Burberry begins its turnaround with signs of momentum returning as cost savings and renewed brand focus start to take effect. Consumers are seeing Burberry emerge leaner and more focused, with signs of recovery after a tumultuous year of restructuring and strategic overhaul.
Retail Revenue Dip Slows as New Strategy Takes Hold Burberry reported £433 million ($584 million) in first quarter fiscal 2026 retail revenue, a 6% drop from last year. While still in negative territory, this marks a substantial improvement
over Q1 2025, when sales plunged 22% as a leadership transition and shifting fashion trends took their toll. Comparable store sales highlights by region: EMEIA (Europe, Middle East, India, Africa): +1% year-over-year, lifted by robust local spending but muted by fewer spending tourists.
Americas: +4% year-over-year, boosted by new customer growth. China: -5%, with sales hit by lower tourist activity but offset by Gen Z and younger shopper gains. Asia-Pacific ex-China: -4%, with Japan’s challenges offset by resilience in South Korea.
Cost Cuts, Job Reductions, and Efficiency Push Burberry said its cost-savings initiative remains on track to deliver £80 million in annualized benefits by FY26 as part of ongoing simplification, productivity, and cash flow improvements.
The company’s earlier organizational shake-up—including up to 1,700 job cuts—was designed to promote greater collaboration, agility, and improved profitability. Focus Sharpens on Core Heritage and Brand Desire Change has come with a refined strategic direction…