Restaurant Brands annual profit rise 7.8%
Thursday 20 April 2017 09:39 AM
Restaurant Brands annual profit rise 7.8% as trans-Tasman KFC delivers, hikes dividend
By Paul McBeth
April 20 (BusinessDesk) - Restaurant Brands New Zealand, the fast food operator, lifted annual profit 7.8 percent as its local KFC business generated record sales, bolstered by the recently acquired Australian KFC business, allowing directors to increase dividends to shareholders.
Net profit rose to $26 million, in the 52 weeks ended Feb. 27 from $24 million a year earlier, the Auckland-based company said in a statement. Underlying earnings rose 26 percent to $30.6 million, within the company's guidance of between $30 million and $32 million, and Restaurant Brands anticipates that will rise to around $40 million from its recent acquisitions.
Because the company issued shares to acquire the Australian business, earnings per share fell from 24.59 cents to 24.08 cents in the year under review.
Restaurant Brands bought 42 KFC stores in Australia last year, making it the biggest KFC franchisee in New South Wales, and in March was granted approval to acquire the only franchisee for 82 Taco Bell and Pizza Hut stores in Hawaii.
New Zealand operations delivered their "best ever overall sales and profit performance, strong trading from the KFC Australian business under its new Restaurant Brands' ownership and the successful completion of the acquisition of the Taco Bell and Pizza Hut franchisee in Hawaii," chief executive Russell Creedy and chief financial officer Grant Ellis said in their report. "The new financial year has seen a continuation of the strong trading performance across all four New Zealand brands seen over the FY17 year and both new acquisitions in Australia and Hawaii are currently delivering results in line with their business case projections."
The board declared a final dividend of 13.5 cents per share, paid on June 23 to shareholders on the register on June 9, taking the annual return to 23 cents, up 9.5 percent from a year earlier. The directors will decide whether to reintroduce a dividend reinvestment plan before announcing an interim dividend for the current financial year.
The shares last traded at $5.35, having gained 5.3 percent so far this year.
The company's New Zealand KFC division increased earnings before interest, tax, depreciation and amortisation by 7.5 percent to $61.4 million on a 4.9 percent increase in sales to $296.5 million. Ebitda margins widened 0.5 of a percentage point to 20.7 percent due to cheaper ingredients and store efficiencies, which the company said offset rising labour costs.
The Pizza Hut New Zealand unit posted a 17 percent decline in earnings to $4.1 million on a 9.8 percent fall in sales to $40.5 million as Restaurant Brands sold stores to independent franchisees, while the Starbucks Coffee division increased ebitda 8 percent to $4.8 million on a 0.4 percent decline in sales to $26.7 million.
Carl's Jr sales rose 9 percent to $36.3 million and ebitda more than doubled to $1 million, with the company saying it "continued to make steady progress towards building critical mass and long term financial viability" for the brand.
Auditor PwC took a closer look at the $1.5 million value attached to Carl's Jr's goodwill due to "the continued profitability challenges faced by the Carl's Jr segment and because of the sensitivity to judgements about the future performance of the business" but was satisfied with management's impairment testing.
Restaurant Brands' KFC Australia division continued $97.2 million of sales and $15 million of ebitda to the group and has bought five more stores since the Feb. 27 balance date.
The company took on debt to fund the Australian KFC division last year, with bank loans totalling $46.5 million as at Feb. 27, up from $12.7 million a year earlier. That's set to increase with its US$105 million acquisition of the Hawaiian business, of which US$42 million will be debt funded. Finance costs rose to $2.3 million from $991,000 in 2016.
Restaurant Brands' operating cash flow rose 8.1 percent to $47.9 million in the year, and after investing and financing activities, the company had $70.1 million in cash as at Feb. 27.
(BusinessDesk)
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