Zara owner to close up to 1,200 fashion stores
around the world
Inditex seeks to boost online retailing as coronavirus
causes 44% sales slump
Store
closures are expected to be concentrated in Asia and Europe, with the UK less
heavily affected.
Jasper
Jolly
Published
onWed 10 Jun 2020 17.28 BST
The owner
of Zara will close as many as 1,200 stores around the world as the clothing
retailer tries to boost online sales during the chaos wrought by the Covid-19
pandemic.
Inditex
said it would “absorb” between 1,000 and 1,200 mainly smaller stores, with
losses concentrated among older shops from brands other than Zara. The Spanish
company’s other brands include Bershka, Pull & Bear and Massimo Dutti.
Closures
are expected to be concentrated in Asia and Europe. It is understood that the
107 Inditex stores in the UK are less likely to be significantly affected.
Inditex said
that “headcount will remain stable”, with staff offered roles in other jobs
such as dispatching online purchases.
The total
store count will fall from 7,412 to between 6,700 and 6,900 after the
reorganisation, which will also include the opening of 450 new shops.
Inditex,
one of the world’s largest clothing retailers, has been hit hard during the
pandemic, with sales down 44% to €3.3bn (£2.9bn) between 1 February and 30
April, the first quarter of its financial year.
The company
reported a net loss of €409m during the quarter. Almost a quarter of its shops
remained closed by 8 June.
However,
online sales growth made up for some of the sales weakness, Inditex said.
Online sales rose by 50% year-on-year during the quarter, and were up 95%
year-on-year in April.
Bricks and
mortar retailers around the world have been forced to re-evaluate their
business models during the pandemic, amid expectations of lower footfall in
stores for a significant amount of time. In the UK fashion brands Monsoon
Accessorize and Quiz said on Wednesday they would close branches, with hundreds
of jobs lost.
The casual
dining sector has also been hard hit, with the Restaurant Group confirming on
Wednesday that 125 of its outlets – the majority Frankie & Benny’s and
Garfunkel’s – will not reopen after lockdown, putting 3,000 jobs at risk. The
company also owns the Wagamama chain, which is unaffected.
Inditex
said it would accelerate its push to sell more clothes online as it seeks to
fend off the challenge of high street competitors such as H&M and the
Uniqlo owner, Fast Retailing, and newer online-only rivals including Asos and
Boohoo in the UK which have prospered during lockdown.
Under
Inditex’s new plan online sales will account for more than 25% of the total by
2022, compared with 14% in its 2019 financial year. Larger stores will act as
distribution hubs for online sales.
Inditex,
controlled by its founder, Amancio Ortega, plans to spend €1bn on its online
offering by 2022 and a further €1.7bn in stores to allow them to integrate
better with websites for faster deliveries and real-time tracking of products.
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