Luxury goods group Burberry beat third-quarter revenue forecasts, helped by heavy discounting, and said it would cut around 540 jobs in Britain and Spain to protect profit in tough trading conditions.
The 153-year-old maker of upmarket raincoats and handbags said yesterday revenues rose nine per cent at constant exchange rates to £329 million in the three months to December 31.
This compared with first-half growth of 13 per cent and forecasts of £270 million to £298 million, according to a Reuters poll of nine analysts.
Burberry said full-year adjusted profit would be in line with guidance it gave in November and that around £50 million of cost cuts would underpin profit between this year and the following year.
Retailers across the world are struggling as consumers cut spending amid fears of a deep recession and job cuts.
Richemont, the Swiss group behind Cartier jewellery, missed third-quarter sales forecasts on Monday, while German retail giant Metro unveiled a cost cutting plan yesterday.
Burberry, known for its camel, red and black check, said like-for-like retail sales fell three per cent in its third quarter.
Burberry said it planned to cut 250 jobs in its underperforming Spanish market, and close a sewing plant in Rotherham, northern England, resulting in up to 290 job losses.
Production and investment will be focussed in nearby Castleford, where Burberry's iconic trench-coats are made.
The group, which has 116 stores, 253 concessions and 76 franchised stores across the world, said the cost of its restructuring plan would be up to 60 million.