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The Guardian - UK
The Guardian - UK
Business
Sarah Butler

JD Sports heads for £1bn profits as it says trainers are ‘affordable luxury’

People pass a JD Sports store in London
People pass a JD Sports store in London. The retailer reported an 18% rise in sales in the year to the end of January. Photograph: Neil Hall/Reuters

JD Sports has said it is on track to hit £1bn of profits this year as it steps up expansion in the US and Europe in a bet that the trend for trainers and sports leisurewear will roll on.

Régis Schultz, the retail group’s chief executive who took over last summer, said JD’s young shoppers had more opportunity to get work, amid staff shortages in all its key markets, and “whenever they get a job they can buy the gear they love”.

He said: “[Young people] are going out more than in the past, and when they go out they want to show off”, adding that new trainers were an “affordable luxury treat”.

He said that once people had made the shift to wearing sports shoes they did not want to move back to less comfortable footwear, and so he expected to the trend to continue.

Schultz’s comments come as JD reported an 18% rise in sales to £10.1bn, while underlying profits rose 4.6% to £991.4m, in the year to the end of January.

He said half the 12% sales rise at the group’s sports chains in the UK was the result of inflation and half because of additional sales. The retailer expects inflation to ease in the second half of the year as transport and energy costs are declining.

Pre-tax profits for the group, however, slumped by almost a third to £440.9m as JD wrote down the value of acquired brands including Wheelbase, Wellgosh, Gym King and Bodytone. It took a hit from the sale of the Footasylum chain and a group of brands sold to Mike Ashley’s Frasers Group, including Liam Gallagher’s Pretty Green and the 1980s brand Tessuti. A withdrawal from South Korea also hit profits.

Schultz said JD expected to top £1bn of profits this financial year as it stepped up expansion in the US to add up to 600 stores over the next five years. The group has 138 JD outlets in North America, including 10 in Canada, up from 89 a year ago.

Schultz said the group was looking at acquisitions in Europe and Latin America to reach new markets and wanted to expand the JD brands into areas such as gaming and music, through partnerships, after successfully shifting into gyms in recent years.

In the UK, JD aims to expand by enlarging existing stores so it can sell more fashion alongside footwear.

Schultz added that JD benefited from having physical stores alongside a website, which protects the group from the decline in sales seen at Boohoo and Asos – online retailers reliant on home deliveries that have gone into decline as consumers have fretted over delivery costs.

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