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The Business of Fashion Podcast

Farfetch’s José Neves Says Profitability Is Still Possible in 2021

The Business of Fashion Podcast

The Business of Fashion

Fashion & Beauty, Business, Arts

4.6770 Ratings

🗓️ 9 July 2020

⏱️ 55 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

LONDON, United Kingdom —For Farfetch Founder and Chief Executive José Neves, the last six months have not only been about protecting his own business from the fallout of Covid-19, but also supporting the hundreds of boutiques around the world — from China, Japan and Korea to the Middle East and Europe — that sell their goods online through the luxury marketplace.

“We've been able to support the boutiques and the brands on the platform at crucial time where online is, for many, the main channel and for some... the only channel,” Neves told BoF Editor-in-Chief Imran Amed in the latest episode of The BoF Podcast.

But as Neves explained, more challenges lie ahead for Farfetch and the global fashion industry at large.

  • Neves described the platform’s performance as “very solid,” and expects to see an acceleration in its second quarter, with year over year growth of 25-30%. Part of this success can be attributed to the business shifting its focus to markets where consumer sentiment has started to recover, according to Neves.
  • But Farfetch is still losing money, and investors and market analysts have questioned the company's recent acquisition of New Guards Group (NGG). The acquisition may have bolstered profitability, but it took the business in an unexpected direction: actually owning the brands it sells on its platform. But Neves said he remains “confident” that Farfetch will achieve profitability by 2021 — a goal it outlined last year, and that the NGG business is a brand platform in its own right.
  • The luxury industry has been bracing for what has been called “the mother of all sales,” as retailers are forced to drastically discount their surplus of spring merchandise. Some observers have pointed to Farfetch as a regular culprit with respect to the industry's discounting addiction even before the Covid-19 pandemic. Neves says the discounting decisions are made by the brands and the retailers themselves, and that Farfetch is simply the platform they use to go to the market, but acknowledges that deep discounting is a systemic industry problem.
  • Neves believes the fashion industry will finally reckon with its wasteful and unsustainable business practices — and partially because it can also reduce costs. “I do think the industry had an oversupply problem, which is an environmental problem as well," he said. “Platforms have a responsibility to… incentivise customers to shop consciously. By doing that you create an incentive for brands to be more conscious or to be totally ethical and sustainable if they can.”

 

Related Articles:

A Cloudy Picture at Farfetch

Farfetch Signals Growing Ambitions in Resale

Why Farfetch's Free-Spending Ways Have Some Investors Concerned

 



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Transcript

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0:00.0

We have more new customers in Q1 and Q2 than at any point in our recent history.

0:09.0

You have to go back more than three years to have the same amount of new customers.

0:13.0

Very honestly speaking, I think when the New Guards Group announcement was made, it wasn't received well.

0:19.0

It's not particularly in line with the model that you

0:22.5

first sold to the market.

0:24.3

I think that the first thing to realize is what is NG. They're a platform. So for us,

0:29.6

it's really buying the studio and then creating original content to the benefit of the

0:35.4

creative community and to the benefit of consumers

0:38.2

and support.

0:43.1

Hi, this is Imran Ahmed founder and CEO of the Business of Fashion and welcome to the Bof

0:48.0

podcast. On this episode, I sit down with Jose Nevis, the CEO and founder of Farfetch, one of the rare fashion companies that

0:55.6

has managed to grow during the coronavirus crisis. But Farfetch isn't without its critics,

1:01.4

some of whom say that Farfetch is one of the companies that has driven the industry's growing

1:05.8

addiction to discounting. And observers were also puzzled by its recent acquisition of the New Guards

1:11.7

Group. I talked with Jose about all of this and how Farfetch is going to seize the opportunity

1:17.6

in a luxury e-commerce market that continues to grow rapidly. Here's Jose Nevis inside fashion.

1:30.6

Today, inside fashion. Today I am thrilled to have Jose Nevis with us, the CEO and founder of Farfetch.

1:39.5

And Jose and I go way back because we met when we were both starting our businesses.

1:48.0

So it's been really amazing to see Farfetch, change, grow, and develop over the years.

1:54.9

And I have a lot of questions for Jose today.

1:58.2

And I know a lot of you have questions as well.

2:00.3

So hopefully we'll get to some of

...

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