A Giorgio Armani shop in Zurich. Chairman Giorgio Armani said on Sunday he expects sales to return to pre-pandemic levels next year. Reuters
A Giorgio Armani shop in Zurich. Chairman Giorgio Armani said on Sunday he expects sales to return to pre-pandemic levels next year. Reuters
A Giorgio Armani shop in Zurich. Chairman Giorgio Armani said on Sunday he expects sales to return to pre-pandemic levels next year. Reuters
A Giorgio Armani shop in Zurich. Chairman Giorgio Armani said on Sunday he expects sales to return to pre-pandemic levels next year. Reuters

Armani recovers in style with 34% first-half revenue growth


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Sales at Giorgio Armani jumped 34 per cent in the first half of 2021 as business in China and the US helped the Italian fashion group bounce back, although it said it could be next year before it fully recovers from the pandemic.

“The goal is to return to pre-pandemic levels by 2022, with ... over €2 billion in direct consolidated revenues,” chairman and chief executive Giorgio Armani said on Sunday in a statement announcing its 2020 results and the trend for January-June.

The luxury group said consolidated net sales had fallen 25 per cent last year to €1.6bn ($1.9bn), with most of the decline occurring in the first half of 2020.

Luxury goods sales around the world fell sharply last year for the first time in years as the pandemic forced shop closures and brought international tourism to a halt.

“The drop in revenues in 2020 should be read not only as a consequence of the pandemic ... but also in line with Giorgio Armani’s own strategic principle of ‘less is more’,” said Armani deputy managing director Giuseppe Marsocci.

The Milan-based group did not give the value of total sales in January-June but said the positive trend so far this year pointed to a much better profitability scenario for 2021.

For the whole of last year, the group made a consolidated net profit of €90 million but an operating loss of €29m.

It also said on Sunday that its financial position improved significantly in the first half with net cash and cash equivalents of €1.088bn, “ensuring the financial resources necessary for the group’s medium to long-term stability and growth”.

Speculation about succession plans at Armani has come to the fore recently, especially after the designer, 87, said he would consider teaming up with another Italian company.

Sources told Reuters earlier this month that John Elkann, scion of Italy’s Agnelli family, had explored a possible tie-up as part of plans to build a luxury conglomerate.

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The biog

Favourite food: Tabbouleh, greek salad and sushi

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Updated: July 25, 2021, 4:55 PM`