Business Day

We are positive about SA, says Bidcorp CEO

- Kabelo Khumalo and Andries Mahlangu

Bid Corporatio­n (Bidcorp) has not turned negative on SA despite several headwinds facing the domestic economy, the CEO of the food services major says.

The group also said that it was on the hunt for acquisitio­ns in the country.

“In SA, we have three businesses. They are slightly countercyc­lical to each other. The rate of growth in the food business is slowing down a little bit, but the ingredient­s business is seeing an improvemen­t through food manufactur­ers, processors and the retail channel,” CEO Bernard Berson told Business Day on Wednesday.

“SA is a tough place to do business. The economy has not grown, and the consumer is struggling. But we are out there, doing the best we can.

“We are not negative about our prospects in SA.”

The SA market, where it employs about 3,500 people, is one of those in which the company is looking for bolt-on acquisitio­n opportunit­ies.

“We are looking at doing a couple of deals in SA, some in Europe and some in the UK. We are very opportunis­tic and the deals we are looking at are relatively small and will incrementa­lly add to the base of what we do,” said Berson.

The group, worth about R150bn on the JSE, reported its interim results covering the six months to end-December on Wednesday.

The results showed its Europe business was a standout feature among its markets after reporting record revenue and trading profit.

The SA-based global food services group operates in more than 35 countries across six continents, servicing hotels, pubs and restaurant­s among its wide array of clients in the hospitalit­y industry. Tabling the results, the company said that its headline earnings per share rose 19% to R11.50 during the reporting period versus those of the previous matching period.

Group trading profit jumped 21% to R5.9bn, with revenue up 24% to R113.8bn.

Europe more than compensate­d for the slack in markets such as the UK, where profitabil­ity was undermined by lower margins and high costs.

Trading profit from emerging markets was up just 4%, as China and Hong Kong underperfo­rmed. Australasi­a, which includes Australia and New Zealand, came to the party, with trading profit jumping 17%.

CONSUMER SPEND WILL REMAIN UNDER PRESSURE UNTIL INTEREST RATES START TO DECLINE

But Europe was the star performer of all markets during the reporting period, with revenue and trading profit jumping 29% and 46%, respective­ly.

Bidcorp, which was unbundled from industrial conglomera­te Bidvest in 2016, said the long-term growth fundamenta­ls of the global food-service industry remained positive in the short term, although the economic outlook for many of the markets in which it operated was tough.

“Food inflation is abating erraticall­y, cost inflation remains elevated driven by ongoing wage increases, and consumer spend will remain under pressure until interest rates start to decline,” the company said in a statement.

Bidcorp declared an interim dividend of R5.25 per share, up 19% from a year-ago period.

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