
Bags brand Radley losses narrow, plans targeted US price rises due to tariffs
Radley — or more accurately parent company Laddie Topco — has filed its accounts for the year to the end of April 2024 and also said it's looking at price rises in the face of new US tariffs.
Turnover at the bags and leather goods brand fell to £71.9 million from £77.3 million, although the operating loss narrowed to £1.6 million from £7.4 million a year earlier on the back of a favourable comparison as there had been a non-recurring item that dented income in the previous year. The loss before tax was £9.4 million, down from a loss of £14.3 million the year before and the net loss narrowed to £8.18 million from £14.3 million.
The company also said group EBITDA before non-recurring items this time was a positive £2.7 million, although this was lower than the £4.3 million 12 months earlier.
Clearly it was a challenging year but group CEO Nick Vance said there were some plus points. It saw 3.8% like-for-like growth in DTC sales, delivering rises in both the key markets of the UK and US. The UK market saw a 3.7% uplift and the US a 4.7% rise.
The DTC share of total sales also increased to 79% from 73% and gross profit rose by 255 basis points. Digital sales were strong with a 10.3% overall rise while store sales saw a more modest increase but were still positive, rising 0.4%.
So why the 7% total turnover decline and lower EBITDA? That was due to softness at wholesale partners globally. In fact, global wholesale declined by 30%, partly impacted by systems disruptions pre-peak, but also reflecting partnerships moving towards dropship and marketplace models.
Licensing revenue was up 8% at £1.4 million though and remains an important growth area for the company in non-core categories such as watches, jewellery, eyewear and beauty (which was new for FY24).
The company includes Radley+Co that manages the brand's UK, European and Asian DTC and wholesale ops, as well as Radley USA, which manages sales and distribution to North America.
Looking in more detail at specific regions, Radley+Co sales fell 3% in the year due to those reductions in sales to wholesale partners and the aftermath of a ransomware attack in August 2023. It accounted for 83% of the group's total sales during the period.
As for Radley USA, it made up 17% of all external group sales, although its sales were down 19% year on year. That said, the Radley USA website traded strongly and was up 50% in the year. The local sales fall overall was caused by the closure of three loss-making stores and the 'underperformance of a key wholesale partner'.
Yet the company said the USA 'remains the key international growth market for the group'.
But as many companies are finding at present, it remains a tough market to approach given the current tariffs situation. As mentioned earlier, price rises are on the cards as the company said new taxes on goods being imported from India could cost it between £0.5 million and £1.3 million. It will bring in 'carefully positioned' US price increases to offset higher costs and 'fully expects' rivals to take similar actions.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


France 24
3 hours ago
- France 24
Canada's reopened cod fishery on shaky ground
The fishery off the coast of the nation's easternmost Newfoundland province had been a major economic driver for centuries, providing livelihoods for local and European fisherman. It became a symbol of overfishing and poor management, however, when Canada imposed a commercial fishing moratorium in 1992 after nearly all of the fish disappeared, leaving tens of thousands in the sector unemployed. The moratorium was initially ordered to last two years, but it would only be lifted in 2024 as fish stocks struggled to bounce back. Last year, the largest vessels in the offshore fleet set out to sea with a quota to catch 18,000 tons of fish -- a far cry from the 120,000 tons authorized just months before the moratorium and the 250,000 tons fished annually in the late 1980s. Why the cod population has failed to recover despite a long moratorium is the million-dollar question, said Tyler Eddy, a researcher at Memorial University in Newfoundland, pointing to a number of factors such as changing water temperatures. The spawning stock is currently estimated at nearly 525,000 tons, according to the latest data released in April. But it has never been able to recover to the levels it reached in the decades before to the moratorium, the scientist noted. The cod population today represents 76 percent of the levels estimated in the 1980s, and 38 percent of a peak in the 1960s, according to Fisheries and Oceans Canada. Other fish in danger The recovery of cod also depends on the abundance of capelin, a small forage fish that is one of its main food sources and whose stock also collapsed in the early 1990s. Its population has still not recovered and is expected to decline further this year, according to Fisheries and Oceans Canada, which added this will limit the growth potential of the cod stock. For Rebecca Schijns of the environmental non-profit group Oceana, "until capelin rebounds, this really isn't the time to ramp up fishing." "The cod stocks are still in trouble and in a very fragile state," she told AFP, urging the government to come up with a better plan for managing both of those fisheries. "Right now, capelin don't have any rebuilding measures or harvest rules," she pointed out. - changes in 32 years - Sylvie Lapointe, president of the Atlantic Groundfish Council, which represents the deep-sea fishing sector, disagrees. She is calling for an increase in quotas to 50,000 tonnes this year. That level represents less than 10 percent of the current cod stock and is "very conservative when you consider what is happening with other cod stocks in Europe," she insisted. "We were the poster child for the lack of sustainable management. But a lot has changed in 32 years: fishing methods, the industry's mentality, the markets," she said. The moratorium had been devastating because cod was Newfoundland's main economic driver for 500 years, commented Alberto Wareham, who runs the Icewater Seafoods fish processing plant. Some 30,000 people lost their jobs, but his plant survived thanks to the catches of inshore fishermen -- whose small boats were still permitted -- and the import of frozen cod from Norway and Russia. Coastal fishermen now fear a repeat of history with the return of boats operating on the high seas. "They can be incredibly destructive and catch in one go with their fishing gear what we can catch all summer long," explained Lillian Saul, who advocates for the maintenance of sustainable fishing.


