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Morning Briefing for pub, restaurant and food wervice operators

Tue 28th Nov 2023 - Update: Loungers H1 lfl sales up 7.7%, on track to open 34 sites this year, CFO to step down
Loungers H1 lfl sales up 7.7%, on track to open 34 sites this year, Brightside progressing to plan: Café bar operator Loungers has reported revenue growth of 22.3% to £149.6m for the 24 weeks ended 1 October 2023, reflecting like-for-like sales growth of 7.7% and the addition of a net 32 new sites. Adjusted Ebitda for the period stood at £23.9m (H1 2023: £19.3m), up 23.6%, while pre-tax profit stood at £3.936m against £2.831m the previous year. The business opened 16 new sites in the period and said it was on-track to open 34 new sites this year and to end the year with 256 sites. It said it had seen “consistently strong trading” driven by both its mature estate (with like-for-like sales 25% ahead of pre-covid levels) and new sites. It highlighted a “continued evolution of our offer”, including further food menu innovation and the introduction of a new blended drinks and iced coffees range. It said that headline four-year like-for-like sales growth of 25% is “testament to the strength of our brands, the flexibility of our offering, and the quality of our teams”. The company said that margins were benefitting from an easing of inflationary pressures and on track to return to pre-covid levels. It said that its new site roll out accelerated with 16 sites opened in the period (H1 2023 11 sites) – 14 Lounges and two Brightsides, and that these new sites were performing “very well and the pipeline remains strong”. The business said it has continued to “trade well” over the first eight weeks of Q3, with like-for-like sales growth across the 32 weeks to 26 November of 7.6%, A further six sites have opened post the 1 October half year end – five Lounges and one Cosy Club. The company said: “With the consumer remaining robust and continuing evidence of moderating inflationary pressure we are optimistic as we look ahead to the Christmas trading period.” Nick Collins, chief executive of Loungers said: “This has been another period of strong financial and operational growth for Loungers. The fact that we have delivered increases of 22.3% and 23.6% in our revenue and Ebitda respectively should be taken as yet another reminder that it is not all doom and gloom in the UK hospitality sector. We are living proof that businesses which can provide outstanding hospitality, great food and drink and excellent value are still capable of thriving, and we see more growth potential for Loungers than ever before. Our accelerated site roll-out programme continues at pace, and we are on track to open 34 in FY24, which means that we will end the year with more than 250 sites. The opening of every new Lounge means an investment of nearly £1m into the local high street, and the increased footfall creates a positive knock-on effect on all of the businesses around us. By the end of 2023, we will have added another 1,000 people to our team during the year, and we are particularly pleased that one in eight of those new jobs is in areas that the government wants to ‘level up’ by creating better opportunities and standards of living.” The company said that its new openings continue to perform very well and above average, and the pipeline remains in good shape to deliver at the current roll-out rate of around 34 sites per year. Collins said: “Geographically we are seeing more opportunities in the north east as we gradually move towards Scotland, but there still remains a great deal for us to go for across England and Wales. We are enjoying strong trading in mixed use retail/leisure parks and coastal locations, alongside our ‘bread and butter’ of suburban and small-town, high street locations. Our strength of performance across this variety of site types gives us real confidence in our conservative targets of 600 Lounges and 65 Cosy Clubs.” During the summer the business opened its second and third sites under its roadside diner concept, Brightside. Collins said: “The team have done a fantastic job at delivering well for their customers in what has been an intense period due to the openings coinciding with school summer holidays. This year we have achieved a gross average weekly level of sales of £22,500 across the sites and we expect this to grow as we continue to build our brand awareness. In the main we are pleased with Brightside’s performance to date, and most importantly are proud of the hospitality we are providing, and the choice we have introduced to passing motorists as well as to local residents. As we continue to trade, and with the benefit of the two further planned openings in FY25, we will build a view on Brightside’s returns on capital and whether there is an opportunity to roll it out as a national brand. Whilst it’s an exciting time for this new brand, I believe the strength of these interim results firmly demonstrates that Brightside has in no way distracted from our focus on or the performance of the Lounge and Cosy Club brands.” Loungers said it is aiming to be the number one choice for careers in hospitality in the UK, and has built a “strong reputation for being a great starting point for young people entering the industry”– with around a third of its 8,400-strong team aged 21 or younger. The company is particularly targeting expansion in both the north-east and north-west, where it is currently under-represented, and is assessing a wide range of sites, from brand new developments to former retail properties, banks, restaurants and pubs. Collins said: “Our Lounges are extremely versatile and work as well in purpose-built, mixed-use retail and leisure parks as they do in historic buildings on high streets. This gives us a huge amount of choice when assessing new sites, as we’re not tied to any one kind of environment or type of location.” At the same time, the business has announced that Gregor Grant, its chief financial officer, is to step down following the publication of the group’s results for the year ending 21 April 2024, with effect from 31 July 2024. Loungers said it had commenced a search to identify his successor and expects to make an appointment well in advance of Grant leaving the group in order to allow for “a seamless handover of responsibilities”. Alex Reilley, executive chairman and co-founder of Loungers, said: “Gregor has been an integral member of the Loungers leadership team since joining the business in 2018. During his time here Gregor has provided consistently strong financial leadership as the business has more than doubled in size, alongside delivering the IPO in 2019 and of course helping to guide the business through the challenges of the covid period and the inflation that has followed. I would like to take this opportunity to thank him, on behalf of the board and colleagues across Loungers, for his commitment and enormous contribution over the last five years. He will leave with our best wishes for his future.”

