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PRIVACY
Retail & Consumer

Big Interview: Next CEO Simon Wolfson gearing up for 'much tougher year' ahead

‘We’ve never seen anything like this before. We don’t know how it’s going to pan out’

(Image: Leicester Mercury)

Six months ago Next chief executive Simon Wolfson spoke to the media as the country began to emerge from Covid.

Back then the retailer was adapting to the new normal while dealing with warehouse and general HGV driver shortages – partly caused by Brexit – and rising international freight costs as the global economy built up again.

Next, he said, was doing well, with online sales in particular looking positive and lots of pent-up demand among shoppers to spend money saved during lockdown.

Now, with war raging in Eastern Europe and inflation rising at an eye-watering rate, there are new issues for the boss of Next to address.

First and foremost it is winding down a distribution site in Russia and has pulled online operations from Russia and Ukraine. That will cost £85 million in sales over the next year and cut profits by £18 million – largely offset by better margins at home.

He said the next 12 months would be even tougher than the last, with average sales prices expected to rise from the current rate of 3.7 per cent up to between six and eight per cent in the second half of the year. The cost of Next homeware and furniture in particular, he said, is expected to go up by 13 per cent.

Speaking to the press on the back of the company’s annual results, Lord Wolfson said: “As we go into the next year we’re really into a very different consumer environment and in many ways the strong comparatives from last year make the year ahead even tougher.

“That said, in terms of guidance, the only change really is the closure of our Russian and Ukrainian websites.