Zalando issued an upbeat results report on Thursday, talking of expectations for “accelerating growth” in 2025 after a strong 2024 performance.
Zalando
And it talked up the key new partnership with the UK’s Next that was announced late last year. This year, Zalando’s ZEOS logistics operation is becoming the “partner of choice” for Next in fulfilling online DTC orders for most of continental Europe. The partnership, will see it introduce new fulfilment features “that will benefit all ZEOS clients in the future. These include advanced fulfilment capabilities — like virtual bonded warehousing — as well as enhanced onboarding and inventory management capabilities. ZEOS is also expanding its services to 10 additional European markets, where Next is already trading”.
Thursday saw the German e-tail giant detailing its expectations for the current trading year and it said its 2025 gross merchandise volume (GMV) and revenue should grow between 4% and 9%, “driven by the successful execution of Zalando’s ecosystem strategy across both growth vectors business-to-consumer (B2C) and business-to-business (B2B)”. That excludes an impact from its About You acquisition on either revenue or profits.
Meanwhile adjusted earnings before interest and taxes (EBIT) should rise to a range between €530 million and €590 million.
Zalando – DR
2024 strength
That confidence comes after a buoyant 2024 as both GMV and revenue were in the upper half of the firm’s guidance range, with 4.5% and 4.2% growth, respectively. GMV reached €15.3 billion, while revenue was €10.6 billion.
B2C revenue was up to €9.657 billion from €9.301 billion. And B2B revenue was up to €952 million from €854 million.
Its adjusted EBIT jumped to €511 million from €350 million, which actually beat the updated guidance for €440 million-€480 million it had issued earlier.
The adjusted EBIT margin also rose from 3.5% in 2023 to 4.8% in 2024, “supported by strong operational efficiencies and a significantly higher B2C gross margin, which saw a year-on-year increase of more than 2 percentage points to 43.5%”.
Net income rose to €251.1 million from €83 million in FY23.
Zalando is now Diane von Furstenberg’s exclusive retail partner in Europe – Zalando x DvF
And it returned to active customer growth in 2024, with the number up 4.5% to an all-time high of 51.8 million. The number of orders rose to 251 million from 245 million and while average orders per active customer dipped slightly to 4.8 from 4.9, the average basket size rose to €60.90 from €59.80.
The company is aiming to “build the leading pan-European fashion and lifestyle e-commerce ecosystem along two growth vectors B2C and B2B” with co-CEO Robert Gentz saying that “our ecosystem strategy is progressing well and is our exciting new North Star”.
In 2024, the company made “significant strides” in onboarding new, “highly relevant brands and assortments” like Versace menswear, Marine Serre, On running, and Fjällräven, enhancing its Designer and Sports offerings. In February, Zalando also became the exclusive retailer for Diane von Furstenberg in Europe.
The e-tailer also improved product presentation through “elevated product detail pages, and is taking the product experience even further with tailored and innovative digital experiences such as its digital size advice for customers based on reference items and body measurements”.
Since the initial launch in 2022, Zalando has also doubled the Adaptive fashion assortment, offering more than 600 styles in the course of 2024 — 170 more than the year before — across several categories, including footwear, sports and kidswear.
It has also expanded its “try before you pay” solution with “success” in Germany leading to expansion to eight more markets.
Lounge by Zalando – DR
And talking of expanding its initiatives to further markets, its Beauty proposition is to be expanded to Spain and Finland, so will be serving customers in 13 European markets. Meanwhile discount shopping club Lounge by Zalando is being expanded to five more countries in 2025, to be available in 22 markets.
Other developments this year include rolling out the company’s updated loyalty programme Zalando Plus further. The programme has already been successfully launched in Germany, Italy, Spain, France, the Netherlands, Switzerland, and Austria, and will be rolled out to most markets in 2025.
Zalando will also expand its platform into new markets, launching in Portugal, Greece and Bulgaria.
The company is focusing on tech too and is piloting an outfit-builder experience called Stylelt, which allows users to style a complete outfit on the avatar of their choice, “letting them experiment with different looks and share their inspirations with friends, family, and followers”.
Meanwhile, in B2B, it’s opening up its logistics infrastructure, software, and service capabilities “to be a key enabler for brands’ and retailers’ e-commerce transactions with its ZEOS operation system, regardless of whether they take place on or off its platform”.
We’ve already mentioned the big Next deal, but as well as that, ZEOS now serves 12 markets following the launch in Switzerland, Poland and Spain.
