chain, such as
in new logistics solutions with greater levels of automation, but also
in optimizing our lead times."
However, markets were unimpressed with the plan and sales figures for
March and H&M shares were down 4.5 percent at 0934 GMT (5:34 a.m. ET).
DILEMMA
H&M has seen competition and price pressure in its budget segment
increase from rivals such as Britain's Primark <ABF.L>, which recently
entered H&M's biggest market Germany.
H&M has a dilemma -- the need to compete on price means four fifths of
its production is in Asia, far more than Inditex which sources around
half its products from countries close to its main markets, making it
more nimble in adapting supplies to in-store demand.
H&M's further-flung supply base could also leave it more exposed to
trade disruption from protectionist moves such as Britain's decision to
leave the European Union and the election of U.S. President Donald
Trump.
H&M has been investing heavily in IT investments to integrate its stores
and e-commerce and make its supply chain faster and more flexible, but
detail on progress has been scant.
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People walk past the
windows of an H&M store in Barcelona, Spain, December 30, 2016.
REUTERS/Regis Duvignau/File Photo
Chief
Executive Persson told Reuters last year that management was looking at whether
to source a larger share of products closer to where they are sold and had some
initiatives underway to analyze and react faster to consumer patterns and
shorten lead times when needed.
Large markdowns in stores last year hit sales and highlighted shortcomings in
design and supply planning. Thursday's results further underscored the need for
H&M to become more responsive to consumer tastes.
An H&M investor relations officer said investments to make the supply chain more
flexible would be higher this year than in 2016.
Societe Generale analyst Anne Critchlow said H&M's gross margin - its most basic
rate of profitability - was higher than expected in its financial quarter that
runs from December to February.
But she said March sales -- up 7 percent on a constant currency basis -- looked
disappointing, "even taking into account the later Easter this year".
She
highlighted a 30 percent increase in inventory compared to a year earlier and
the company warned of a risk of increased mark-downs impacting its gross margin
if that stock-in-trade is not sold down over the months ahead.
April sales would need to come in around consensus expectations - up 11 percent
compared to April 2016 - for the market to regain confidence in H&M's trading,
she added.
Quarterly pretax profit fell to 3.21 billion crowns ($362 million) from 3.33
billion a year-earlier, above a mean forecast for 2.87 billion in a Reuters poll
of analysts, helped by cost controls and currency translation effects.
H&M is also branching out into new concepts to reach a broader customer base and
reduce exposure to the increasingly crowded budget segment. It announced a new
chain of stores, ARKET, with a slightly higher price range than its core budget
H&M brand.
The new chain would also sell brands made by third parties.
(Reporting by Anna Ringstrom; additional reporting by Helena Soderpalm; writing
by Tom Pfeiffer; editing by Niklas Pollard and Keith Weir)
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