Zara-owner Inditex posted a 14 per cent rise in sales for November and early December as its fast-changing fashion collections helped it cope better with mild weather than many European rivals.

The strong sales performance, coming after a better-than-expected rise in revenues during the nine months to the end of October, boosted Inditex shares more than three per cent despite a small decline in margins during the period.

Fashion sales in Europe were hit by an unusually warm autumn, hurting demand for more profitable items such as winter coats and boots.

The Spanish group is nimbler than rivals as it orders more small collections with lead times of a few weeks from suppliers close to home, rather than the millions of garments that many retailers source from Asia six months in advance.

“The strong and positive third-quarter like-for-like sales ... reflects the strength of the business model and the speed with which Inditex can respond to adverse conditions like mild weather,” said Bernstein analyst Jamie Merriman.

Inditex sales for the nine-month period ending October rose 10.5 per cent to €12.7 billion while net profit was flat at €1.69 billion. Stripping out the negative impact of currency moves, sales rose seven per cent. By 10.03 am, Inditex shares were up 3.6 per cent to €23.2 , outperforming a 0.8 per cent rise in the European retail index. Its shares trade at 26 times forecast 2015 earnings compared to 23 times for Swedish rival H&M.

Inditex, founded and controlled by Spain’s wealthiest man Amancio Ortega, is implementing a microprocessor-based tagging system on its garments to improve its ability to respond to shifts in demand for popular clothes.

It said the technology should be fully operational in 1,000 Zara stores by the end of 2014 and in all Zara stores by 2016.

Gross margin, a closely-watched measure of profitability, fell to 58.9 per cent from 59.9 per cent a year ago, with 40 basis points of that decline due to a change in accounting criteria, the company said. Barclays analyst Chris Chaviaras, who has a ‘negative’ rating on Inditex, said the slippage reinforced his view margins would stay under pressure due to potential wage inflation in southern Europe and more pressure on prices in emerging markets. Inditex has suffered due to weak currencies in markets such as Russia and Japan in recent years, but that trend is turning as the euro falls, in turn hurting H&M which makes a bigger portion of its sales in Europe and reports in Swedish crowns.

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