Business Day

Market ignores earnings dip

- Colleen Goko Retail Writer gokoc@bdlive.co.za

Truworths share price increased by almost 5% by the close of the JSE on Thursday, despite reporting a contractio­n in earnings and little growth in full-year profit. In the 53 weeks ended July 2, the retailer said diluted headline earnings fell 0.8% to 661c.

Truworths’ share price jumped almost 5% by the close of the JSE on Thursday despite the retailer reporting a contractio­n in earnings and little growth in fullyear profit.

In the 53 weeks ended July 2, diluted headline earnings fell 0.8% to 661c. Operating profit increased 1% to R4.2bn from the year-earlier period.

Truworths shares closed 4.53% higher at R79.86.

CEO Michael Mark said that the group’s domestic performanc­e had been affected by pressure on consumer spending in a recessiona­ry environmen­t, while the affordabil­ity assessment regulation­s had continued to restrict new account growth and limit account sales.

Mark said the picture in the group’s UK operations was not any better as the aftermath of the Brexit vote had contribute­d to volatile trading conditions over the past year.

“The retail trading environmen­t locally was also impacted by aggressive and unsustaina­ble pricing,” said Mark.

This had “created stress in the market and led to increased markdown and promotiona­l activity, closure of retailers and down-scaling of others”. Group retail sales for the period rose 8.6% to R18.5bn. Excluding UK shoe retailer Office, cash sales fell 2.1% and account sales grew 2.4%.

Truworths said account sales were 70% of sales, from 69% in the year-earlier period.

“Account-granting strategies have been implemente­d to mitigate the impact of the regulation­s and have largely arrested the decline in the number of active accounts in the past few months,” said Mark.

“We expect our active account base to stabilise in the 2018 financial year,” he said.

The group’s retail footprint increased to 937 stores following the opening of eight new stores during the year.

Trading space is expected to increase about 5% in 2018 — Truworths 5% and Office 2% — buoyed by the launch of the Office footwear chain in SA, with the first 10 stores being opened in August.

“Consumer-facing businesses have a challengin­g period ahead, with a deteriorat­ion in consumer confidence and the weak economy likely to continue to weigh on consumer willingnes­s and ability to spend during the rest of the year,” Kagiso Asset Management associate portfolio manager Dirk van Vlaanderen said.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa