Trent Expands Retail Footprint into Tier II and III Cities Amid Strong Q4 Results
The Tata-owned retailer reports a 26% profit surge and announces its first-ever bonus issue while navigating geopolitical headwinds
En resumen
- Tata-owned Trent is aggressively expanding its Zudio and Westside brands into Tier II and III Indian cities to capture growing consumer demand.
- Despite a 26% Q4 profit increase and a new bonus share issue, the company remains cautious regarding inflation and geopolitical risks.
Resumen generado por IA
Por qué importa
Trent is a Tata Group company operating fashion retail brands including Westside and Zudio. The company is currently shifting its focus toward Tier II and III cities to capture India's growing consumer base.
Trent is expanding its retail footprint beyond metro cities, focusing on Tier II and III locations with its Zudio and Westside formats to tap growing income and economic activity. The company reported a 26% rise in Q4 net profit and announced its first-ever bonus issue, while acknowledging cautious consumer spending due to geopolitical tensions and rising input costs.
Tata-owned Trent said it continues to open stores within select existing catchments across Tier I and Tier II cities and ramp up presence in many smaller markets, as it seeks to tap the growing income and economic activities beyond the plush metro cities of India.
Trent, which owns and operates fashion retail formats such as Westside, Zudio and Utsa, said more than 80% of new Zudio stores in the last fiscal year were opened in Tier II, III cities and in peripheral new growth micro-markets.
“The intent is to grow our presence in both existing as well as new micro-markets/ geographies and to position ourselves favourably as more regions register stronger economic growth,” the company said in a statement after announcing the Q4 results.
“The agenda is to pursue growing reach and share of revenues as we selectively increase the density of our presence across key markets with an improving customer proposition,” it added.
Trent said that its strategy of building a stronger presence in select clusters, along with improving its customer offering, was beginning to show encouraging early results in terms of both revenue density and profitability. The company added that the newer markets it is entering offer significant growth potential, though these markets are likely to take time to mature in terms of fashion adoption and consumption levels.
“Hence, the revenue profile and the growth trajectory of newer stores are not entirely comparable with that of the existing portfolio. Our experience indicates that newer markets become more relevant over a two-to-three year period,” it said.
In the fourth quarter of FY26, Trent opened 23 Westside and 109 Zudio stores, including two in the UAE. It also shut one Westside store and entered 47 new cities. For the full year, the company opened 60 Westside and 212 Zudio stores, including four in the UAE, while closing eight Westside and 14 Zudio outlets.
As of March 31, 2026, Trent’s network stood at 300 Westside stores, 963 Zudio stores, including six in the UAE, and 23 stores under other lifestyle formats. Together, its fashion brands covered a total retail space of more than 17.7 million square feet.
Trent today declared its first-ever bonus issue, offering shares in a 1:2 ratio to more than five lakh shareholders. Trent also reported a 26% on-year rise in its consolidated net profit for the fiscal fourth quarter to Rs 400 crore. Revenue from operations rose 19% on year to Rs 5,028 crore.
Trent consumer sentiment was fairly stable at the start of the fourth quarter, though the impact of ongoing geopolitical tensions is still unfolding. It said customers are becoming more cautious with spending, leading to a slowdown in discretionary purchases amid continued economic uncertainty and the possibility of a higher cost of living.
The company added that overall demand and long-term market opportunities remain strong. However, it warned that the duration and intensity of disruptions in the Middle East, along with their knock-on effects on supply chains, commodity prices and inflation, could affect demand in the near term.
Trent also said input costs for some raw materials are starting to rise. In addition, there are some challenges around labour availability for suppliers in certain regions. It said it is managing the situation through careful sourcing decisions and closer engagement with suppliers, while most of its sourcing continues to be based in India.
Qué observar
Perspectiva de IA — posibilidades, no hechos
Trent will continue to prioritize store openings in Tier II and III markets throughout the next fiscal year.
Muy probable · En meses
Operating margins may face pressure if input costs and inflation continue to rise.
Probable · En meses
Preguntas abiertas
- What is the specific timeline for the bonus share distribution?
- How will the company specifically mitigate the rising input costs?