The New Zealand Herald

Restaurant Brands lifts sales 41pc

Boost from new Hawaiian stores

- Tina Morrison

Restaurant Brands New Zealand lifted secondquar­ter sales by 41 per cent after the fast-food operator expanded its footprint through Australia and Hawaii.

The Auckland-based company said sales increased to $224.9 million in the 16 weeks ended September 11, from $159.5m in the equivalent period a year earlier.

New Zealand sales rose 5.3 per cent to $130.6m, while Australian sales jumped 19 per cent to $42.2m and its Hawaiian operations added $52.1m. On a same-store basis, sales rose 6.7 per cent.

New Zealand’s largest fast-food operator is expanding into new overseas markets to drive future earnings growth. In April 2016 it expanded into KFC in Australia and in March 2017 bought the largest fast-food operator in Hawaii.

Chief executive Russel Creedy told shareholde­rs at the annual meeting in June that the company was now “truly internatio­nal” and expected sales this financial year to exceed $700m, up from $497.2m last year. Yesterday’s release showed sales in the first half of the year were up 51 per cent to $386.1m.

In New Zealand, the company’s 92 KFC stores lifted sales 8 per cent in the second quarter to $99.4m with the benefit of an additional store.

Its 34 Pizza Hut stores increased sales 2.9 per cent to $13.2m despite having three fewer stores due to sales to independen­t franchisee­s, which now own 60 Pizza Huts.

Sales at its 23 Starbucks Coffee stores dipped 6.4 per cent $7.3m after it closed its Botany store during the quarter, reducing the store numbers by two compared with the year-earlier period. On a same-store basis, Starbucks sales lifted 6.5 per cent. Sales at the company’s 19 Carl’s Jr outlets fell 6.1 per cent to $10.7m due to strong sales in the year-earlier period following two new store openings in Christchur­ch and the closure of the poor performing Otahuhu store at the end of last year.

On a same-store basis, Carl’s Jr sales dipped 2.3 per cent.

In Australia, t he company acquired 42 KFC stores in New South Wales on April 27, 2016, and acquired another five independen­t KFC franchise stores in the first quarter of this year.

The 47 stores contribute­d A$39.2m in sales during the second quarter, up 16 per cent from the year-earlier or 6.2 per cent up on a same-store basis.

Its Hawaiian-based operations include 37 Taco Bell and 45 Pizza Hut stores in Hawaii, Guam and Saipan acquired on March 7, 2017, which contribute­d US$38.1m in the second quarter.

The company’s shares closed up 5c yesterday at $6.39. —

 ?? Picture / Stephen Parker ?? Chief executive Russel Creedy told shareholde­rs that the company expected sales this financial year to exceed $700m, up from $497.2m last year.
Picture / Stephen Parker Chief executive Russel Creedy told shareholde­rs that the company expected sales this financial year to exceed $700m, up from $497.2m last year.

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