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M&S ‘praying for sun’ but full recovery from cyber-attack unlikely this summer

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The bosses at Marks & Spencer will surely be praying for sun.As UK temperatures rise over the coming week, M&S will be hoping it prompts shoppers to fill their virtual baskets with shorts, swimwear and sandals to get its summer sales back on track.After six weeks of costly disruption as the result of a cyber-attack, the retailer started taking internet orders again on Tuesday, making a selection of its fashion ranges available for standard home delivery in England, Scotland and Wales.However, the partial resumption of online services does not mark the end of the website woes.Shoppers in Northern Ireland were told they would have to wait a little while longer before theycould place orders, while click-and-collect and next-day-delivery services would only become available again in the coming weeks.

Retail analysts were unsurprised that the UK’s biggest clothing retailer had prioritised getting fashion back online before beauty and homeware, given the limited time M&S has to sell seasonal stock,“They will be praying for a hot summer so people keep buying summer clothes,” said Catherine Shuttleworth, a retail commentator and the chief executive of Savvy Marketing,“Now they have got to get their operation up and running, but things are in the wrong place,I think the challenge is that not a lot is online in the right sizes,”There was clearly pent-up demand for M&S clothing among loyal customers, judging by excited comments shared on social media and among friends in Whatsapp groups when the retailer announced it had restarted online orders.

However, that delight soon turned to disappointment, as shoppers were informed they would have to wait up to 10 days to receive their order.Others discovered the items they had been coveting were out of stock.“I attempted to order some jeans last night, but by the time I finished adding things to my basket, my size was gone,” said Kirsten Jones, a customer.“Stock is pretty low, I think I’m just going to wait until business is back to normal.”M&S has already said its six weeks of lost sales will prove costly – and has estimated it will take a £300m hit to profits this year as a result of the cyber-attack.

The incident began over the Easter weekend – too late in the year for the retailer to cancel orders for its spring and summer clothing ranges with its suppliers.M&S could have lost up to £130m in online clothing sales during the period its website was down, according to an estimate by the data firm GlobalData.Some customers may have heeded the chief executive Stuart Machin’s plea to visit its physical stores during the online switch-off, but it is unclear how much of the spend shifted to shops or how much was lost to competitors, given that not all customers would have been able to visit a branch or may have found insufficient stock on the shelves.With its supply chain thrown into disarray by the attack, lack of availability continues to dog M&S in store.Clare (who did not want to share her last name) was looking through the racks of summery outfits at M&S’s Stratford branch in east London on a weekday morning.

Eyeing a new pair of shorts for an upcoming holiday to Mallorca, she said she could not find many in her size,“I usually browse online, but tend to shop in store if I’m nearby,I’ve not been able to find my size in store for a few weeks, and even now I’m struggling,” she said,Sign up to Business TodayGet set for the working day – we'll point you to all the business news and analysis you need every morningafter newsletter promotionM&S’s stores play a crucial role in its online operations, and are involved in two-thirds of online orders, through customers either picking up or returning purchases,As a result, getting all services working again is a key milestone for the retailer, according to Clive Black, the head of consumer research at M&S’s broker, Shore Capital.

“They need to get click and collect back up.They need to get [their hi-tech distribution centre] Castle Donington working.They need to get the full assortment online,” said Black.“It may be August before you actually see a normalised M&S clothing offer in store and online.”Tuesday’s online restart came just as many rival retailers were launching their summer sales, giving shoppers the chance to pick up bargains elsewhere at a time when retail sales and spending data suggests consumers are watching their wallets and cutting back on purchases.

Analysts say M&S will need to hold its nerve to try to recoup some of its lost earnings.“They will probably try and stay at full price initially, at least, to get that money back.But I’m assuming they have a lot of excess stock, so they will eventually need to start discounting more to get through some of that, as they won’t be able to keep selling more seasonal summer items,” said Pippa Stephens, a senior apparel analyst at GlobalData.M&S was hit by the cyber-attack just as its bosses were seeing the fruits of their turnaround plan, having gained market share in both food and clothing last year, while the company’s shares hit an almost nine-year high in April.It may take the high street stalwart some time to rebuild trust with shoppers after the attack, which involved some personal information relating to thousands of customers being taken.

