Next express keeps rolling

2 min read

The clothing retailer continues to impress with strong results and a rapidly growing array of brands and services. Matthew Partridge reports

The group eclipsed forecasts again
©Next Plc

Retailer Next’s shares jumped by 5% last week following a “better-than-expected annual profit haul”, says Holly Williams in the Evening Standard. Next reported a 5% rise in underlying pre-tax profits to £918m for the year to 31 January 2024, better than the £905m it had pencilled in.

That impressive figure even includes a £20m hit from the ongoing Red Sea disruption, while Next had also upgraded its earnings guidance five times in the past year. The firm was also upbeat about the coming year. It said the household-spending environment looked “more benign than it has for a number of years”.

Next’s full-year results certainly gave investors “plenty to be jolly about”, says Hargreaves Lansdown’s Guy Lawson-Johns. In addition to the upgraded pre-tax profit, the online division “continues to be the main driver of growth”, with increased warehouse space and operational tweaks “helping to iron out some of the problems of the past”.

While there is “still some work to be done”, planned improvements in infrastructure should bring further cost savings over time. The online focus has helped Next grow its brand in overseas markets, too. It is “eager to seize the growth opportunity” – while sales abroad are still “a relatively small slice of the pie”, they grew by 17% over the full year.

Ample cash on hand

Next’s balance sheet, meanwhile, is also improving, with net debt, excluding lease debt, falling from £797m to £700m, says Lauren Almeida in the Times. With management expecting to generate £615m in cash, net debt should fall by a further £75m in this year, while the company should easily be able to repay a £250m bond that matures in August 2024 and return