Daily Dispatch

Retail, restaurant SMEs are ‘engines for growth’

- By COLLEEN GOKO

SMALL- and medium-sized enterprise­s (SMEs) in the restaurant and retail sector should be funded despite the recession as these businesses will be engines for growth.

This is the view of Retail Capital chief executive Karl Westvig, whose optimism about restaurant­s and retail is backed up by the most recent Statistics SA data.

While discretion­ary spending may be on the decline in SA due to the constraine­d economic environmen­t, retailers in food, beverages and tobacco in specialise­d stores are showing positive growth rates.

At constant prices, April’s retail data showed a 13.6% yearonrise in sales in this category of goods, higher than the overall retail trade rise of 1.5%.

Retail Capital provides working capital to small businesses based on real-time informatio­n on credit card transactio­ns.

“Banks and lenders are often more wary to extend credit to SMEs; this is worsened during recession,” Westvig said.

“But it can be lucrative lend to these businesses restaurant­s and retailing there is scope for growth.”

A large portion of Retail Capital’s funds is disbursed to black- and women-owned businesses. Concepts range from pop-up to traditiona­l stores.

“Certainly, there is always risk in lending but we see prospects especially in those sectors. We have built our business in identifyin­g trends, threats and opportunit­ies in retail and restaurant­s. We model for seasonal changes and customer tastes,” said Westvig.

However, JSE-listed companies are increasing­ly saying it is difficult to grow sales.

“Since March, the restaurant industry has had a very sharp turndown in activity across the board,” Spur Corporatio­n chief executive Pierre van Tonder to in as said earlier in June.

In the six months to December 2016, Spur’s group sales from continuing operations rose by 10.4% to R3.8-billion, while existing restaurant sales rose 4.1%.

Taste, which holds the Starbucks and Domino’s Pizza brands, reported a R101-million headline loss (-25c a share) from a 3% increase in core turnover to R1.1-billion in the year to end-February. In its full-year results, Famous Brands reported consolidat­ed revenue of R4billion, an 18% increase on the previous year, while operating profit rose 31% to R455-million. Famous Brands owns Wimpy, Mugg & Bean, Europa, Fishaways, Tashas, Steers, Debonairs Pizza, Milky Lane and The Bread Basket.

Over the past year, Spur’s share price has declined 8.84%. Taste Holdings has shed 38.3%, while Famous Brands is up 3.47% in the same time-frame. — TMG

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