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Nouveau texte de la page, après la modification (new_wikitext) | Naked Wines became the latest so-called ‘lockdown winner' to come crashing back to earth as shares fell more than 40 per cent.<br>The online wine seller warned sales could fall by up to 4 per cent in the year to March 2023 and it would only just break even in terms of profits.<br>In a sobering update, the company highlighted ‘greater uncertainty' in the economy.<br>Naked soared through the pandemic as customers stuck at home signed up in numbers for [http://leonbets-34play.buzz "http://leonbets-34play.buzz] its home booze deliveries.<br> Hangover: Naked Wines warned sales could fall by up to 4% in the year to March 2023 and it would only just break even in terms of profits<br>Chief executive Nick Devlin had said Norwich-based Naked would be a long-term winner, with the pandemic causing an ‘enduring shift of demand online'.<br>But shares have fallen more than 80 per cent since last year's highs as the end of lockdown saw demand dry up.<br><br>It has issued a series of sales and profit warnings and reined in the amount it is spending chasing customers. Shares crashed 43.6 per cent, or 125.3p, to 162.1p.<br>The crash will land a big payday for hedge funds who had been betting on a fall. <br>Naked was one of the biggest targets of short sellers, who bet against a stock by borrowing and selling it on the assumption its price will fall and they will be able to buy it back cheaper and pocket the difference.<br> RELATED ARTICLES Share this article Share HOW THIS IS MONEY CAN HELP Devlin said Naked would not ‘pursue growth at any cost' as it continues scaling back investment in signing up new customers. <br>The bleak outlook came as Naked reported a 5 per cent rise in sales to £350million in the year to March 28.<br><br>Profit for the period was £2million, swinging back from a £1.5million loss a year earlier.<br><div class="art-ins mol-factbox floatRHS money" data-version="2" id="mol-217007a0-af74-11ec-8ecb-491bd3f41f9c" website REPORT: Naked Wines shares lose their lockdown sparkle |
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+Naked Wines became the latest so-called ‘lockdown winner' to come crashing back to earth as shares fell more than 40 per cent.<br>The online wine seller warned sales could fall by up to 4 per cent in the year to March 2023 and it would only just break even in terms of profits.<br>In a sobering update, the company highlighted ‘greater uncertainty' in the economy.<br>Naked soared through the pandemic as customers stuck at home signed up in numbers for [http://leonbets-34play.buzz "http://leonbets-34play.buzz] its home booze deliveries.<br> Hangover: Naked Wines warned sales could fall by up to 4% in the year to March 2023 and it would only just break even in terms of profits<br>Chief executive Nick Devlin had said Norwich-based Naked would be a long-term winner, with the pandemic causing an ‘enduring shift of demand online'.<br>But shares have fallen more than 80 per cent since last year's highs as the end of lockdown saw demand dry up.<br><br>It has issued a series of sales and profit warnings and reined in the amount it is spending chasing customers. Shares crashed 43.6 per cent, or 125.3p, to 162.1p.<br>The crash will land a big payday for hedge funds who had been betting on a fall. <br>Naked was one of the biggest targets of short sellers, who bet against a stock by borrowing and selling it on the assumption its price will fall and they will be able to buy it back cheaper and pocket the difference.<br> RELATED ARTICLES Share this article Share HOW THIS IS MONEY CAN HELP Devlin said Naked would not ‘pursue growth at any cost' as it continues scaling back investment in signing up new customers. <br>The bleak outlook came as Naked reported a 5 per cent rise in sales to £350million in the year to March 28.<br><br>Profit for the period was £2million, swinging back from a £1.5million loss a year earlier.<br><div class="art-ins mol-factbox floatRHS money" data-version="2" id="mol-217007a0-af74-11ec-8ecb-491bd3f41f9c" website REPORT: Naked Wines shares lose their lockdown sparkle
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Lignes ajoutées lors de la modification (added_lines) | Naked Wines became the latest so-called ‘lockdown winner' to come crashing back to earth as shares fell more than 40 per cent.<br>The online wine seller warned sales could fall by up to 4 per cent in the year to March 2023 and it would only just break even in terms of profits.<br>In a sobering update, the company highlighted ‘greater uncertainty' in the economy.<br>Naked soared through the pandemic as customers stuck at home signed up in numbers for [http://leonbets-34play.buzz "http://leonbets-34play.buzz] its home booze deliveries.<br> Hangover: Naked Wines warned sales could fall by up to 4% in the year to March 2023 and it would only just break even in terms of profits<br>Chief executive Nick Devlin had said Norwich-based Naked would be a long-term winner, with the pandemic causing an ‘enduring shift of demand online'.<br>But shares have fallen more than 80 per cent since last year's highs as the end of lockdown saw demand dry up.<br><br>It has issued a series of sales and profit warnings and reined in the amount it is spending chasing customers. Shares crashed 43.6 per cent, or 125.3p, to 162.1p.<br>The crash will land a big payday for hedge funds who had been betting on a fall. <br>Naked was one of the biggest targets of short sellers, who bet against a stock by borrowing and selling it on the assumption its price will fall and they will be able to buy it back cheaper and pocket the difference.<br> RELATED ARTICLES Share this article Share HOW THIS IS MONEY CAN HELP Devlin said Naked would not ‘pursue growth at any cost' as it continues scaling back investment in signing up new customers. <br>The bleak outlook came as Naked reported a 5 per cent rise in sales to £350million in the year to March 28.<br><br>Profit for the period was £2million, swinging back from a £1.5million loss a year earlier.<br><div class="art-ins mol-factbox floatRHS money" data-version="2" id="mol-217007a0-af74-11ec-8ecb-491bd3f41f9c" website REPORT: Naked Wines shares lose their lockdown sparkle
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