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Thursday 15 September 2022 9:44 am  |  Updated:  Thursday 15 September 2022 11:17 am

Sofa giant DFS suffers big slump in profits after ‘grim year’ amid sharp retail downturn

By: Michiel Willems

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DFS has announced that it will cut jobs as part of a restructuring programme necessitated by the coronavirus pandemic

DFS said this morning the sofa seller has suffered a big slump in profits.

Moreover, the company warned that the industry is facing a downturn as soaring bills mean fewer customers are in the market for a new sofa.

DFS said pre-tax profit dropped 43 per cent to £58.5m in the financial year that ended in June.

Order numbers “softened markedly” in the last three months of that period as the cost-of-living crisis weighs on customers.

‘Grim year’

It was a grim year for the sofa seller, boss Tim Stacey said.

DFS faced several different issues fed in part by the pandemic, Brexit and the war in Ukraine.

“This has been the most operationally challenging year that we can remember, with industry-wide Covid-related supply chain issues, double-digit cost inflation on raw materials and ongoing colleague absence and skill shortages,” Mr Stacey said.

The company warned that sales volumes across the industry could slump by 15 per cent in the current financial year compared with pre-pandemic levels.

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That would slash its profit to as little as around £20m, even as the business said that its revenue would continue to grow.

That is the worst-case scenario that DFS presented to shareholders.

But perhaps more worrying for investors is the best-case scenario: a 5 per cent drop across the industry.

Even this – the most positive outlook – would see DFS profit fall to around £54m for the year ending next June.

It is a rough forecast, which saw the company’s shares drop around 13 per cent shortly after markets opened in London.

The business said it had “carefully absorbed” double-digit increases in costs into its prices.

“Looking forward, the UK furniture market continues to be challenging and the outlook for the sector remains uncertain given the macroeconomic environment,” Mr Stacey said.

“From the fourth quarter of the year, we saw a reduction in the volume of orders, which we believe is consistent with the overall furniture retail market, although our elevated order bank will provide some resilience as we enter our 2023 financial year.”

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