Coronavirus Outbreak Will Deal Painful Blows To Our Business, Warn Adidas And Puma

German sportswear makers Adidas and Puma on Wednesday warned the coronavirus outbreak would deal painful blows to their business in 2020.

Adidas said its revenues in vital market China would come in between 800 million and one billion euros ($907 million-1.1 billion), lower than the 2019 January-March periods. Sales in China plunged by 80 percent in late January-early February.

Meanwhile Puma said it “cannot quantify the negative effect” but pointed to sales “severely affected” in China and other Asian countries.

Both companies face disruption to their supply chains, although the gradual reopening of factories in China and sourcing from other countries has so far limited the impact.

Without the effects of the coronavirus outbreak, Adidas had forecast sales growth of six to eight percent and “double-digit-rate improvement of the bottom line” in 2020. It reported Wednesday sales of 23.6 billion euros in 2019, up almost eight percent, for a net profit up 16.1 percent at almost two billion euros. Adidas added that it had “performed strongly” in the first three weeks of 2020, before the coronavirus began to make itself felt. In China, one of its most important markets, Adidas owns 500 stores and boasts a network of around 11,500 franchises.

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