Beyond that, merchants can now sell on 10 different channels, including brands’ own e-com destinations, as well as via nine marketplaces that collectively cover 85% of the total marketplace volume in Europe.
After a period of well-publicised expansion comes a period of consolidation for Beaverbrooks. The UK family jewellery/watch retailer has said it will close seven UK stores in March and April following a performance review by senior management.
Beaverbrooks
It will bring its store count down to 82 showrooms.
Earmarked for closure are units in East Kilbride and Dundee, Scotland (16 March), following by Birmingham Fort and High Wycombe (23 March), Huddersfield (5 April), and Croydon and Sutton Coldfield (6 April).
Each has been deemed “no longer commercially viable” by the retailer.
However, on the flip-side, it said there are plans to open a new store in Harrogate in the spring “to accommodate consumer demand [there]”. Also, a scheduled number of branches earmarked for renovation will go ahead in the coming year.
On the impending redundancies, Anna Blackburn, managing director of Beaverbrooks, told The Sun newspaper: “We aim to retain as many colleagues as possible within other Beaverbooks stores or the wider business, and are working closely with each individual affected to provide them with other options for their specific needs, supporting them with their next steps whatever they may be.”
However, there was no mention of whether the current crop of closures will be Beaverbrooks’ last.
According to its most recent financial report for the 53-week period ended 2 March 2024, profits had fallen “considerably” with the accompanying Companies House statement in September saying: “Despite increasing turnover and market share, profitability for the period was reduced considerably which reflects significant and broad increases in costs.”
It added: “We have also continued to invest in our core infrastructure (people, property, and systems) to protect and strengthen the business for future growth. As a result depreciation has also risen reflecting the high levels of investment in recent years.”
Salvatore Ferragamo on Thursday reported that its adjusted operating profit had more than halved last year, as the Italian luxury leather goods group seeks a new boss to replace departing chief executive Marco Gobbetti.
The company cited a slowdown in Asian markets, with a particularly difficult environment in China, and a challenging global wholesale environment in its earnings statement.
“Considering the uncertainties over demand by luxury consumers, we remain cautious on short-term expectations,” it said, indicating there would be no immediate turnaround.
As announced last month, the company said that its CEO Gobbetti had stepped down on Thursday after little over three years in charge, during which time the former Burberry chief failed to stem a slide in sales at the Florentine brand.
Chairman Leonardo Ferragamo told financial analysts that designer Maximilian Davis had his full support. Davis was hired as creative director in 2022 shortly after Gobbetti took charge of the company.
The chairman also said the family of late founder Salvatore Ferragamo remained committed to the company.
Adjusted earning before interest and taxes (EBIT) dropped to 35 million euros, better than a LSEG analysts consensus, after the company last year warned it expected EBIT of around 30 million euros. The comparable figure in 2023 was 79 million euros.
The group reported a net loss of 68 million euros in 2024 from a profit of 26 million euros a year earlier.
Ferragamo’s revenues declined 4% at constant currencies in the fourth quarter. In January the group flagged “encouraging results” from its direct-to-consumer sales which were overall flat in the last three months of the year.
Italian footwear brand Geox has reported a revenue of €664 million for fiscal 2024, equivalent to a 7.8% downturn compared to 2023 (and a 7.1% drop at constant exchange rates). The result was chiefly caused by Geox’s sub-par performance in multibrand retail and franchised stores.
Geox
The group recorded a loss of €17.3 million, greater than the €6.5 million loss posted in 2023. EBITDA was €76.3 million (equivalent to 11.5% of revenue), compared to €89 million the previous year. Geox’s adjusted net income was €8.8 million, down from the €15.6 million generated in 2023.
The forecast for 2025 is a low-single-digit revenue drop and an operating margin decline of approximately 80 basis points. Geox stated in a press release that the forecast is subject to “a high degree of uncertainty, given the current macroeconomic and geopolitical context.”
In Q4 2024, Geox performed slightly better than the previous year, recording a revenue of €138 million (up 0.5% at current exchange rates).
“2024 proved to be a complex year for the group, marked by the persistence of tough market conditions which have affected company performance and sales volumes,” said CEO Enrico Mistron.
Geox’s new 2025-2029 business plan is a “crucial step, as it sets out the growth guidelines for the next five years. Our strategy is based on three mainstays: Innovation, style and sustainability,” concluded Mistron.