Business Standard

MARGIN TOPPING ADDS TO JUBILANT SHOW

Company more selective in opening outlets and sweating existing ones to boost same-store sales growth

- RAM PRASAD SAHU

Jubilant FoodWorks reported a better-thanexpect­ed September quarter performanc­e. The operating profit margin at 14.1 per cent was up 450 basis points year-on-year, the highest in 14 quarters. It was led by revenue performanc­e and cost optimisati­on. Most analysts had estimated the margin number at 12-12.5 per cent.

Operating profit jumped 59 per cent over a year to ~102 crore; revenue grew nine per cent to ~726 crore. This was led by strong growth in volumes and a 5.5 per cent samestore sales growth (SSSG). The top line growth would have been better considerin­g that the company passed on GST benefits (two per cent reduction in tax) by reducing prices. Passing on of input credit gains to customers in the form of more product additions (toppings) at the same value and absorbing the food inflation also helped. Profit after tax was up 124 per cent to ~48.5 crore with net margins at 6.7 per cent.

SSSG was led by continued traction from the everyday value offering launched in the first quarter and the new Domino’s campaign in August. It was, however, lower than analysts’ estimates of 7-7.5 per cent growth. SSSG was 6.5 per cent in the June 2017 quarter and 4.2 per cent in the June 2016 one. Analysts had estimated five or six new stores in the quarter but the company has become conservati­ve on this. It added one Domino’s store and shut another, ending the September quarter at 1,125 (1,081 a year before), the same as at the start. Store additions are to follow a more exhaustive criteria.

There is a focus on cost management by higher personnel utilisatio­n and improved productivi­ty, while cutting on administra­tion and promotion expenses. Lower other expenses in the quarter is focused on is cutting the were, for example, a function loss on its Dunkin’ Donuts of what the company called franchise. The company continues optimising of advertisin­g cost. to rationalis­e the store

The other area the company portfolio of this brand, having closed five and added two, taking the total at the quarter's end to 52. That number stood at 73 in the year-ago quarter. It expects to reduce losses by half in FY18 from this business and see break-even in FY19.

Himanshu Nayyar, analyst at Systematix Shares, said, “If you look at same stores sales are almost same on q-o-q basis, we could see good margins at Ebitda (earnings before interest, tax, depreciati­on and amortisati­on) level and it shows that the cost control measures are showing some results.”

However, there are no stores opened during the quarter, this may be the reason for no substantia­l increase in their cost structure. If this kind of profitabil­ity is delivered, there is definitely upside for this stock, he said.

The strategy, clearly, is on opening new stores selectivel­y and to drive SSSG from existing ones. Coupled with everyday value offerings, this is expected to drive volumes, growth and profit. While there is scope for margins to improve, the company is investing in technology to improve customer experience (online and offline) and reduce cost, while scaling up operations. This and rising input cost could keep a lid on the margins.

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