The owner of budget fashion firm Primark has said 68,000 staff have been furloughed across Europe amid the coronavirus lockdown as it revealed a £248 million hit for unsold stock as all its stores remain shut.
Associated British Foods boss George Weston said the group had been “squarely in the path of this pandemic” but would not reopen Primark stores until the disease is under control.
Mr Weston told the PA news agency the company would have “had no option but to fire staff” were it not for the furlough scheme.
Primark has seen sales plunge from £650 million a month to zero as coronavirus has caused the 376-strong chain to shut completely, with no online business to fall back on.
Total charges in the first half soared to £309 million, compared with £79 million a year earlier, including the £248 million stock costs.
However, Mr Weston said the company would not launch online in a bid to shift stock it has been unable to sell.
He told PA: “We will sell that stock in stores but it might take a while.
“It might be in a year’s time but it’s not going to deteriorate and we will just have to wait until we can open stores again safely.
“I think this is the cost of Covid rather than not having online operations.”
Primark revealed on Monday it had agreed to pay an additional £370 million to suppliers to cover stock currently in production or yet to be delivered after facing criticism over order cancellations during the coronavirus crisis.
The fashion chain said the deal will cover products which were in production or due for shipment by April 17, having previously committed to pay for orders which were in transit or booked for delivery by March 18.
Mr Weston laid bare the “human tragedy” of the Covid-19 crisis as he reported half-year figures, as he said two of the group’s employees have died from Covid-19 in the past three weeks while another remains in intensive care in the United States.
Its food and agriculture business – spanning sugar, groceries and ingredients, including brands such as Twinings tea and Kingsmill bread – is helping the firm weather the crisis while cost cutting will also help it mitigate half the operating costs of Primark while stores remain shut.
The company said it has seen a 20% jump in bread sales, while other store cupboard products such as Blue Dragon noodles and Ryvita crackers have also seen sharp sales increases.
Mr Weston said: “Much as I would love to be allowed to reopen Primark stores across the UK, continental Europe and the USA soon, because lockdown has so harmed our business and our supply chains, I know that we must not do so until we have suppressed this disease.
“When we are allowed to reopen we must make our Primark stores safe for our staff and our customers, even if that means ensuring there are fewer people shopping at any one time and so accepting lower sales at least until the remaining risk is minimal.
“In time, we can rebuild the profits. We can’t replace the people we lose.”