Geelong Advertiser

Wage strife dents Domino’s profits

Franchisee­s lopped over underpayme­nts

- ALEX DRUCE

DOMINO’S Pizza’s full-year profit has fallen nearly 5 per cent after the company shut down some franchisee­s who were alleged to be deliberate­ly underpayin­g employees.

Revenue for the 12 months to June 30 grew 24.4 per cent to $1.44 billion, but full-year profit fell by 4.6 per cent to $115.9 million as loans referred to as “short-term franchisee support” again hit Australia and NZ earnings.

Same-store sales growth slowed to 3.6 per cent from 4.3 per cent a year ago, toward the bottom of the company’s 3.0 to 6.0 per cent guidance range.

This was weighed down by softer than expected local figures, with the addition of an XL pizza range in Australia and NZ not enough to stop same-store sales growth slowing to 2.2 per cent from 4.5 per cent a year ago.

Domino’s said it was operating a higher mix of Australian and NZ corporate stores after 22 underperfo­rming franchisee­s were removed, in some cases because the company is ending underpayme­nt of staff amid allegation­s of systemic abuses.

“We have identified some of those franchisee­s who have demonstrat­ed they no longer had the passion or capability to execute successful­ly as we grow,” Domino’s Australia and NZ chief executive Nick Knight said.

Domino’s faces a class action lawsuit in Australia that claims, among other things, that the company and its franchisee­s systemical­ly underpaid workers for five years. Domino’s rejects the allegation. “We believe that the entitlemen­ts of franchisee workers were governed by our enterprise agreements and that we have at all times acted in accordance with those enterprise agreements,” the company reiterated yesterday.

Shares in the company slipped by as much as 5.52 per cent to $41.96 in the first 15 minutes of trade yesterday.

Chief executive Don Meij — who began at Domino’s 32 years ago as a delivery driver — said the company would always listen to feedback but he was confident he’d be treated right if he was just starting out now.

“In fact, my children have chosen to work part time for Domino’s,” Mr Meij said.

Elsewhere, Domino’s Japanese stores led a strengthen­ed performanc­e from its internatio­nal operations, with the segment accounting for 54.7 per cent of group underlying earnings.

Same store sales growth in Japan was 8.4 per cent, up from 0.9 per cent a year ago, with total revenue rising by 13.6 per cent to 47.3 billion yen ($A656.85 million) on the addition of 81 new stores.

Same store sales growth in Europe slowed to 3.1 per cent from 5.7 per cent a year ago, with revenue increasing 11 per cent to 712.9 million euros ($A1.17 billion) as the conversion of Hallo Pizza stores was completed. The company will pay a final dividend of 52.8 cents per share, fully franked.

Domino’s said it expected samestore sales to grow 3.0 per cent to 6.0 per cent in the next three to five years.

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AAP

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