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PRIVACY
Retail & Consumer

Analysis: Experts say Next Plc will do ‘best possible job’ of managing challenges as cost of living bites

'Next isn’t just playing a game here either, it is likely that things will get tougher before they get better'

Part of the Next Summer 2022 collection

Industry experts say the Next fashion chain is in a better position than many to weather the tough economic conditions facing the high street.

With the Bank of England pushing interest rates up to 1.75 per cent, inflation expected to peak at 13 per cent, and fears that energy prices will push the economy into a five-quarter recession, the amount of cash families have to spend on things like clothes is falling.

But market analysts believe the fashion giant – which has its º£½ÇÊÓÆµ headquarters just outside Leicester – will weather the storm after a trading update showed it has performed well over the summer thanks to the unusually warm and dry weather and people spending more on formal clothes now that lockdown restrictions had lifted.

Despite a warning that the strong sales were expected to start slipping in the second half of the year, the business said profits for the full year should be ahead of expectations at around £860 million – 4.5 per cent up on last year.

Russ Mould, investment director at online stockbroker AJ Bell, said Next was widely seen as a “best-in-class” retailer and the latest figures showing why that was the case.

He said: “Bosses at Next are well-versed in how to operate successfully as a public company, demonstrating fluency in the art of expectation management.

“This helps explain how, right in the middle of the worst cost-of-living crisis in a generation, the company has been able to deliver better-than-expected numbers.

“Next has also benefited from market share gains as competitors like Topshop and Debenhams have disappeared from the high street.