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Marks & Spencer clothing sales fall

London - British retailer Marks & Spencer on Tuesday posted an eighth consecutive quarterly fall in underlying sales of general merchandise, though the outcome did represent a slowing in the rate of decline.

The performance will ratchet up the pressure on management to deliver a swift turnaround when new season ranges start hitting the shops later this month.

The 129-year-old group, which serves 21 million customers a week from 766 British stores, said sales of non-food products, spanning clothing, footwear and homewares, at stores open over a year fell 1.6% in the 13 weeks to June 29, its fiscal first quarter.

That compared with analyst forecasts of a fall of 0.2% to 3.0%, according to a company poll of 10, and a decline of 3.8% in the fourth quarter of the group's 2012-13 financial year.

"In general merchandise we have seen some improvement, despite difficult trading conditions and further intensification of promotional activity in the market," M&S said.

Marc Bolland, chief executive since 2010, is pinning his hopes on a new clothing strategy based on more stylish and higher-quality garments.

Autumn/winter ranges were unveiled in May by his new general merchandise team, led by John Dixon, the former boss of M&S food, receiving generally positive reviews from both analysts and the fashion press, and sending M&S shares, which have also been buoyed by periodic bouts of bid speculation, to a five-year high.

Sales data for the fiscal first quarter will be the last to fully reflect garments purchased by the previous buying team.

Though the first quarter outcome represented M&S's best non-food performance since the same period in 2011, when like-for-like sales were flat, the firm did benefit from easy comparative numbers, as in the first quarter of its last financial year like-for-like sales had slumped 6.8%.

M&S's food business, which contributes over half of group sales, is performing much better.

Its sales on the same basis rose 1.8% versus analyst forecasts of a rise of 1.0% to 2.0% and an increase of 4.0% in the previous quarter.

The food business is benefiting from product innovation, a focus on providing for special occasions and M&S's avoidance of any involvement in a scandal over foods found to contain horsemeat when they were labelled as containing other meats.

"Given the challenging trading conditions, we remain cautious about the outlook and continue to manage the business tightly," M&S said.


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