Fashion Network
4 hours ago
- Fashion Network
Kering's fall in market value triggers Euro Stoxx 50 exit
Rheinmetall AG's surging stock price has earned the tank and munitions maker a place in the euro area's main stock benchmark. JPMorgan Chase & Co. strategist Pankaj Gupta wrote in a note that the German company will replace Gucci owner Kering SA in the Euro Stoxx 50 benchmark as of June 20, citing index compiler Stoxx Ltd. It will be the only pure-play defense name in the gauge, which counts Safran SA and Airbus SE among its members. Bloomberg News has contacted Stoxx by phone and email for comment. Rheinmetall is being fast-tracked into the index after its shares roughly tripled so far this year amid a boom in European military spending. A 26% surge in May boosted the firm's market value to almost €87 billion ($98 billion), making Rheinmetall bigger than more than half of the existing Euro Stoxx 50 index members by that measure on the last trading day of the month. The stock has surged by about 1,800% since Russia invaded Ukraine in February 2022. While Rheinmetall has soared, Kering has moved in the opposite direction. The luxury goods firm's shares hit their lowest level since 2016 in April and are down 28% year-to-date, with the firm and its peers weighed down by a slump in spending by wealthy Chinese shoppers. The industry's outlook has become gloomier in the face of U.S. President Donald Trump 's tariffs. For Rheinmetall, inclusion in the widely followed index may further boost sentiment in a world increasingly dominated by passive investment funds. Such funds will need to buy the stock as they realign portfolios to the index's new composition.


France 24
12 hours ago
- France 24
Coach Inzaghi to leave Inter Milan: club
"The club and Simone Inzaghi are parting ways. This is the decision taken by mutual agreement," Inter said in a statement. Both Inter and Inzaghi said the decision had been made at a meeting involving the coach and club President Giuseppe Marotta on Tuesday afternoon. The parting came just days after Saturday's 5-0 thumping by Paris Saint-Germain in the Champions League final. Talk had already been swirling about his exit, and last month Inzaghi played down rumours about a two-year deal with Saudi Pro League club Al-Hilal worth 50 million euros. Italian media said Tuesday this reported had been confirmed. Inzaghi took over Inter in 2021 and had a contract until 2026. The 49-year-old guided the club to one Serie A title - Inter's 20th - and two Italian Cups. He led the team to two Champions League finals in the past three seasons but lost both. On track to repeat the treble heroics of 2010 just a few weeks ago, Inter ended the season trophyless after falling away in each competition. In its statement, the club said Inzaghi's management was "characterised by great passion, accompanied by professionalism and dedication". His trophies had "brought the club back to the top of Italian and European football", it said. Marotta thanked him "for the work done, for the passion shown and also for the sincerity in today's discussion, which led to the common decision to separate our paths". "Only when we have fought together to achieve success day by day, can we have a frank dialogue like the one that happened today," he said. In a separate statement, Inzaghi thanked the players, managers and staff, but most of all the fans, adding: "I will never forget you." © 2025 AFP