Business Day

Shoprite share price reaches a record high

- Ann Crotty Writer at Large crottya@businessli­ve.co.za

The Shoprite share price touched a record high of R263 in early trade on Monday before easing back to close at R256.99 just as the group announced interim results and a 14.2% hike in diluted headline earnings per share to 525.2c.

An interim dividend of 205c a share was declared, up 13.9% on the previous interim’s.

A strong showing from the South African supermarke­ts underpinne­d the 6.3% increase in turnover to R75.8bn in the six months to December 2017.

On a like-for-like basis, turnover was up 2% and follows a hefty 14% increase in the correspond­ing 26 weeks of financial 2017. South African supermarke­ts reported increased turnover of 7.8%, equivalent to 3.5% on a like-for-like basis.

CEO Pieter Engelbrech­t said the South African performanc­e was boosted by the continued success of the increased focus on Checkers’s high-end customers. The group increased its market share in SA by 0.44 percentage points.

But turnover of the nonSouth African supermarke­ts fell 0.4% from the prior year’s hefty 32.3% rise. On a like-for-like basis this represente­d a decline of 6.4%. Engelbrech­t said this was a reversal of the previous year and it “validates the strength of our strategy which not only includes geographic­al diversific­ation but also the extraction of value across all operations and brands”.

He said the results demonstrat­ed the group’s resilience to economic headwinds.

“SA has been in an almost no-growth situation for most of 2017, unemployme­nt stood at 26.7% in the fourth quarter of 2017, consumer confidence was at low levels and our customer base has been under unpreceden­ted financial pressure.”

The group experience­d deflation in most product ranges. The furniture division grew sales 10.7% despite credit sales dropping by almost a third to only 15% of total sales.

Group trading profit was up 5% to R4.1bn underpinne­d by a trading margin of 5.41% down marginally from 5.48% in the previous interim.

Engelbrech­t said the group still faced testing trading conditions “with positive economic improvemen­ts across our operations still some way off and food inflation expected to remain low”.

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