Daily Dispatch

Pick n Pay expects first-half profits to halve

- KARL GERNETZKY

Retailer Pick n Pay warned on Tuesday that its first-half profits could halve as it grapples with the fallout from Covid19.

Trading restrictio­ns on items such as alcohol and tobacco, increased staff costs and a voluntary severance programme all weighed on the group, which expects comparable headline earnings per share (HEPS) to endAugust to fall more than 50%.

HEPS is a widely used profit measure in SA that strips out certain one-off items, while the group also adjusts for other items, such as hyperinfla­tion in Zimbabwe, to give a comparable performanc­e of its stores.

The group said 1,400 staff had left after it initiated a voluntary severance programme in March. At the beginning of March, the group had about 90,000 employees. Pick n Pay faced other costs, including protective gear for employees, while it had paid a R1,000 bonus for some of its front-line staff.

“We have prudently and carefully preserved our cash through tight working capital management and a keen focus on critical capital and operationa­l spend,” said CEO Richard Brasher.

“I want shareholde­rs to understand and be reassured that the impact on our first-half earnings we are announcing today derives solely from the specific circumstan­ces of the pandemic, the impact of measures taken by the government and ourselves to mitigate it, and the once-off costs of our voluntary severance programme which has made the group leaner and more competitiv­e,” Brasher said.

“Our business remains strong and stable, and well-placed to serve customers and shareholde­rs in the future.”

In morning trade, Pick n Pay’s share was down 1.06% to R112.23, having fallen 10.87% so far in 2020.

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