Burberry value rocked by profit warning amid China slowdown

A Burberry shop is pictured in central London. Burberry shares tumbled by almost 21 percent Tuesday after the British firm issued a surprise profits warning which analysts blamed on China's economic slowdown

Shares in luxury clothing and accessories group Burberry tumbled by almost 21 percent Tuesday after the British firm issued a surprise profits warning which analysts blamed on China's economic slowdown. Analysts warned that the group's poor second quarter could signal that the high-end luxury goods industry was no longer immune to weakness in the global economy, as Burberry's shock announcement dragged down the wider fashion sector. Burberry said in a trading update that like-for-like sales, stripping out the impact of new floor space, ground to a halt in the 10 weeks to September 8 and have started to fall. As a result, Burberry warned that annual profits would be at the bottom end of analysts' expectations of between £405 million and £445 million. In reaction, the group's share price closed down 20.9 percent to 1,088 pence on London's FTSE 100 index of top companies, which ended flat. It meant Burberry saw about £1.0 billion wiped from its market value in just one day. In Paris, shares in luxury fashion groups LVMH and PPR slid by 3.36 and 2.07 percent respectively, to end at 127.80 and 125.25 euros. The overall French market won 0.89 percent. "Burberry spooked the market announcing a material downturn in second quarter retail sales," Seymour Pierce stockbrokers said in a note to clients. "This seems to be macro driven," it added. In a statement, Burberry said it "expects adjusted profit before tax for the twelve months to 31 March 2013 to be around the lower end of market expectations." The company, famous for its trench coats and trademark red, camel and black check design, had thus far bucked the gloomy trend in the wider retail sector due to its exposure to emerging markets like Asian powerhouse China. Jon Copestake, retail analyst at the Economist Intelligence Unit, said: "Burberry's warning could signal a retrenchment for luxury firms as Chinese growth slows. However, reliance on China is just one of a number of factors. Weakness in the eurozone remains influential." In recent years, Burberry has been at the forefront of the global surge in demand for luxury goods, bolstered by soaring sales in China. At the same time, many mid-market retailers have struggled for survival amid poor economic conditions. Burberry chief executive Angela Ahrendts on Tuesday said that "the external environment is becoming more challenging." She added in the group's earnings statement: "In this context, second quarter retail sales growth has slowed against historically high comparatives."