The Mercury

Famous Brands signs deal to bring French café to SA

- Banele Ginindza

FAMOUS Brands has signed a 10year licensing agreement with French global bakery-café brand PAUL in a deal that the local company hopes will complement its strategy of fortifying its position in the premium end of the food service market.

The group, which has a presence in 41 countries and over 800 restaurant­s, would hopefully have the first outlet up and running in South Africa in the next nine months, Famous Brands chief executive Kevin Hedderwick said yesterday.

In terms of the 10-year licence agreement with PAUL, Famous Brands will open five restaurant­s within a five-year period in three trading formats.

The first flagship PAUL restaurant is scheduled to open by the end of next year.

“The licence agreement talks about opening five stores in five years is, by our standards, quite pedestrian. It will take us probably the next few months to get the first one off the ground,” Hedderwick said.

“I think, PAUL is going to have limited capability to grow, but given our Famous Brands technique I would be disappoint­ed if we opened five shops in five years, it’s not our style.”

He said he would be happier with between 10 and 15 shops in a five-year period and further growth would be driven by demand.

Internatio­nally, PAUL has partnered with operators across Europe, Africa, Asia, America and the Middle East.

Hedderwick said in the South African context, there wasn’t another bakery-café operating in the space that PAUL occupied, and as such, Famous Brands had an opportunit­y to be the first movers in this category, with the most recognisab­le French bakery-café brand in the world.

“It is a global brand, it’s a brand that a lot of South Africans who travel can associate with. So if you look at our brand portfolio this can quite easily stand on its own,” he said.

He said efforts would be made to source as much local content as possible but that the deal came with stipulatio­ns of buying some products directly from PAUL to retain the brand’s tradition and flavour.

Famous Brands shares on the JSE gained 0.75 percent yesterday to close at R135, valuing the company at R13.5 billion. ROYAL Bafokeng Platinum (RBPlat) will delay the ramp up of its new mine by a year as commodity prices sink to near seven-year lows.

The mid-tier producer said it now aimed to increase production at the Styldrift project in the first quarter of 2020, not the first quarter of 2019 as planned previously.

“Delaying the start of stoping at Styldrift I ensures that value is not destroyed by ramping up high-quality Merensky ounces in a depressed market. Instead, the business is well positioned to begin the ramp-up when the market improves,” RBPlat said.

Styldrift, with an estimated lifespan of more than 60 years, is a high-grade, shallow, mechanised mine in the North West, about 100km from Johannesbu­rg. Drilling could be further delayed from the first quarter of 2017 – after it was pushed back from the third quarter of this year – if prices sank further, RBPlat said.

The company had spent R5.19 billion by the end of September on developing Styldrift. It is still expected to produce 2.76 million tons per year.

Spot platinum has recovered from Friday’s seven-year low of $851 (R12 232) an ounce but is still at levels last seen in 2008. RBPlat shares were down 1.06 percent at R23.42 on the JSE yesterday.

 ?? PHOTO: SUPPLIED ?? A PAUL bakery-café restaurant in the Mall of Arabia, Egypt.
PHOTO: SUPPLIED A PAUL bakery-café restaurant in the Mall of Arabia, Egypt.

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