EXEC: JD Sports Sees Resilient Europe, Weak UK and Improving North America in 2026 | SGB Media Online
公開日: May 7, 2026 at 05:44 PM
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JD Sports Fashion PLC announced total sales of £12.7 billion for the fiscal year ended January 31, 2026, representing an 11.7 percent year-over-year increase at constant foreign exchange rates. Group CEO Régis Schultz noted that the results were at least in line with the growth of their addressable markets, although organic sales growth excluding acquisitions stood at 2.1 percent. The company completed the acquisition of Hibbett in North America and Courir in Europe during the prior year, which contributed significantly to the reported figures.
Regionally, North America emerged as the largest segment, accounting for 38 percent of group sales with improving performance supported by disciplined execution and strong online growth. Europe delivered a resilient performance with 33 percent of sales, while the United Kingdom, representing 25 percent of sales, experienced weak trends particularly in the online channel and footwear categories. Asia Pacific rounded out the regions with 4 percent of sales, delivering organic growth of 8.5 percent year-over-year.
In terms of categories, footwear maintained its position at 60 percent of overall sales with flat organic growth, while apparel sales proportion reduced slightly to 30 percent but showed underlying growth driven by North America and Europe. Accessories grew organically by approximately 11 percent, primarily due to strong performance in sporting goods businesses. The group operated 4,811 stores worldwide at the end of the fiscal year, having opened 289 and closed 325 locations throughout the period.
Profitability metrics showed a gross margin holding steady at 47.0 percent, though operating profit before adjusting items fell to £886 million, down 4.0 percent at constant FX rates. Higher operating costs related to organic new stores and the annualization of acquisition costs impacted profitability. Despite this, free cash flow improved to £462 million, supported by cost and capital discipline, with net leverage including lease liabilities decreasing to 1.4 times.