Ted Baker profits to fall short of expectations

Ted Baker has warned that its profits will fall short of market expectations this year due to foreign exchange movements and additional costs.

The company said pre-tax profits for the financial year ended January 26 2019 are now expected to be £63m, compared with consensus estimates of £73.8m.

Foreign exchange movements have affected profit by around £2.5m, primarily due to the change in the pound’s value versus the dollar and euro.

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Upgrades to the group’s systems have also cost approximately £2.5m, while transitions in Asia and the US resulted in a £5m writedown in the value of inventory stock.

The adjusted profit estimate does not include previously announced costs associated with the investigation into the behaviour of the brand’s founder, Ray Kelvin, the collapse of House of Fraser, or the acquisition of footwear brand No Ordinary Shoes.

The full results will be announced in March.

Investors had feared that negative publicity surrounding harassment allegations against Mr Kelvin would hit the brand’s sales.

But Ted Baker’s post-Christmas update in January showed strong growth, with sales up 12.2 per cent.

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The group is currently being led by acting chief executive Lindsay Page, who has taken on the role while Mr Kelvin is on an indefinite leave of absence.

In January, the company said an independent investigation, led by law firm Herbert Smith Freehills, was “progressing” and a further update will be given in due course.

It capped off a turbulent year for Ted Baker, which has also had to contend with declining consumer confidence in several markets and the fallout from House of Fraser’s collapse in the UK.