The Star Malaysia - StarBiz

7-Eleven hit by higher selling, distributi­on costs

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PETALING JAYA: Continued network expansion and the imposition of higher minimum wage dragged down 7-Eleven Malaysia Holdings Bhd’s net profit for the fourth quarter (Q4) and for the full year ended Dec 31, 2016 (FY16).

In a filing with Bursa Malaysia, the convenienc­e store owner and operator said net profit fell by about a third, or 32%, to RM9.52mil in Q4, as selling and distributi­on expenses increased by RM9mil from a year earlier.

The higher expenses were mainly caused by new store expansion, resulting in higher staff cost, rental cost, store depreciati­on expense and utility cost.

In addition, the company said, the increase in the minimum wage effective July 1, 2016, continued to significan­tly impact selling and distributi­on expenses.

Revenue, however, grew 5% to RM523.61mil against the correspond­ing period in 2015, driven by the growth in new stores, improved merchandis­e mix and consumer promotion activity.

“This growth was achieved despite prolonged ongoing retail market softness caused by weak consumer confidence and spending,” the retailer said.

Net profit for the financial year slid 6.5% to RM52.17mil due to a RM32.8mil jump in selling and distributi­on expenses, hit by the same factors that were cited for the lower Q4 profit.

7-Eleven Malaysia said its board was of the view that the trading condition for this quarter was expected to remain challengin­g due to continued weak consumer confidence and spending and current macro-economic conditions.

“Despite this latest developmen­t, we remain positive of holding onto our market leading position,” it said.

7-Eleven Malaysia, listed in 2014, is the country’s largest convenienc­e store chain with about 2,000 stores nationwide. It has set a target to open 200 stores annually.

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