British fashion retailer Next raised its guidance for annual profit by £10 million (€11.6 million) to £845 million (€981.3 million) on Thursday, after full price sales and the end-of-season summer sale came in ahead of forecasts.
The upgrade from Next, which is considered a barometer of how British consumers are faring as it trades from about 500 stores and online, came just six weeks after its last upgrade and shows shoppers continue to defy tough economic conditions.
A year of high inflation and consecutive interest rate rises in Britain have squeezed household incomes, but high street spending has held up, and Next said it sees annual full-price sales 1.8 per cent higher than in its 2022-23 financial year.
Value-retailer Primark and Sports Direct-owner Frasers Group have both in recent weeks issued positive updates.
Kathy Sheridan: The aggressive speed and silence of cyclists is a cultural problem that needs tackling in Ireland
Meticulously restored Marino midterrace for €635,000
Róisín Ingle: I call out a chat’n’cut, Larry David style. I will never live down what happens next
Women keep changing their surnames to match their husbands’. Why are we normalising this symbolic control?
Next’s forecast for profits of £845 million (€981.2 million) in its statement on Thursday means they will come in 2.9 per cent lower than it made in 2022-23. – Reuters