Next says it may close stores if £30m equal pay claim is upheld

September192024
A picture


Next said it may close stores if it loses an appeal against a landmark equal pay claim.The fashion and homeware retailer made the comments after shop workers at Next last month won a six-year legal fight for equal pay.Next is planning to challenge the decision and could have to pay more than £30m in compensation if it is unsuccessful.An employment tribunal found that its retail sales staff – who are overwhelmingly female – should be paid the same hourly rate as those working in Next’s warehouses, who are mostly men.“Inevitably, some of our stores will no longer be viable if this ruling is upheld on appeal,” the retailer said in its report to City analysts.

Simon Wolfson, the chief executive of Next, said: “This is certainly not a threat,We are pointing out the reality of store openings and closures,It is about the costs of the business going up relative to sales,”Next has 466 stores across the UK,Announcing half year results on Thursday, Wolfson said there was no evidence that shoppers were spending more freely and the recent surge in sales was about sunshine.

“When the weather flipped, the sales flipped,” he said,Next has said international tastes in fashion are “converging” as tech platforms expose consumers to global trends, boosting the retailer’s overseas sales and helping it close in on £1bn in annual profits for the first time,The retailer forecast its annual profits would be £15m more than previously expected, at £995m – up from the £918m recorded in 2023 – after overseas sales rose by 23% in the six months to July, offsetting a near 1% decline in sales of Next-branded clothing in the UK,The company said the “global reach” of tech platforms including Netflix, YouTube and TikTok were “exposing people to international fashion trends in a way they never have been before”, and improving international delivery networks were also encouraging “consumers to try clothes from other countries, and retailers to adapt their ranges that cater for overseas tastes”,It said: “It appears that international tastes in clothing are converging more rapidly.

”Wolfson said the business was “at the start of a new phase” with more than half of its sales and profits now online and rapid growth in sales of non-Next brands, some of which the group now owns.Sign up to Business TodayGet set for the working day – we'll point you to all the business news and analysis you need every morningafter newsletter promotionNon-Next brands account for 17% of overseas sales and the group said it had been experimenting with expanding wholly owned labels including Cath Kidston, after it bought the brand name out of administration last year, and Love & Roses.The group has signed a partnership deal in India with the local operator Myntra to develop online and retail stores and will expand a deal with the US department store chain Nordstrom, where it sells childrenswear, as well as a new US partner and also expects to find similar partners in Japan, China and Australia.Next also plans to improve the way it works with shipment hubs in the Middle East and Europe to help better serve shoppers in those territories.The plans were announced as Next revealed full-price sales rose by 4.

4% in the six-month period, boosting total group sales by 8% and pre-tax profit by 7.2% to £452m.Next said full-price sales of its brand over the six weeks after that period had “materially exceeded our expectations” and were up by 6.9% as better weather helped increase trade.Sales in the second half of the year are now expected to rise by 3.

7%, up from 2,5%,If Next were to hit £1bn of profits for the first time, it would join only a handful of UK retailers that have done so, including Tesco – and Marks & Spencer in a previous era,The upgrade to its profit expectations lifted Next’s shares by 5,5% to an all-time high of £109.

10 in early trading.
sportSee all
A picture

Rory McIlroy club snaps during box-office opening 67 at PGA Championship

A club snapping, a backwards putt, a miss from 3ft and a drive out of bounds at the last while en route to an opening round of 67. Welcome to the zany world of Rory McIlroy. Day one at Wentworth’s PGA Championship proved once again why it is unwise to ever take eyes off the Northern Irishman. Even by his standards, though, this represented box-office material.“It was a bit of a rollercoaster but most of the incidents worked out in my favour so I am happy,” said McIlroy

September192024
A picture

‘I feel every one of my Tests’: James Slipper takes long and winding road to Wallabies record | Angus Fontaine

Veteran prop has stood tall during a generation of decline and overcome his own battles to become Australia’s most capped playerThe future and soon-to-be former Wallabies games record holders walk in together. But as he did for 139 Tests, George Gregan is gone in a flash. It’s James Slipper’s time. An hour prior, the 35-year-old prop was named in the Wallabies side to play the All Blacks for Bledisloe One in Sydney on Saturday. It will be his 140th Test – no Australian has played more

September192024
A picture

Sean Payton’s stumbling Broncos would be innovative ... if it was still 2013

The head coach was supposed to bring a wave of fresh thinking to Denver. But he is losing games and confusing his young quarterbackIt was only last season that Sean Payton rocked up in Denver and set a blowtorch to everything that came before, labelling Nathaniel Hackett’s spell in charge of the Broncos one of “the worst coaching jobs” in NFL history. It would be nice to know where he thinks his first two games of this season stack up in the rankings.The Broncos have started the season 0-2. Push the timeline back further and Denver have only won two of their last eight games, with both wins coming over a team quarterbacked by Easton Stick

September192024
A picture

Lions, laws, live rights: what to look out for in the new men’s rugby union season

The Premiership kicks off on Friday but the game’s perpetual flux is sure to punctuate the breathtaking actionMen’s rugby union in the northern hemisphere is cranking up once again. On Friday the Premiership and the United Rugby Championship resume, the former opening with a rerun of last season’s final when champions Northampton travel to Bath.On the first Saturday of the season iIt almost goes without saying that these are swirling, uncertain times for rugby, a sport seemingly in perpetual flux. The dust has settled for now on the sudden loss to financial ruin of three Premiership teams, and the rest of the game is taking stock. Where will we be when the curtain falls on the third Lions Test in Sydney, not far short of 11 months hence?Here are a few areas where answers may or may not materialise between now and June…Still we tinker

September192024
A picture

Emma Raducanu survives injury scare to make Korea Open quarter-finals

Emma Raducanu reached the ­quarter-finals of the Korea Open after beating Yuan Yue of China in straight sets. The 21-year-old needed seven match points to secure a hard-fought 6-4, 6-3 victory over the eighth seed.Raducanu edged ahead to win a close first set and built a quick lead at the start of the second, then held off a comeback from Yuan and ­served eight aces during the second set.Raducanu had battled past the American Peyton Stearns in the ­previous round to set up the ­meeting with Yuan, which was incredibly tight in the opening stages. The ­momentum shifted when some solid forehands allowed Raducanu to level at 4-4 and she broke Yuan’s serve in the ­following game to go in front

September192024
A picture

Take it from a former player: the NFL is brutal, violent and very tough to walk away from | RK Russell

Football is one of the most violent sports in the world – a fact that is both its downfall and allure. As players, we are acutely aware of the risks we take every time we step on to the field. And if we aren’t, it’s often a chosen ignorance, a conscious decision to embrace the reckless freedom that the sport demands. I don’t know a single teammate from my career in the NFL or college who doesn’t suffer daily pain from their playing days. Yet, that pain often brings back memories of treasured moments – the locker room camaraderie, the weight room grind and the battles on the field

September192024