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H&M earnings boost fails to impress

Swedish clothing giant H&M reported disappointing third-quarter earnings on Wednesday, adding it would scale back plans for new stores due to property market challenges in southern Europe and France.

H&M earnings boost fails to impress

The clothing giant, the third-biggest fashion group in the world after Spain’s Inditex (Zara) and Gap of the US, posted a net profit up 23 percent from last year, to 4.24 billion kronor ($461.7 million).

But the earnings missed the expectations of analysts surveyed by Dow Jones Newswires, who forecasted a net profit of 4.53 billion kronor.

The company’s sales were up 14 percent to 26.9 billion kronor, beating expectations of 26.6 billion kronor.

Its shares were down 5.79 percent to 244 kroner on a Stockholm Stock Exchange down 0.50 percent at around 11:50 GMT.

H&M said it would open fewer stores than planned because the completion of shopping malls, mainly in southern Europe, had been stopped because of the weak economy.

“As a consequence, the planned store net for the full-year will be approximately 220 compared to the 240 stores previously communicated,” the company said.

At a press conference, chief executive Karl-Johan Persson said the concerned countries were Italy, Spain, Portugal and Greece, but also France and the United States.

“Everything happened quite brutally. Some projects were abandoned, others delayed. There just weren’t enough good alternatives,” he said.

“But there will be in 2011-2012,” he told reporters, according to the TT news agency.

In the fourth quarter (September to November) alone, H&M will open some 140 stores and close 10 others, the company said.

The cheap’n’chic fashion group had 2,078 stores worldwide at the end of August.

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BUSINESS

Swedish retailer H&M sees profits slump after Russia exit

Swedish fashion retailer H&M reportedĀ 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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