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Uniqlo Parent Says Profit Slid 2% As Japan, China Drag Growth

The Uniqlo Beijing Sanlitun global flagship store will open Nov. 6.
Japan’s Fast Retailing Co, owner of clothing brand Uniqlo, said on Thursday that first quarter earnings slid 2 percent. (Courtesy)

Japan’s Fast Retailing Co, owner of clothing brand Uniqlo, said on Thursday that first quarter earnings slid 2 percent, reflecting weakness at home and continuing Covid-19 restrictions in China.

A day after announcing plans for big wage rises, the company said operating profit had been 117.1 billion yen ($889.82 million) in the three months to the end of November, compared with 119.4 billion yen a year earlier.

The consensus forecast was for 135.3 billion yen, according to the average of five analyst estimates collected by Refinitiv.

Domestic results were hit by warmer weather in November that stifled sales of fall and winter wear, while Covid curbs continued to weigh on China, including the temporary closure of 247 stores in Beijing and Guangzhou.

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“Once ‘with corona’ lifestyles take root, we think a normal operations will come back on the Chinese mainland,” CFO Takeshi Okazaki told reporters.

Sales and earnings in all other regions increased. The company held its full-year operating profit forecast at 350 billion yen.

The company, Japan’s biggest retailer, sent shockwaves through the country on Wednesday by saying it would lift its employees’ wages by as much as 40 percent. That greatly satisfied policymakers, who had been urging employers to raise wages to help offset the highest inflation in a generation.

“From a macro perspective, this move highlights that it is becoming increasingly difficult for Japanese companies to attract and retain workers,” said Mark Chadwick, an independent equities analyst who publishes on the Smartkarma platform.

Fast Retailing, which operates more than 3,500 clothing stores worldwide, reported record profit last fiscal year, as growth in North America and Europe compensated for a slump in China.

The company is seen as a bellwether for the Chinese market, where it produces many of its goods and operates almost 900 Uniqlo stores, more than in Japan.

Fast Retailing’s share price slid 2 percent in Tokyo trade, compared to a flat benchmark Nikkei index.

By Rocky Swift; Editors: Clarence Fernandez, Bradley Perrett and Conor Humphries

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Learn more:

Uniqlo Owner Sees Profit Topping Projections on Sales Climb

Uniqlo owner Fast Retailing Co. issued an outlook for profit and sales ahead of analysts’ projections for the current fiscal year, thanks to better demand for its cheap casual apparel in Japan and a weaker yen bolstering profits brought back home from overseas.

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