Retail Giants' Q2 Profits Tipped to More than Halve over Pandemic | Be Korea-savvy

Retail Giants’ Q2 Profits Tipped to More than Halve over Pandemic


This photo, taken on May 27, 2020, shows duty-free shops at Incheon International Airport, South Korea's main gateway west of Seoul, where the number of customers has sharply fallen amid the COVID-19 pandemic. (Yonhap)

This photo, taken on May 27, 2020, shows duty-free shops at Incheon International Airport, South Korea’s main gateway west of Seoul, where the number of customers has sharply fallen amid the COVID-19 pandemic. (Yonhap)

SEOUL, June 18 (Korea Bizwire)South Korea’s major retailers are expected to see their operating profits more than halve in the second quarter amid the new coronavirus pandemic, a poll showed Thursday.

The combined operating profits of Lotte Shopping Co., Shinsegae Inc., E-Mart Inc. and Hyundai Department Store Co. are estimated to be 60.3 billion won (US$50 million) in the April-June period, compared with 180.4 billion won a year earlier, according to the survey by Yonhap Infomax, the financial news arm of Yonhap News Agency.

The retail sector has been the hardest hit by the COVID-19 pandemic as people refrain from visiting offline stores to avoid infection risks.

Analysts said the bleak earnings outlook comes mainly because the retail groups’ duty-free operations have suffered an industrywide slump due to a fall in air travel demand.

Industry leader Lotte Shopping, an operator of Lotte Department Store, is projected to log an operating profit of 44.1 billion won in the second quarter, down 42 percent from a year ago.

“Lotte Shopping’s flagship business saw its sales grow slowly. The restructuring of its brick-and-mortar stores generated one-off costs,” Cha Jae-hun, an analyst at DB Financial Investment, said.

No. 2 player Shinsegae is estimated to post an operating profit of 7.4 billion won, down 89 percent from the previous year.

E-Mart, the country’s biggest discount store chain run by Shinsegae, is forecast to post an operating loss of 20.6 billion won.

Smaller rival Hyundai Department Store is expected to report a 42 percent decline in operating profit to 29.4 billion won.

Analysts said the retail giants are likely to see some recovery in the department store business as people’s “revenge” spending will increase sales of luxury items amid a protracted pandemic.

But it may take more time for duty-free operators to rebound as the virus outbreak has disrupted global air travel.

South Korean duty-free operators began to temporarily close some of their outlets on the southern tourist island of Jeju and in several cities in June in line with a drastic fall in visitors.

(Yonhap)

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