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Burberry's Europe Sales Hit By Iran War While US And China Grow

CEO Schulman's strategy to focus on US, China paying off for now; Europe and Middle East sales fall 3%, hit by Iran war.

London : Burberry said ‌conflict in the Middle East was hurting tourist spending in Europe, sending the British luxury brand's shares down more than 6% on Friday even though sales in its April-June quarter were strong in the U.S. and China.

Burberry's sales in the Europe and Middle East region fell by 3% ​as fewer tourists visited Middle Eastern shopping hubs like Dubai, and Europe drew fewer Asian shoppers.

"Where we're really seeing ​the impact is tourism," Chief Financial Officer Kate Ferry said on a call with journalists, adding ⁠that in other regions local spending was helping to cushion the blow, and American tourist spending was strong.

To boost tourist ​spending in London, CEO Joshua Schulman said incoming Prime Minister Andy Burnham should reinstate tax-free shopping for tourists, which was abolished ​at the start of 2021.

Although Burberry has said the Middle East only accounts for 2% of its sales, the knock-on impact of the conflict still drew investors' focus as the war escalated with Iran launching fresh strikes on U.S. military bases in the region on Friday. That pushed down ​luxury stocks across the board on Friday.

STRENGTH IN U.S. AND CHINA

Schulman, who has led a turnaround since taking the helm two ​years ago, has said he is focused on the two "must-win" markets of the U.S. and China as he tries to revive the luxury ‌brand.

Luxury giants ⁠are hoping the U.S. and its newly-minted millionaires from the AI boom can help revive sales growth after a two-year slump.

For Burberry, the strategy appeared to be working, with sales in the Americas up 12% from a year earlier during the quarter thanks to new customers, and Gen Z shoppers helping boost China sales by 9%.

"In America, our strategy is working and we're seeing ​the halo effect of our ​investments in the U.S. market ⁠in Europe, with the strong presence of American customers here," said Schulman.

Burberry's shares have fallen 18% this year but have outperformed most luxury peers as the brand's sales growth improves.

BURBERRY CALLS ​FOR TAX-FREE SHOPPING

Burberry's tourist business in London has declined by 50% since 2019, largely as ​a result of ⁠the VAT refund scheme being abolished, Schulman said, and that spending has shifted to Paris where its tourist business is up 30%.

"While we know the new PM (prime minister) has a busy agenda, we would hope that restoring London as the most important shopping capital ⁠this side ​of the Atlantic would be at the top of his list," said Schulman.

Overall ​comparable store sales in Burberry's first financial quarter grew 5%, in line with analysts' expectations. Burberry's first-quarter revenue - which is typically the smallest of the year - ​rose to £455 million ($612.88 million) from £433 million a year earlier.

( Source : Reuters )
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