Inditex powered ahead in 2021, new year starts well
ZaraInditex
The period saw most of its more-than-6,600 stores globally able to operate from the middle of 2021 and that helped sales surge 36% year-on-year to €27.7 billion. That figure was up 3% compared to 2019 on a currency-neutral basis, although on a reported basis it was down 2%.
That said, the Omicron variant in Q4 had a negative impact and restrictions in countries such as Germany and Japan meant it took a €400 million hit.
Importantly during the year, online revenue reached €7.5 billion and made up 25.5% of the group’s total sales as e-tail rose 14%.
Looking at profitability, EBITDA rose 58% to €7.2 billion, EBIT jumped 184% to €4.3 billion and pre-tax profit sky-rocketed 200% to €4.2 billion. Gross profit increased 39% to €15.8 billion and the gross margin reached 57.1% (up 123 bps versus 2020), the highest in six years. It also said all expense lines have shown “a favourable evolution. Operating expenses increased 26%, below sales growth”.
And the company had good news on current trading as well with the new financial year having started strongly. Total
But the firm is confident as its SS22 collections “have been very well received by our customers”.
During the last year, Zara remained the firm’s star brand with sales rising 39% compared to 2020, but its other, smaller labels also saw strong growth. Pull&Bear rose 32%, Massimo DuttiStradivariusOysho
The company also saw important developments regionally as the US became its largest individual country market. In fact, America accounted for 17.5% of sales during the year compared to 13.5% in 2020. Spain accounted for 14.4% of sales compared to 14.6% a year earlier.
Meanwhile Europe excluding Spain was the biggest combined market overall, accounting for 48.4% of sales (down slightly from 48.7% in 2020). Asia and the rest of the world accounted for 19.7% of sales last year compared to 23.2% a year earlier.