Gap records $1bn losses on coronavirus store closures

Retailer with 2,800 stores in North America said 55% of its stores in the region now open

The company’s more expensive brands Gap and Banana Republic did not do well as customers opted for casual clothing.
The company’s more expensive brands Gap and Banana Republic did not do well as customers opted for casual clothing.

Gap on Thursday reported a quarterly loss of nearly $1 billion as the clothing retailer was forced to close its stores due to the coronavirus outbreak, sending its shares down about 8 per cent after market hours.

Retailers that sell non-essential goods such as clothing have been crushed by the Covid-19 pandemic as they were forced to restrict their businesses to online operations and curbside pickups.

San Francisco-based Gap, which operates nearly 2,800 stores in North America, said 55 per cent of its company-operated stores in the region were now open and sales from online operations were booming.

Casual clothing

The company’s more expensive brands Gap and Banana Republic did not do well as customers opted for casual clothing as they stayed at home during the lockdowns, chief executive Sonia Syngal said.

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However, its affordable clothing brands, Old Navy and Athleta, were seeing signs of strong demand, Syngal added.

The retailer, which is streamlining its fleet of retail stores, said it would prioritize closing some Gap stores and seek rent concessions for well-positioned stores that cannot support the current rent structures.

“While our economics in our Old Navy and Athleta fleets are strong, our specialty store fleet (Gap and Banana Republic) has not been as profitable as we need it to be,” chief financial officer Katrina O’Connell said in a conference call with analysts.

Net loss came in at $932 million, or $2.51 per share, for the three months ended May 2nd, which included a $484 million write-down on store and operating lease assets and a $235 million charge on excess inventory.

Net sales fell 43 per cent to $2.11 billion from $3.71 billion.

Analysts had forecast a loss of 67 cents per share and revenue of $2.30 billion, according to IBES data from Refinitiv. – Reuters