Burberry, the UK luxury
fashion brand, has announced a strong rise in sales but warned that profits
could be hit by unfavourable exchange rates.
Retail revenues for the
three months to the end of June were £370m, up almost 10% from a year earlier,
while like-for-like sales increased by 12%.
Sales were particularly
strong in China and Hong Kong.
But it warned tha
t if
exchange rates remained at current levels, retail and wholesale profit could be
cut by £55m.
Burberry added that, given
movements in the sterling-yen exchange rate, it expected licensing revenue to
be down by about £10m.
"The first quarter
performance reflects our focus on striving to give customers the best possible
experience of the Burberry brand through ongoing investment in retail, digital
and service, both on and offline," said chief executive Christopher
Bailey.
"With great brand
momentum and a focused vision, we remain confident of delivering sustainable,
profitable growth into the future."
'Creditable
performance'
The company said it had seen
double-digit sales growth in American and Asia Pacific markets. Europe, the
Middle East and Africa saw "low single-digit" sales growth.
The retailer also
highlighted the strong performance of its online business.
"There are a number of
strong figures coming from the statement, from the overall hike in revenues
through to robust growth in the Asia Pacific - China in particular - and a
creditable digital performance in the Americas," said Richard Hunter at
Hargreaves Lansdown Stockbrokers.
"Less positively, the
previously flagged currency headwinds are likely to prove a material drag on
full year profits."
Burberry holds its AGM on
Friday, and the meeting is likely to be dominated by Mr Bailey's reported £20m
pay package, which some shareholders consider to be more than generous.
Mr Bailey took over as chief
executive of Burberry from Angela Ahrendts, who left the company to join Apple.
BBC Business
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