J D Wetherspoon has updated on current trading for the six months ending 25 January 2015, with the first 12 weeks of the second quarter (to 18 January 2015), showing like-for-like sales increased by 2.8% and total sales by 6.8%. Like-for-like sales slowed to approximately 2% in December and have slowed further in the last fortnight. In the year to date (25 weeks to 18 January 2015), like-for-like sales increased by 4.6% and total sales increased by 9.1%.
Wetherspoon expects the operating margin (before any exceptional items), for the half year ending 25 January 2015, to be around 7.3%, 0.9% lower than the same period last year. This reduction is mainly due to an above-inflation increase in pay for staff and an increase in utility and supplier costs. In addition, gross margins are under pressure as a result of increased price competition from supermarkets.
Douglas Jack of Numis commented that More discounting = more downgrades:
“LFL sales have slowed from Q1’s level of 6.3%, to 2.8% in Q2, reflecting comps becoming tougher (Q1 3.7%; Q2 6.7%; Q3 6.2%; and Q4 5.2%), largely due to the extension of food trading hours in autumn 2013. In the first 25 weeks, LFL sales are up 4.6% and total sales are up 9.1%. More importantly, H1 margins have slipped to 7.3%, down 90bps from H1 2014’s 8.2%. We are cutting our forecasts (2015E by 4%; 2016E by 6%; 2017E by 8%) to reflect a lack of margin support.”
Outlook
The biggest financial dangers to the pub industry continue to be the VAT and business rates disparity between supermarkets and pubs and the continuing imposition of stealth taxes, such as the late-night levy and the reduced allowances for gaming machine income.
Although the reduction in sales growth may have an impact on operating margin if the trend continues, the company is aiming for a broadly satisfactory outcome in the current financial year.
Property
The Company has opened 11 new pubs so far this financial year and currently has 10 sites under development. In line with previous estimates, 30 to 40 pubs will be opened in the current financial year.
The Company opened its second pub in the Republic of Ireland in December in Dun Laoghaire, and has completed on a further three sites in Swords, Cork and Dublin.
Financial position
In the period under review, the Company bought back 196,500 shares for cancellation, at a total cost of £1.5million, at an average price of £7.96 per share. There have been no significant changes in the Company’s overall financial position since the publication, on 13 October 2014, of the annual report and accounts for the year ended 27 July 2014.
Commentary on current trading
Tim Martin, Chairman of Wetherspoon, makes the following comments on the pub industry:
“Wetherspoon has had significantly better sales growth in the last couple of years than our main competitors, reflecting a pattern that has continued since our flotation. Even Wetherspoon, however, has seen flat bar sales in the last two months, when food sales have continued to rise. Inevitably, bar sales in the industry as a whole, especially where pubs have not benefited from Wetherspoon’s level of investment, will have fared less well. This situation reflects the dire need for the pub industry to campaign for equal tax treatment for pubs and supermarkets. It is certain that the current wave of pub closures, which continues at a high level, will accelerate when economic growth slows or reverses.
Impact of price differential between pubs and supermarkets
“The majority of investment in larger pub companies has been in “food-led” businesses, which have very low levels of bar sales, apart from those which are consumed with meals. Fewer and fewer customers, outside pockets of affluence, in an accelerating trend, are using pubs for “drinking occasions”, which do not involve eating. The main reason behind this trend is not that people prefer to drink at home, for example, but relates to the huge and growing price differential between pubs and supermarkets. This differential has been created and increased by the fact that business rates per pint are far higher in pubs and that supermarkets pay no VAT in respect of food, whereas pubs pay 20% – enabling supermarkets to subsidise the price of beer and other products.
“A number of major pub companies believe that they can avoid the resulting malaise by investing in out-of-town pubs which are really “quasi-restaurants”. Unfortunately, these businesses too are already starting to suffer the effects of the tax disparity with supermarkets and they will clearly, in our view, be unable to escape the consequences of an unequal tax system.
“Neither these businesses nor the main pub industry newspaper, the Publican Morning Advertiser (PMA), have campaigned for tax equality with supermarkets. In the case of the PMA, the editor has questioned the financial motives of the leader of the tax equality campaign, Jacques Borel, but has utterly failed to campaign himself or through his newspaper for tax equality, which would help to ensure the future of pubs.
“The pub industry is in a strange position, whereby market research clearly shows that almost 100% of individual licensees believe their companies should support a campaign for tax equality, yet several major pubcos and the main trade newspaper have not actively done so. Following chaos at our banks, the supermarkets themselves have recently witnessed a situation where the tectonic plates of the industry moved, even though the boardrooms at the major industry players were oblivious to this fact. That is the position now in the pub industry and the companies that do not speak out about the dangers of tax inequality are likely to be those that suffer most in the future.”
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