The logo of the Galeries Lafayette department store is pictured on the Champs-Elysees avenue in Paris, France, April 11, 2019. — Reuters pic
The logo of the Galeries Lafayette department store is pictured on the Champs-Elysees avenue in Paris, France, April 11, 2019. — Reuters pic

PARIS, Nov 20 — French high-end department store chain Galeries Lafayette expects the coronavirus pandemic to halve its revenue this year, and fears foreign tourist flows may not regain pre-crisis levels before 2024, its chief executive said today.

“This year our revenue will be cut in half. 2020 will be difficult for our results, 2021 also. We should return to break-even in 2022,” CEO Nicolas Houze told BFM Business radio.

Retailers, especially those who depend heavily on tourists, have been hit hard by government-enforced lockdowns to curb the virus and restrictions on international travel.

Foreign tourists account for more than 60 per cent of the customers of the group’s flagship Haussmann store in central Paris.

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“The scenario which seems the most realistic is one that has foreign tourists return from the last quarter of 2021, but this would be at 30 per cent below what it was in 2019. There will not be a return to pre-crisis traffic before 2024,” Houze said.

Galeries Lafayette, which has had to endure two lockdowns to rein in coronavirus infections in France this year, backs postponing “Black Friday” discount shopping sales to December 4 if in return stores can reopen soon, he added.

Finance Minister Bruno Le Maire had called on retailers to postpone Black Friday, which runs from November 27 to November 29, as shops selling non-essential goods have to remain closed during a lockdown slated to last until December 1.

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“What is key is being able to open our stores. If this means delaying Black Friday, there is no discussion... If we can reopen from November 27 or November 28, it’s excellent news,” he said.

Le Maire is due to meet retailers today at 1400 GMT to finalise a possible agreement on a one-week Black Friday delay. Online retail giant Amazon, which has seen sales surge under lockdown, has joined France’s Carrefour, Europe’s biggest retailer, and French retailer Leclerc in agreeing to the delay. — Reuters