By
Reuters
Published
Apr 15, 2015
Reading time
2 minutes
Download
Download the article
Print
Text size

Burberry to adjust prices to offset currency fluctuations

By
Reuters
Published
Apr 15, 2015

British luxury goods maker Burberry will adjust prices in response to currency fluctuations and rivals' similar moves, it said on Wednesday as it posted a forecast-beating 9 percent rise in second-half revenue.

Several luxury brands including Chanel, Richemont's Cartier and Patek Philippe have moved to harmonise their prices globally following the rise of the U.S. dollar, the weakness of the euro and the surge in the Swiss franc earlier this year.

"We will maintain our price positioning by market relative to our immediate peers ... as prices move, we would also move prices up or down in the same way," Burberry Chief Financial Officer Carol Fairweather told journalists in a conference call.

Currency movements have created notable price differentials, reaching more than 50 percent for the same luxury item between European and big Chinese cities.

The trend has encouraged Asian buyers to snap up goods in Europe and resell them at home, a practice often referred to as parallel trading or the grey market.

Broker JP Morgan Cazenove said in a note this month that some luxury executives and consultants believed 20 to 40 percent of luxury sales in mainland China were now parallel.

Burberry, known for its trademark trench coats with camel, red and black check linings, backed by ads featuring British models Kate Moss and Cara Delevingne, said trading in its high-margin Hong Kong market had decelerated further.

It said same-store revenue in Hong Kong, where it made about 10 percent of sales, fell in "single-digit" terms in the second half.

Chinese tourists, an important Burberry customer group, have been avoiding cities such as Hong Kong following last year's pro-democracy protests, travelling instead to Europe, the United States and other Asian destinations such as Japan and Korea.

Burberry saw "double digit" sales growth in the United States and Europe and trading was particularly buoyant in Britain, France and Italy, from both locals and tourists.

Revenue from directly operated stores rose 13 percent at constant exchange rates in the half-year to March 31 and 9 percent on a same-store basis, slightly ahead of market expectations.

Burberry shares were down 1p at 1,783p by 0825 GMT.

Industry leader LVMH on Monday posted a 1 percent rise in like-for-like fashion and leather sales, marking a slowdown against the year-ago period and the fourth quarter.

© Thomson Reuters 2024 All rights reserved.