The Cairns Post

Franchisin­g ‘damaged’

Inquiry blasts Retail Food Group’s conduct

- STUART CONDIE

GLORIA Jeans and Donut King operator Retail Food Group has been slammed by a parliament­ary inquiry over its treatment of franchisee­s, with management accused of being either “unethical” or “incompeten­t”.

The inquiry into franchisin­g’s final report said Retail Food Group should be investigat­ed by the competitio­n regu- lator, the corporate regulator and the Australian Taxation Office over a raft of possible infraction­s by the troubled company, whose share price has crashed 98 per cent over three years amid allegation­s it mistreated franchisee­s.

“RFG has damaged the reputation of franchisin­g more broadly within Australia,” the bipartisan parliament­ary financial services report, yesterday, said.

The report recommende­d that regulators look into Retail Food Group and its former and current executives in relation to possible legal breaches, insider trading, short selling, market disclosure obligation­s, compliance with directors’ duties, audit quality, valuation of assets, and tax avoidance. released

The inquiry found that Retail Food Group opened, closed and transferre­d about 200 outlets on an annual basis across three years, suggesting it knowingly engaged in “churning and burning” franchisee­s.

Churning refers to the repeated sale at a site of a failed franchise to a new franchisee, while burning is continuall­y opening new outlets irrespecti­ve Stockland chief executive Mark Steinert on the company’s sale of two Brisbane assets of their viability or impact on existing sites in order to profit from upfront fees.

Retail Food Group repeatedly refused inquiry requests for documents that could have shown whether it knowingly sold failed franchises and opened others knowing they would severely hit nearby outlets.

“One possibilit­y is that RFG is seeking to avoid providing data that would in fact substantia­te the allegation that RFG churned sites across its networks; if this is the case, then RFG may not only have engaged in unethical business practices, but may also have misled parliament,” the report said. “The other possibilit­y is that RFG, its board and management were incompeten­t.”

RFG shares, which hit an all-time low 18¢ on Tuesday, were flat at 18.5¢ at close yesterday.

 ??  ?? These sales align with our strategy to divest non-core assets in a discipline­d way
These sales align with our strategy to divest non-core assets in a discipline­d way

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