Premium subscribers to receive next New Openings Database and videos from Propel Multi-Club Conference on Friday: Premium subscribers will receive the next The New Openings Database on Friday (1 December), at midday. The database will feature a diverse set of hotel openings including Kinsfolk & Co, the hospitality management company from Paul Brackley, the former managing director of Corbin & King’s Beaumont Hotel, who will launch its first hotel next year in London’s Fitzrovia. Due to launch in winter 2024, The Newman will open in Charlotte Street. Z Hotels is to open a new flagship site in London’s Leicester Square, refurbishing a five-storey office building into a new 85-room hotel. Meanwhile, real estate investment firm Wirefox has acquired the Ducks Inn in East Lothian, Scotland, as part of its Marram hotel collection, expanding its leisure portfolio across the UK and Ireland. The database will show the details of 142 site openings, including which company has opened a site or its plans to open one in the future. It will have details on what type of site it is and its location, and there will also be a website link to the businesses. The database is published on a monthly basis and Premium subscribers will also receive an 8,500-word report on the new additions to the database. Premium subscribers also receive access to five other databases: the Propel Multi-Site Database, produced in association with Virgate; the Propel Turnover & Profits Blue Book; the UK Food and Beverage Franchisor Database; the Who’s Who of UK Food and Beverage; and the UK Food and Beverage Franchisee Database. Premium subscribers will also receive all the videos from this month’s Propel Multi-Club Conference on Friday. They will be sent 12 videos at 9am. Premium subscribers receive all the videos from Propel conferences each year – around 100 in total. Companies can now have an unlimited number of people receive access to Propel Premium for a year for £995 plus VAT – whether they are an operator or a supplier. The single subscription rate is £495 plus VAT for operators and £595 plus VAT for suppliers. Email kai.kirkman@propelinfo.com to upgrade your subscription. Premium subscribers also receive their morning newsletter 11 hours early, at 7pm the evening before; regular video content and regular exclusive columns from Mark Wingett.

Food prices rise at slowest pace in 17 months: Annual shop prices inflation is at its lowest level since June 2022, a survey suggested yesterday. The Times reported that shop prices in early November were 4.3% higher than they had been a year earlier, down from the 5.2% inflation reported in October and from the peak of 9% inflation recorded in May, according to the latest data from the British Retail Consortium and NielsenIQ. Food prices inflation fell to 7.8%, down from 8.8% in October and marking the seventh consecutive month of decline. Food prices inflation is now less than half its peak rate of 15.7%, recorded in April 2023, and is the lowest since July 2022. Non-food inflation fell to 2.5% in November from 3.4% in October, continuing a downward trajectory from a peak of 5.8% in May. However, looming cost pressures threaten to push inflation back up again next year, the retail consortium warned. Helen Dickinson, chief executive of the trade body, said that retailers faced “new headwinds in 2024, from government-imposed increases in business rates bills to the hidden costs of complying with new regulations. Combining these with the biggest rise to the national living wage on record will likely stall or even reverse progress made thus far on bringing down inflation, particularly in food.” The consortium’s figures, based on information for the first week of November, show that inflation was steeper for “ambient foods” — those stored at room temperature, such as tins — at 9.2% than it did for fresh foods, where inflation fell to 6.7%. Dickinson told the newspaper this reflected a larger proportion of ambient foods being imported and affected by the weak pound, whereas lower energy prices had cut input costs for fresh dairy products, in particular. She said the wider fall in inflation reflected retailers competing “fiercely to bring prices down for customers ahead of Christmas”, but “while health and beauty products saw price cuts as retailers rush to shift stock before Christmas, clothing prices increased as some retailers continued to hold off on promotional activity”.

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