Boohoo’s US Fulfillment Reverts Back To The UK, Asos’ Eyes Return Fee Policy

In This Article:

As U.K. retailers enter the back half of the year, they are making some changes to improve overall operations.

Boohoo is fine-tuning to improve overall profitability, including the closure of its U.S. distribution center by Nov. 10. Meanwhile, Asos is changing its return fees for some U.K. shoppers, paying attention to those who frequently send back their ordered items.

More from Sourcing Journal

Separately, the U.K. saw nearly 7,000 retail stores close in the first half of 2024 across high streets, shopping centers and retail parks. The good news for fashion retail was that it saw fewer store closures compared with year-ago levels.

Boohoo to change operations in the U.S.

Boohoo Group plc is reversing course and now plans to shutter its U.S. distribution center (DC) in Pennsylvania by mid-November.

In a notice with the London Stock Exchange, the British online retailer said it will also broaden its product offering for U.S. customers, and expand its routes to the market. Under the change, the company revert to supplying U.S. customers from the U.K. Boohoo said it will now fulfill all U.S. orders from its “state-of-the-art automated U.K. distribution centre in Sheffield.” The company added that it has recently tested an increase in product options offered to U.S. consumers where orders were fulfilled from the U.K. and saw “encouraging results.” Up until the test, U.S. consumers were offered only around 60 percent of the styles offered in the U.K., the e-tailer said.

Boohoo in October 2022 chose DHL Supply Chain to lead the operation at the e-tailer’s new 1.1 million-square-foot DC in Elizabethtown, Penn. The DC opened the following year, which also allowed Boohoo to offer next-day service to the New York City metro region. The DC operation was expected to reduce transportation costs and drive greater agility and speed to get orders into their customers’ hands faster.

The planned closure will result in Boohoo taking a write-down for the related costs, although the company said the shut-down will also result in a “significant reduction in ongoing costs over the medium term.”

Boohoo said the steps are the latest in a series as part of a “strategy to reposition the group for sustainable, profitable growth.” The e-tailer has had financial issues since last year as consumers grapple with inflationary pressures. Boohoo, like its U.K. e-tail rival Asos, has also had a tough time adjusting to the post-COVID marketplace, which includes stiffer competition from fast-fashion rivals Shein and Temu.