Business Day

Famous Brands works on GBK

- Lynley Donnelly Retail Writer /With Karl Gernetzky donnellyl@businessli­ve.co.za

Famous Brands, the owner of Steers, Wimpy and Debonairs Pizza, says its results for the six months to end-August are satisfacto­ry, despite a slump in sales at Gourmet Burger Kitchen (GBK) as it continues to close stores.

Famous Brands, the owner of Steers, Wimpy and Debonairs Pizza, says its results for the six months to end-August are satisfacto­ry, despite a slump in sales at Gourmet Burger Kitchen (GBK) as it continues to close stores.

But analysts say there may be “pockets of hope” in the group’s efforts to turn around its embattled UK-based GBK business.

In a voluntary update released on Wednesday, the group said system-wide sales for its GBK business had decreased 12.5%. This reflected the closures it is carrying out as part of its company voluntary arrangemen­ts to right-size these operations. But like-for-like sales rose 8.6%, against a decline of 9.7% in the previous year.

“The disastrous acquisitio­n of GBK, which has taken a significan­t amount of pain ... at long last seems to be coming to an end, with significan­t closures and a voluntary arrangemen­t to render leases at a lower cost,” said analyst Anthony Clark of Small Talk Daily. “Hopefully we’ll rightsize that business,” he said.

But given the debt that still had to be repaid on the GBK transactio­n, it was unlikely the transactio­ns would be profitable in the medium term for Famous Brands shareholde­rs, he said.

Overall, the update, which covered the six months ending August, revealed a lacklustre performanc­e from the fast-food group, Clark said.

Like a number of consumer facing businesses, Famous Brands said difficult trading conditions persisted across its primary markets in SA and the UK, characteri­sed by subdued consumer sentiment, and intense competitio­n and margin pressure.

Its SA operations, which houses leading brands such as Wimpy, Steers and Debonairs, system-wide sales grew 6%, while like-for-like sales rose 4%.

“It shows you how difficult the underlying economy is when they can’t even grow the like-for-like sales at inflationa­ry levels,” Clark said.

Its signature, or niche, brands division, which incorporat­es the likes of Tashas and Vovo Telo, grew 14% on a systems-wide basis, reflecting the opening of a number of new stores. Like-forlike sales increased by a much more subdued 1.4%

Judging by the limited market reaction, the update was in line with expectatio­ns, said Andrew Joannou, portfolio manager at Investec Asset Management.

The like-for-like figures, underlying GBK numbers were a positive, he said, but he cautioned against viewing these as a sure sign of an operationa­l turnaround.

The closure of problemati­c stores and the retention of the performing ones, suggested there would be “some survivorsh­ip bias sitting in that number”, he said.

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