However, M&S shares are moving upwards again and its clothes are winning plaudits from fashion commentators,“I think M&S’s summer was already damaged, and they will want to see the back of it,” said Shuttleworth,“What they are doing now is to get the business right so that back to school means back to normal
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How to Train Your Dragon to Neil Young: your complete entertainment guide to the week ahead

How to Train Your DragonOut now This live-action remake was shot by Bill Pope, the cinematographer behind films as diverse as Clueless, The Matrix and Spider-Man 3, with puppets used on set to give the actors something to work with before painting in the CGI. Starring Mason Thames, Gerard Butler and Nick Frost.Film on Film WeekendBFI Southbank, London, 14 & 15 JuneA whole weekend of films screening exclusively from actual physical prints? Sign us up. Physical film in a digital world is a use-it-or-lose-it kind of treasure, so to see the likes of Star Wars screened from prints, vote with your wallet and get down to the BFI.LollipopOut now Daisy-May Hudson based this portrait of a woman trying to regain custody of her kids on her own experiences of the social care system, with Posy Sterling giving a barnstorming performance as a woman who can’t get a bigger flat because she doesn’t have her children with her, and can’t get her kids back because her flat is too small

1 day ago
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British Library to reinstate Oscar Wilde’s reader card 130 years after it was revoked

The British Library is to symbolically reinstate Oscar Wilde’s reader pass, 130 years after its trustees cancelled it following his conviction for gross indecency.A contemporary pass bearing the name of the Irish author and playwright will be officially presented to his grandson, Merlin Holland, at an event in October, it will be announced on Sunday.Rupert Everett, who wrote, directed and starred as Wilde in The Happy Prince – the acclaimed 2018 film about the writer’s tragic final years in exile – will play a part in the ceremony.Holland is an expert on Wilde whose publications include The Complete Letters of Oscar Wilde. Asked how his grandfather might have reacted to the pass being reinstated, he said: “He’d probably say ‘about time too’

2 days ago
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The Guide #195: How Reddit made nerds of us all

It only ended a few years ago, but Westworld already feels a bit of a TV footnote. A pricey mid-2010s remake of a 70s Yul Brynner movie few people remembered, HBO’s robot cowboy drama lumbered on for four lukewarm seasons before getting cancelled – with few people really noticing.Still, when it premiered, Westworld was big news. Here was a show well-placed to do a Game of Thrones, only for sci-fi. Its high production values were married to an eye-catching cast (Evan Rachel Wood, Ed Harris, Thandiwe Newton, Jeffrey Wright) and it was run by the crack team of Lisa Joy and Jonathan Nolan, who promised they had a playbook for how the whole show would shake out

2 days ago
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Seth Meyers on Trump’s falling approval rating: ‘Worth remembering that people don’t like this’

Late-night hosts spoke about how Donald Trump’s presidency is proving unpopular with Americans, looking at the cruelty of his deportation strategy and the response to protests in Los Angeles.On Late Night, Seth Meyers spoke about Trump’s approval rating going down this past week and in particular he looked at how people are against his extreme immigration strategy.“People don’t even approve of Trump on immigration and that’s what people wanted him for,” he said.Meyers called his tactics “needlessly cruel” before speaking about his appearance at the Kennedy Center this week where he went to see a performance of Les Misérables.Trump was booed by many and Meyers said it was “like Darth Vader getting booed on the Death Star”

2 days ago
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‘Difficult love’: Spanish publisher reprints groundbreaking book of Lorca’s homoerotic sonnets

In the autumn of 1983, dozens of carefully chosen readers received an envelope containing a slim, red booklet of sonnets that had been locked away since they were written almost 50 years earlier by the most famous Spanish poet of the 20th century.While those behind the initiative gave no clue as to their identities, their purpose was made abundantly clear in the dedication on the booklet’s final page: “This first edition of the Sonnets of Dark Love is being published to remember the passion of the man who wrote them.”Here at last, lovingly pirated and printed in blood-red ink, were the deeply homoerotic and anguished verses that Federico García Lorca had completed not long before he was murdered in the early days of the Spanish civil war.To commemorate the anonymous effort, to revisit a peculiar episode in Spain’s literary history, and to bring the poems to a new audience, a Galician publisher has now brought out a perfect facsimile edition of that groundbreaking 42-year-old booklet.Although long known to Lorca scholars – not least because they had been published in French two years earlier – Los Sonetos del Amor Oscuro had been hidden away by the poet’s family, who believed their tortured and sensual lines would taint his legacy and stir up old hatreds

2 days ago
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Seth Meyers on Trump’s deployment of troops to LA: ‘About spectacle and power and nothing else’

Late-night hosts blasted Donald Trump’s deployment of troops to Los Angeles, his extremely partisan speech to the army and his upcoming military parade.On Wednesday’s Late Night, Seth Meyers mocked Donald Trump for saying he would arrest the California governor, Gavin Newsom, for the crime of “running for governor, because he’s done such a bad job”.“If you could arrest someone for being bad at their job, the jails would be filled with former head coaches of the New York Jets,” Meyers joked.“I gotta say, Trump’s really lost his step. He can’t even come up with a phony reason to arrest Newsom?” Meyers continued

3 days ago
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Resident doctors have good reason to strike over pay | Letters

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Suman Fernando obituary

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Robert Tollemache obituary

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‘That child is not a product’: how IVF big business plays on hope of people desperate for a family

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Society may have overestimated risk of the ‘manosphere’, UK researchers say

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‘Transformative’: the UK lab working on a way to halt genetic type of dementia

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