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Halfords shares hammered after profit warning

Halfords warned that it had seen a further weakening in demand for bicycles in January as unseasonal weather hit sales of winter products for cars and tyres
Halfords warned that it had seen a further weakening in demand for bicycles in January as unseasonal weather hit sales of winter products for cars and tyres

Britain's Halfords Group cut its annual profit forecast and warned there could be no profit growth next year as a result of weakening demand for bicycles, car products and tyres, sending its shares plunging.

The company said it was seeing "very challenging and exceptional short-term market conditions", and while it blamed wet, mild weather, it was cautious about a recovery.

The stock opened down 23% to 154 pence, hitting its lowest level since October 2022.

Falling sales at Halfords show the challenge retailers face from squeezed incomes for Britons, with the economy slipping into recession in the second half of last year.

Halfords said rain and warmer temperatures meant lower footfall in its shops and reduced sales of anti-freeze.

Across the wider sector, motoring product sales volumes fell 5.1% in January compared to the same month last year, while cycle sale volumes were 8% lower and tyre sales were down by 4.3%.

Analysts at Peel Hunt said it was positive that Halfords continued to take market share, but shoppers were wary.

"While our macro indicators for disposable income growth this year are all lit up green, which bodes well for spending power into the second half of 2024, consumers still remain cautious, shopping by need," they said.

For the financial year to March 29, Halfords said it expected underlying pretax profit of £35-40 million pounds, a downgrade of at least 17% on the previous £48-53 million range given last month.

Profit in its 2025 financial year would be broadly in line with 2024 it said, another downgrade compared to a consensus forecast of £56 million according to LSEG.