Stocks to watch next week: Burberry, SSE, Disney, Alibaba and AstraZeneca

In This Article:

Earnings releases are almost over but there are still a number of major companies across different sectors due to report.

In London, Burberry will let investors gauge on how the luxury market is performing, particularly as demand in China for exclusive items appears to be waning.

From luxury to utilities, markets are waiting to see how SSE can maintain its generous dividend policy amid further sector scrutiny and net zero goals.

Shareholders in Disney will see if CEO Bob Iger still has a midas touch and in Asia, Alibaba is expected to deliver yet another quarterly growth.

In big pharma, AstraZeneca will talk to investors after having its head of China operations detained, a crucial market for the company.

Here's more on what to look out for:

Burberry (BRBY.L) — Reports first-half results on Thursday 14 November

Burberry has remained tight-lipped since its profit warning in July, the latest in a series of dire updates that prompted the luxury brand to halt dividend payments and announce the abrupt departure of its CEO, Jonathan Akeroyd.

The company’s struggles were laid bare further in September, when it was removed from the FTSE 100 (^FTSE) in the quarterly reshuffle.

“Demand in China is not recovering as quickly as hoped, the company’s strategy to hike prices is backfiring and leaving it with unsold stock and the discounting needed to shift that inventory only tarnishes Burberry’s credentials as a luxury brand, where lofty pricing is one of the attractions to plutocratic would-be purchasers,” AJ Bell's Russ Mould, Danni Hewson and Dan Coatsworth, said.

Now, the spotlight shifts to Joshua Schulman, Burberry’s newly appointed CEO, tasked with steering the company through these choppy waters. Schulman is a veteran in the luxury sector with leadership experience at Coach, Jimmy Choo, and Michael Kors.

Investors and analysts are keeping a close eye on rumours that Italy’s Moncler may be considering a takeover bid, speculation that has at least buoyed Burberry’s stock from its low point earlier this summer. But the main focus is set on the company’s first-half results, which are expected to reflect the ongoing struggles.

The numbers investors will be watching closely are the comparable retail sales for the first half of the financial year. Burberry reported a 21% drop in comparable retail sales in the first quarter, and analysts predict a similar decline in the second quarter. For the first half overall, a year-on-year decline in sales of around 20% is expected, with total revenues potentially dipping to £1.1bn, a drop from the £1.3bn reported in the same period the previous year.