<p>The owner of fashion retailer Zara, Inditex, returned to quarterly profit in the three months from May to July despite a 31 per cent fall in sales as the coronavirus crisis kept consumers away from city centre shopping districts.</p>.<p>Inditex, which also owns the Massimo Dutti and Bershka brands, said 98 per cent of its stores had reopened and that current trade showed a progressive return to normality with online sales growing sharply and store sales recovering.</p>.<p>In the current quarter, sales in store and online from Aug. 1 to Sept. 6 at constant exchange rates were on an improving trend, though still down 11 per cent from a year earlier.</p>.<p>Inditex shares rose 5 per cent on Wednesday morning, adding to gains booked on Tuesday after Swedish rival H&M beat quarterly profit forecasts.</p>.<p>Shoppers have started to buy fashion again since stores reopened following shutdowns. JP Morgan estimates continental Europe fashion sales were down 15 per cent in July on average compared to May's 42 per cent drop. </p>.<p>Inditex reported a second-quarter net profit of 214 million euros ($253 million), beating the 96 million euro mean forecast from Refinitiv's SmartEstimate model, which is weighted towards more recent estimates and higher-ranked analysts.</p>.<p>It saw a 74 per cent jump in online sales in the first half, a trend seen at apparel retailers worldwide, as shoppers bought from home with many stores closed and movement restrictions in place.</p>.<p>In a sign of how apparel spending has switched to more comfortable styles with many working from home and parties cancelled, Zara's app showed autumn looks with wide trousers and flat shoes on models climbing fences and riding bikes.</p>.<p>For the first half, it reported a net loss of 195 million euros on sales down 37 per cent.</p>.<p>It said it would have reported a profit had it not booked a 308 million euro charge related to its integration of its store and online platforms.</p>
<p>The owner of fashion retailer Zara, Inditex, returned to quarterly profit in the three months from May to July despite a 31 per cent fall in sales as the coronavirus crisis kept consumers away from city centre shopping districts.</p>.<p>Inditex, which also owns the Massimo Dutti and Bershka brands, said 98 per cent of its stores had reopened and that current trade showed a progressive return to normality with online sales growing sharply and store sales recovering.</p>.<p>In the current quarter, sales in store and online from Aug. 1 to Sept. 6 at constant exchange rates were on an improving trend, though still down 11 per cent from a year earlier.</p>.<p>Inditex shares rose 5 per cent on Wednesday morning, adding to gains booked on Tuesday after Swedish rival H&M beat quarterly profit forecasts.</p>.<p>Shoppers have started to buy fashion again since stores reopened following shutdowns. JP Morgan estimates continental Europe fashion sales were down 15 per cent in July on average compared to May's 42 per cent drop. </p>.<p>Inditex reported a second-quarter net profit of 214 million euros ($253 million), beating the 96 million euro mean forecast from Refinitiv's SmartEstimate model, which is weighted towards more recent estimates and higher-ranked analysts.</p>.<p>It saw a 74 per cent jump in online sales in the first half, a trend seen at apparel retailers worldwide, as shoppers bought from home with many stores closed and movement restrictions in place.</p>.<p>In a sign of how apparel spending has switched to more comfortable styles with many working from home and parties cancelled, Zara's app showed autumn looks with wide trousers and flat shoes on models climbing fences and riding bikes.</p>.<p>For the first half, it reported a net loss of 195 million euros on sales down 37 per cent.</p>.<p>It said it would have reported a profit had it not booked a 308 million euro charge related to its integration of its store and online platforms.</p>