New sales records were set in Primark stores following the easing of lockdown restrictions, the owner of the high street retailer said.
The discount fashion business saw like-for-like sales rise by 3% against pre-pandemic levels from the same quarter two years ago.
Associated British Foods (ABF) revealed that sales for the retailer hit £1.6 billion for the 16 weeks to June 19, “reflecting an increase in both confidence and willingness to spend by our customers”.
Primark started the quarter with only one in five stores trading due to pandemic restrictions, but all of its stores now reopened.
The group said it was particularly buoyed by “pent-up demand in the early weeks after reopening” and is expecting trading to steady now restrictions have been significantly eased.
In the stock market update, the company said: “The relevance and appeal of our value-for-money offering has been evidenced by the number of customers that have returned to shop in person in our stores, across every one of our markets, each time we have reopened post-lockdown.
“This reopening has also seen a resurgence in demand for fashion across womenswear and menswear, as customers start to step out of lockdown leisurewear.”
ABF bosses said that the firm now expects Primark’s profit for the full year, before the repayment of furlough funds, to be “broadly in line” with last year’s figures.
John Bason, finance director at ABF, told the PA news agency that shoppers were buying more items when they were finally able to return to shops following the latest national lockdown.
He said: “People were filling up their shopping bags so we saw bigger average shops per customer despite those restrictions on capacity.
“I think we’ve seen quite a marked change in what we have been selling as well.”
The company said shoppers have snapped up blazers and licensed clothing, although smart clothing and high heels have seen a slump in sales.
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