It noted that 60 of its Greater Melbourne stores had been closed for most of the quarter and 14 Auckland stores were closed for over two weeks during the period.
Airport stores in Australia, as well as Rip Curl stores in Hawaii and Europe, were still heavily impacted by travel restrictions and government-mandated lockdowns and closures, it said.
The company said its EBITDA for the first quarter was "in line with last year", which included government subsidies and the realisation of cost synergies.
Group chief executive Xavier Simonet said the group was beginning to reap the benefits of a diversified group following a strong performance for Rip Curl and successful winter trading for Kathmandu.
"Rip Curl's strong sales performance in its key markets of Australia, Europe and North America is very pleasing. It highlights the strength of Rip Curl's global brand and innovative products as more people take to surfing. At broadly pre-Covid-19 levels, wholesale sell-in for Rip Curl for the second half-year is also encouraging," Simonet said in the market update.
"As for Kathmandu, camping and footwear categories have over-performed, but have not compensated for the impact of Covid-19 with low footfall in CBD and tourist locations as well as lower travel-related purchases."
Simonet said Oboz's performance had been "robust" and the order book was tracking above pre-Covid levels.
He said the group's half-year result would be dependent on the key Christmas trading period, and warned that the impact of Covid-19 on consumer sentiment remained a risk.
"The Group continues to maintain a strong balance sheet and liquidity position, allowing it to respond to current trading conditions and pursue attractive growth opportunities that may arise. The Group intends to resume dividend payments subject to market conditions and trading performance following first-half results," he said.