A Beaten Down FTSE Share For Retail Revival 

 | Nov 06, 2020 07:30

The COVID-19 pandemic has affected numerous sectors of the economy, including retailers. The spring months saw lockdowns in many countries, which included the closure of non-essential shops. Even those retailers with online e-commerce presence suffered as the pandemic's initial shock affected the consumer psyche and wallet.

In the US, share prices of many retailers have since recovered, along with many other stocks in different sectors. For instance, year-to-date (YTD) the Dow Jones Retailers is up over 38%.

However, the improvement in retails stocks has, for the most part, not happened in the UK. Here is how the shares of several FTSE retailers have fallen since the start of the year.

  • boohoo.com (LON:BOOH) (OTC:BHOOY): down 5%;
  • Burberry (LON:BRBY) (OTC:BURBY): down 35%;
  • JD Sports Fashion (LON:JD): down 15%—not to be confused with the Chinese e-commerce giant JD.Com (NASDAQ:JD);
  • Next (LON:NXT) (OTC:NXGPY): down 11%

One retailer that has had good a strong year so far is ASOS (LON:ASOS) (OTC:ASOMY). The shares are up over 35% YTD.

According to the UK's Office for National Statistics , (ONS):

"In September 2020 retail sales volumes increased by 1.5% when compared with August; this is the fifth consecutive month of growth, resulting in an increase of 5.5% when compared with February's pre-pandemic level."

The official numbers further show that:

“in the three months to September, retail sales volumes increased by 17.4% when compared with the previous three months; this is the biggest quarterly increase on record as sales picked up from record-low levels experienced earlier in the year."

Put another way, most retailers saw significant improvement when the earlier lockdowns during the spring months ended in the summer.

On Nov. 5, the UK began another lockdown, and non-essential stores will be shut for almost a month. However, we believe the potential adverse effect of the revenue hit has already been factored into most retail shares.

Markets are always forward-looking. As the UK gets ready to enter the normally-busy shopping season leading up to Christmas and the New Year, many analysts concur that beaten-down retail stocks could well deserve a closer look. Let's now see if BOO stock is one of them.

Boohoo/h2

The Manchester-based member of the FTSE 250 Index started trading in 2014 at an opening price of 70p. On Nov. 5, shares in Boohoo closed at 285p ($68.90 for US-based shares).