Luxury leather goods and stationery retailer Frank Smythson has filed its accounts for the year to the end of last March and said that its business improved.
That came as the economic situation in the UK and globally showed signs of recovery from the disruptions caused by the pandemic and despite the fact that challenges persisted.
Turnover for the business increased to £27.26 million from £23.65 million and gross profit rose to almost £19.6 million from just over £16 million. The operating result was still a loss, but it narrowed slightly to £5.9 million from £6.9 million and the loss both before and after tax was also down at £6.6 million from a negative £7.3 million a year earlier.
Looking at sales in more detail, the company saw like-for-like sales growth of 4.6% year on year, even though retail traffic fell by 8.7% and was boosted by conversion growth of 0.9%.
Its travel locations, while it said they were “much improved”, continue to feel the impact of reduced passenger numbers and less international travel.
But online, the business performed better with like-for-like growth of 5.1%, an increase in traffic of 0.7% and a conversion rise of 4.8%.
Meanwhile, the wholesale business (B2B) was still affected by high stock volumes, slow traffic in department stores and a few “uncertain financial positions” within large players, specifically Matches and KaDeVe. This translated into wholesale buyers spending less with the business. Yet its Corporate ops benefitted from a renewed interest in brands and corporations investing in rewarding their VIP clients and executives. This translated into strong growth versus the prior year.
The company’s strategy continues to focus on refining its retail network, It exited loss-making stores to create a more stable base of overheads and enable its effort and investment to be concentrated on growing brand visibility as well as on its digital channel. It expanded its presence in key markets and invested in marketing and digital expansion. And the company said that the “difficult decision” to close its flagship store on New Bond Street, London, was taken as part of that strategy.
During the year, the company invested in people with a new digital director to improve its online businesses and new agencies brought in to improve domestic and international sales. It also took on a new marketing director at the end of the financial year while a business development director joined in January 2024 “to expand and create a new model for” B2B.
The decision about the aforementioned New Bond Street closure was taken during the financial year in question but the shop actually closed just after the year ended. In August 2024 it also shut its store in Heathrow Terminal 5 due to improvement work at the terminal. But it’s working closely with the airport’s management to find another space in the same or other terminals (possibly more than one space) in order to continue with what’s an important high-traffic location for the brand.
Also after the financial year end, this January, its new Japanese distributor Look Inc began operating the local business starting with e-commerce and followed by Isetan men’s and a flagship[ in Ginza 6.
END. promised it would be going big on its 20th anniversary celebrations and judging by the fashion retailer’s itinerary of events it’s actually huge.
With three events already under its belt in the January-March period, there are over 20 in the pipeline for the rest of the year involving a programme of curated events, pop-ups, activations, collaborations and partnerships “crafted hand-in-hand with brand partners who have journeyed with END. over the last 20 years”.
Participants include a host of big brands including A Bathing Ape, Adidas, Aries, CP Company, Crocs, Needles, Puma, Salomon, Stone Island, Umbro, Universal Works, Y-3, “and many more”.
It’s all in recognition of a brand that has grown from an independent in Newcastle to an international name with flagship locations in Newcastle, Glasgow, Manchester, London, and Milan, “defining its position as a trailblazer bridging the gap between luxury and streetwear, balancing exclusivity with accessibility with its signature curation of the world’s biggest brands to the most sought-after emerging labels all under one roof”.
The 20th anniversary will also honour the brand’s North East roots and the best of British subculture “focusing on narratives deeply connected to the retailer’s heritage, customers and cultural influences, touching on nostalgic themes from the coast to the corner shop and nightlife to the classic British pub”.
Global threads manufacturing giant Coats Group is quitting its US Yarns business, resulting the closure of its Performance Materials (PM) facility based in Kings Mountain, North Carolina.
It comes after a strategic review of the wider Americas yarns business that has already resulted in the closure of the Toluca, Mexico facility in December. The review, which started in Q4 2024, concludes that the Americas Yarns business doesn’t fit with Coats’ future strategy, noting the exit from this non-core operation “will result in a positive annualised impact to both the PM and Group adjusted EBIT margins”.
The exit process is expected to complete in Q2 and Coats said it anticipates to generate a modest cash inflow, after closure costs, that will “allow management to focus on driving forward and growing other parts of the group’s attractive portfolio.
In 2024, revenues and EBIT for US Yarns was $68 million and $3 million, respectively.
Last month, Coats delivered a trading statement that highlighted “strong delivery, exciting medium-term targets with compounding cash and earnings growth”.
While the business reported a string of positives for the year ended 31 December (total revenues up 8% to $1.5 billion; apparel and footwear revenues up 13%; EBIT up 16%), it also noted that the PM business continued to drag across all North America end markets while there was also structural softness in North American Yarns.
The writing was perhaps on the wall for the future of its US PM ops in a statement that included that its Americas manufacturing footprint had been “right-sized” in Q4 with the closure of the Toluca site “to align to structural softness in North American Yarns [that will] drive immediate margin improvement”.
Poland’s biggest fashion retailer aims to double its revenue to 40 billion zlotys ($10.56 billion) by 2027, driven by the rapid expansion of budget brand Sinsay and its omnichannel strategy, it said on Thursday.
Reuters
“In three years we assume the company will be twice as big,” CEO Marek Piechocki said during a press conference.
Under LPP‘s new three year strategy through 2027, Sinsay is set to account for 75% of the group’s total sales, it said.
The Gdansk-based retailer aims to expand its store network to around 7,500 outlets by the end of 2027, with Sinsay stores making up around 6,000 of those, and to increase e-commerce sales to 10 billion zlotys in the same period.
“As in previous years, the company intends to consistently pursue its policy of sharing the profit generated with its shareholders,” LPP said, indicating plans to maintain its dividend payouts. The management recommended a dividend of 660 zlotys per share to be paid for the 2024 financial year.
The company also aims to double its core earnings (EBITDA) by 2027, compared to last year’s 3.67 billion zlotys, while keeping its debt levels safe, it said.
LPP’s revenue rose by 20% to 20.19 billion zlotys in 2024.