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Swedfund joins H&M in Ethiopia expansion

As H&M expands into Ethiopia, Sweden's state venture capital unit Swedfund has announced that it will back the clothing giant, in a move hoped to create more jobs for local women.

The partnership, which is set to kick off in autumn this year, will see Swedfund injecting 60 million kronor ($8.6 million) in investments to H&M suppliers, reported the Dagens Industri newspaper. 
 
The goal is to create a domestic textile industry that's both sustainable and responsible, Swedfund announced in a statement.
 
"Through this unique partnership with H&M, our goal is to contribute to developing the textile industry in Ethiopia, thus creating jobs with good working conditions that lift people out of poverty, especially women," said Anna Ryott, CEO at Swedfund. 
 
H&M's CEO Karl-Johan Persson said the move was an opportunity to get involved early in Ethiopia's growing textile industry. 
 
"We have for many years worked in existing manufacturing countries to improve working conditions and environment. This experience is included with the establishment of cooperation with Ethiopian suppliers," he added.
 
The Swedish clothing giant has been on the scene in Ethiopia all year, with long-term plans to attract Africa's middle class.
 
H&M has a good track record when it comes to sustainability and working conditions.
 
In May last year it signed up to a building safety agreement in the wake of the factory collapse that killed more than 1,000 garment workers in Bangladesh. In November it announced that it was scrapping angora products after a Chinese video surfaced showing workers plucking hair from rabbits while they were still alive.

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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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