Toronto Star

Freshii CEO says patience needed after stock drops

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MONTREAL— The chairperso­n and CEO of Freshii sought to reassure investors about the restaurant chain’s growth after it said earlier this week that it would open fewer locations than expected.

Speaking to an investor conference in Montreal, Matthew Corrin says the company could have started a process to terminate its contracts with large franchisee­s who failed to meet the store opening commitment­s in their contracts.

However, he says Freshii opted against doing that because the franchisee­s are doing the right things and the value in the long-term is greater if the company continues to support their developmen­t.

“If you recognize the true value is supporting and seeing them through to building their scale and then collecting a royalty in perpetuity, the value creation of that royalty is much greater than the one-time upfront fee that we got at the start of the relationsh­ip,” Corrin said.

Freshii shares fell 35 per cent on Tuesday after the company lowered its guidance for new store openings and scaled back its longer-term expansion targets.

The company attributed the reduction to the closure of its locations in Target stores, challenges in ramping up the number of locations and a more conservati­ve pace of store openings by its multi-unit franchisee­s than expected.

Corrin said multi-unit franchisee­s are looking to roll out several restaurant­s at the same time as part of a larger plan.

In its revised outlook, Freshii said it expects between 90 and 95 net new store openings in its 2017 financial year, down from 150 to 160 locations.

The company also lowered its longer-term expansion targets and now plans to open between 730 and 760 stores by the end of its 2019 financial year, rather than the 810 to 840 stores previously anticipate­d.

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