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Uniqlo operator Fast Retailing’s Q3 profit jumps 45.7%, raises forecast

By Thomson Reuters Jul 9, 2026 | 1:42 AM

By Rocky Swift

TOKYO, July 9 (Reuters) – The Japanese owner of clothing brand Uniqlo said on Thursday that quarterly profit rose 45.7%, as it weathered the impact on supply chains and ​logistics from the Iran war on its way to an ‌expected fifth straight year of record earnings.

Fast Retailing said its operating profit was 213.79 billion yen ($1.32 billion) in the three months through May. That compared with 146.74 billion yen for the same period a year earlier and was well above ‌the ​177.73 billion yen average of seven analyst estimates ⁠compiled by LSEG.

The company ⁠raised its full-year operating profit forecast to 730 billion yen from 700 billion yen.

Fast Retailing is widely seen as a bellwether for consumer spending in Japan and mainland China, where it has almost ​900 stores.

From a single store in the western Japanese city of Hiroshima in 1984, there are now more than 2,500 Uniqlo locations ⁠across the globe, selling inexpensive fleeces and ⁠cotton shirts made primarily in Asian manufacturing hubs.

In recent ​years, the franchise has been rapidly expanding in Europe and North America ​as it looks beyond China, its largest overseas market.

Fast Retailing’s ‌Japanese sales have been supported by a tourism boom driven by a weak yen, now hovering near a 40-year low, while growth in China has slowed due to weak consumer sentiment, prompting store closures and ⁠restructuring.

Global fashion retailers are grappling with disruptions to supplies and logistics from the Middle East conflict as well as the effect of dramatic weather on ⁠clothing demand.

Fast Retailing ‌CFO Takeshi Okazaki said in April that the ⁠Iran war was complicating air freight from production bases ​in ‌Southeast Asia and that sustained increases in oil prices ​could impact ⁠costs for synthetic fibres.

Blistering heat waves have hit Europe and North America this year, prompting Swedish retailer H&M to say it is changing its product line-up and marketing calendar to account for longer, hotter summers.

($1 = 162.3200 yen)

(Reporting by Rocky Swift in Tokyo; Editing by Sonali Paul, Muralikumar Anantharaman ​and Kim Coghill)