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H&M

H&M sales rise despite slumping retail market

June sales for Swedish clothing retailer Hennes & Mauritz (H&M) beat all expectations, jumping 8 percent despite signs of a retail slowdown throughout much of Europe.

Sales in German clothing stores dropped 11 percent in June compared to figures from a year ago. But despite the weakening German market, which is H&M’s largest, the Swedish clothing giant managed to increase overall sales in June by 8 percent compared to last year.

However, June sales figures did suffer a 4 percent drop due to the summer retailing lull, and same-store turnover dropped 2 percent in compared with the same month a year ago.

“Sales in June was better than expected. It was really a positive sales figure and it has to do with higher growth, both locally and for comparable divisions, despite that the negative seasonal effects,” said Rolf Karp, a retail analyst at Öhman Fondkommission, to the TT news agency.

“The unexpected higher sales may be due to the fact that Hennes & Mauritz opened more new stores and that they had several sales earlier this year.”

The figures sent H&M stock up about 2.5 percent in morning trading on the Stockholm stock exchange.

By mid afternoon shares were trading at 289 kronor ($48.49) per share, up 0.7 percent for the day.

BUSINESS

Swedish retailer H&M sees profits slump after Russia exit

Swedish fashion retailer H&M reported a sizeable drop in third-quarter profit on Thursday following its decision to leave the Russian market.

Swedish retailer H&M sees profits slump after Russia exit

The world’s number two clothing group is among a slew of Western companies that have exited Russia following Moscow’s invasion of Ukraine.

H&M paused all sales in the country in March and announced in July that it would wind down operations, although it would reopen stores for “a limited period of time” to offload its remaining inventory.

The company said Thursday its net profit fell to 531 million kronor ($47 million) in the third quarter, down 89 percent from the same period last year. “The third quarter has largely been impacted by our decision to pause sales and then wind down the business in Russia,” chief executive Helena Helmersson said in a statement.

The group said in its earnings statement that it would launch cost-cutting measures that would result in savings totalling two billion kronor.

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