JD Sports enjoys 10.6% jump in sales in five weeks to January

Shares rose as much as 8% to high of 1140.5 pence on London Stock Exchange

JD Sports Fashion said it expects full-year profit above market expectations after a “very strong” Christmas. Photograph: Bloomberg.
JD Sports Fashion said it expects full-year profit above market expectations after a “very strong” Christmas. Photograph: Bloomberg.

British retailer JD Sports Fashion said it expects full-year profit above market expectations after a “very strong” Christmas, sending its shares to an all-time high.

The results come at a time when bigger rival Sports Direct is struggling, having issued a profit warning earlier this month citing a deterioration of trading conditions and unseasonal weather. It has also faced criticism over unfair treatment of its staff.

JD Sports, the owner of Champion Sports, which also runs fashion and outdoor retail chains such as Scotts and Blacks, expects headline profit before tax and exceptional items to exceed current consensus market expectations of 136 million by up to 10 per cent for the current financial year.

Shares in the company rose as much as 8 per cent to a life-high of 1140.5 pence on the London Stock Exchange.

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"JD appears to be in a sweet spot as several years of store and infrastructure investment is starting to bear fruit," analysts at Investec wrote in a note.

The company reported a 10.6 per cent jump in like-for-like store sales in all core Sports Fashion fascias, in the five weeks to January 2nd.

JD Sports, which has the majority of its 850 stores in the UK but is expanding overseas in the Netherlands, Spain, France and Germany, has enjoyed strong demand for its sports and fashion products.

The stock is trading at a premium to most of its peers at a multiple of 62 times its 12-month forward earnings, according to Thomson Reuters Eikon data.

"The valuation, in our view, still does not reflect the true value of the JD concept, which is trading in a booming segment of the retail market," an analyst at Cantor Fitzgerald said.

Earlier this month, clothing retailers Next and Marks & Spencer said their Christmas sales had been dented by unusually mild weather.

Reuters