JD Wetherspoon plc (‘JD Wetherspoon’ or ‘the Company’), announces its Q3 trading update for the 13-week period up to 29 April 2018.
Current trading
For the 13 weeks to 29 April 2018 like-for-like sales increased by 3.5% and total sales increased by 2.8%. Year-to-date like-for-like sales have increased by 5.2% and total sales have increased by 3.8%.
The third quarter last year included the early May bank holiday, but the third quarter this year did not, which is likely to have reduced like-for-like sales by about 0.5% in the period.
Property
Since the start of the financial year, the Company has opened 5 new pubs and sold 19. We intend to open one further pub in the current financial year. The Company believes the market value of our pub estate remains comfortably above the net book value.
The Company has spent £15.4m on buying the freeholds of pubs of which we were previously tenants and has bought back £51.6m of shares in the financial year to date.
Financial position
The Company remains in a sound financial position. The net debt at the end of the quarter was £754m and is expected to be around £740m at the end of the financial year.
Outlook
The chairman of JD Wetherspoon, Tim Martin, said:
“A debate is currently taking place as to whether the UK should remain in the EU’s customs union post-Brexit. I feel sure that the UK should leave. This will enable parliament to eliminate taxes on non-EU food and drink imports, reducing prices in the shops, which will immediately improve living standards.
“It makes no sense for the UK to continue to impose taxes on New World wines, coffee, rice and thousands of other products, and then to send the proceeds to Brussels. The EU masquerades as a free trade organisation, but it is really a protection racket which imposes import taxes on the 93% of the world’s population that is not in the EU.
“The UK should copy countries like New Zealand, Australia and Singapore, which have successfully adopted free trade policies, rather than being beholden to the undemocratic EU and its unelected presidents.
“As anticipated, the rate of like for like sales growth slowed slightly in the third quarter.
“We continue to face significant cost increases in the second half in areas which include labour, business rates and the sugar tax. There is also some uncertainty as to the effect on sales of the FIFA World Cup.
“We continue to anticipate a trading outcome for this financial year in line with our previous expectations.”