Langton Capital – 2020-05-01 – Ending lockdown, new normal, Intu, Carlsberg, Gregg’s etc.:
Ending lockdown, new normal, Intu, Carlsberg, Gregg’s etc.:A DAY IN THE LIFE: The dog hasn’t been paying much attention to news reports that the binmen are a group of heroes in the current environment. And hence he’s zealously guarding us (and our rubbish) from them meaning that he can’t go outside until mid-morning of a Wednesday and has to bark and drool impotently when he hears their reversing beeper and the clatter of last week’s chuck-out as it gets crushed up by the lorry’s snazzy squashing machine. And that can leave him in a bad mood until he sees a rabbit, gets thrown a biscuit, or finds a yummy bit of yesterday’s food (or random garden rubbish) stuck to his fur somewhere that he can suck on for an hour or two. Still, that’s not all bad. Not for him the stress and worry of the ongoing lockdown. Anyway, we were confused as to whether this weekend or next weekend was going to feature the Bank Holiday. And then we realised that it didn’t matter. Follow our intra-day ramblings on @brumbymark. On to the news. LANGTON PREMIUM EMAIL: Corporate Offer: Premium email just £295 (plus VAT) for a single subscriber or £495 (plus VAT) for multiple subscribers. Drop us a line to get involved. Retail Offer: Easy in, easy out. £30 per month (inclusive of VAT, £25 net) via PayPal. Email us for details or check here. ADVERTISE WITH US: Langton’s free email now carries adverts. See front page of website for today’s copy & contact us for further details. SEE PREMIUM EMAIL. • Smoothing us out of lockdown. A SMOOTHED END TO THE LOCKDOWN? The industry would like to see government support maintained into the post-lockdown period. 1 May 2020: See Premium Email. Government aid: • UK Hospitality has reiterated its view that government support will need to continue for some time after the lockdown has ended. See our comments on smoothing above. The new normal: • A survey of 260 restaurant and bar operators undertaken by Square Meal has found that three quarters of them have warned that they do not expect their businesses to survive with social distancing measures in place. Just over a quarter say they would not be able to impose social distancing at all. Almost half said that they will need to make staff redundant in the next month. • The FT reports once more that the UK consumer is turning back to processed foods during the lockdown. • Home Secretary Priti Patel has said that the government ‘will expect social distancing in every single work area.’ New norms will be introduced. Ms Patel said ‘the fact of the matter is we will not go back to how we were in early March.’ • Food equipment manufacturer Middleby corporation is the subject of a private equity company report suggesting that there will be no ‘v-shaped’ recovery. • Various operators have suggested that the recovery from the current level of virtually zero sales will not be rapid. UKH says ‘social interaction is key to hospitality, so at a time when public health is rightly the Government’s top priority, it is essential that our sector is seen as a special case.’ • Wundamail research has suggested that employees would like to have fewer video calls as they believe that they could achieve more without them. Some 42% of remote workers believed that they were more productive without video conferencing. Will Ferrell does a lengthy but pointed spoof on meaningless communications in his Lang Haired Businessmen do Zoom. • Wundamail says on video calls, more than 40% of participants dial in and contribute nothing. • The ONS has reported that UK retailers cut the prices of non-food items by the largest amount since at least 2006 this month. Many will be stuck with ageing stock. • Waiting for ‘exploring options’ news from Vapiano, Busaba and a number of others. Property companies: • Property company Intu has updated again saying that it ‘can now confirm we have agreed waivers for certain potential breaches which could have arisen, including in particular under our RCF.’ The company says ‘we have continued to collect rent and have now received 40 per cent of the rent and service charge for the quarter. We are now offering monthly rents to the end of 2020 and are in advanced discussions with customers representing a further 28 per cent of the amounts due.’ • Intu says ‘the remainder of customers are at various stages of discussions regarding revised payment plans. However, there are a very small number of cases where customers are not currently engaging with us to find a consensual solution – these are large, well-capitalised brands who have the ability to pay but have chosen not to. In these instances we are prepared to take more robust action to enforce the legally binding terms of those leases.’ Company news: • Carlsberg has reported sales down by 7.4% in Q1 with CEO Cees t’Hart warning that worse is to come. Sales in China were down 20%. The company says ‘we see some pockets of demand in bars and restaurants, but in general it’s a relatively slow recovery in China.’ • Carlsberg says on trade revenues were down 6% in Europe in Q1. They will clearly be much lower still in Q2. Carlsberg says ‘social-distancing requirements will continue and will impact consumer behaviour.’ • A number of operators have announced the reopening of (some of their) sites for delivery and collection. Caffè Nero has said it will be re-opening eight stores during the week of the 4 May on a trial basis for takeaway. Franco Manca will be opening five sites for takeaway from today, Honest Burger is opening sites, Pret is to open more in London and GBK is also to reopen a number of sites. • Meanwhile Gregg’s has rowed back on plans to reopen 20 of its shops next week after a social media response that suggested the units could draw crowds. The company says that an ‘excessive numbers of customers’ could make it hard to implement distancing measures. • El Pollo Loco in the US says that its delivery business has seen sales treble. • Amazon has reported a surge in sales in Q1. The retail giant says that sales in the quarter were up by 26% on the same period last year. Jeff Bezos says ‘the current crisis is demonstrating the adaptability and durability of Amazon’s business as never before, but it’s also the hardest time we’ve ever faced.’ • Remy Cointreau has reported that Q1 sales were down by 24% as a result of disruption caused by the coronavirus outbreak. The company now anticipates destocking in China and a sharp reduction in European and North American demand. • Boparan Restaurants are in exclusive acquisition talks with the administrators to Carluccio’s. • TGI Fridays is to launch a click & collect service at 24 of its UK restaurants next week. • Everards has cancelled rents due from its business owners. • Oasis and Warehouse have closed their stores in the UK permanently. Some 1,800 jobs are to be lost. • Brinker International in the US has said that sales are running at around 57% of last year’s levels. Other news: • Property agent Jones Lang Lasalle has said that the restaurant industry will face a tough task when it reopens. It says capacity within venues may have to be limited and more customers could cook at home. • JLL says ‘landlord-tenant collaboration will be key’. It says landlords and tenants will have to work with one another. This will almost certainly mean a sharing of the revenue hit. • Down day for the sector with major moves including Cineworld & Saga, down 5%, Carnival, Compass, DART Group down 6%, SSP and TUI down 8% and Intercontinental Hotels 9% off. Risers included City Pub Company and Marston’s, up 8% and DP Eurasia, up 15%. HOLIDAYS & LEISURE TRAVEL: • PM Boris Johnson has said that he sympathises with ‘everybody in the tourism industry’ • The Competition and Markets Authority is to look into complaints that travel companies have not been paying refunds to their customers. The CMA says it has seen ‘increasing numbers of complaints in relation to cancellations and refunds, which now account for four out of five complaints being received.’ • Tripadvisor has cut 900 jobs. • Hotstats has reported that US gross operating profit per available hotel room (GPPPAR) has fallen by 110.6% (to a loss of $12.71 per room) in March this year compared with the same month last year. Some markets have performed particularly badly. New York profit is down 273.8% to a loss of $112.17 per room. OTHER LEISURE: • Spotify has reported Q1 revenues up sharply in Q1. The group reports revenues of €1.848bn with a positive net income of just €1m. Spotify says ‘despite the global uncertainty around COVID-19 in Q1, our business met or exceeded our forecast for all major metrics.’ • Blackstone has put $350m into casino operator Crown. • Apple sales rose in Q1 though by only 1%. Sales in the period to march were $58.3bn. FINANCE & ECONOMICS: • UK car production was down by 37% in March compared with March last year. April will be further down. Q1 has seen the lowest volume since 2009. • Another 3.8m American workers have filed jobless claims. • Sterling up vs dollar at $1.2568 but level vs Euro at €1.1477. Oil up sharply again at $27.00 and UK 10yr gilt yield down 5bps at 0.24%. World markets down with the Far East mixed in Friday trade. London set to open down about 85 points (as at 7am). START THE DAY WITH A SONG: The song has been furloughed. See you on the other side. RETAIL WITH NICK BUBB:
• Today’s News: There is no sign of an AGM update from the Covent Garden landlord, Capital & Counties, but its former stablemate, the embattled Trafford, Metrocentre and Lakeside landlord, Intu Properties, has issued an update to flag that it has received some debt covenant waivers and is still trying to collect Q1 rents. Interestingly, Intu highlight that “a very small number of cases where customers are not currently engaging with us to find a consensual solution – these are large, well-capitalised brands who have the ability to pay but have chosen not to. In these instances we are prepared to take more robust action to enforce the legally binding terms of those leases”. Elsewhere, the Q1 results from Heathrow note a 97% collapse in passenger traffic in April…whilst the video game developer Frontier Developments have announced that it has acquired a licence from Games Workshop to • BDO High Street Sales Tracker: We highlighted on Wednesday that, thanks to a big spike in Online sales, John Lewis sales were probably “only” down by c25% overall in w/e April 25th. However, the BDO High Street Sales Tracker today for medium-sized Non-Food chains flags that in w/e Sunday April 26th, Total BDO LFL sales (including a handful of Homewares and Lifestyle retailers, as well as Fashion retailers) were down by 29% (down c84% in Store sales, but up by c90% in Online sales), albeit the comp was with the week after Easter last year. • Trade Press: Neither Retail Week magazine or Drapers magazine have been published this week, alas, but both the websites have plenty of news and features. The Retail Week website has a feature on “Will Dixons Carphone’s ShopLive be retail’s answer to Zoom?”, whilst the Editor looks in his column at the question of whether the CMA should encourage more M&A activity and thunders that “Amazon-Deliveroo verdict must spark more collaboration amid Covid-19 crisis”. The Drapers website pushes the “Drapers Connects” Digital events, which show how to learn from various industry leaders, as well as the latest news from the fashion industry, eg the exit of the once well-regarded Oasis and Warehouse MD Hash Ladha. • News Flow Next Week: As we move on into May, the pace of Retail company news should slow down a bit next week, ahead of the rescheduled Bank Holiday on Friday, but Wednesday brings the Ocado AGM update, whilst on Thursday we get the Superdry pre-close, as well as the Howden AGM update, the pre-close from The Works and (in Europe) the Zalando Q1. Thursday also marks the end of the latest 3-week lockdown period, that began back on March 23rd…with the Government set to at last spell out its exit strategy…Coincidentally, GFK will be issuing a “flash” UK Consumer Confidence survey first thing on Friday. TRADING STATEMENTS & EVENTS: Upcoming results are set out below: • 29 Apr 20 YUM Brands Q1 numbers • 29 Apr 20 Nichols AGM • 30 Apr 20 Sainsbury FY numbers • 30 Apr 20 Carlsberg Q1 update • 1 May Covid-19 update: Intu • 4 May 20 Texas Roadhouse Q1 numbers • 11 May 20 Marriott Q1 results • 12 May 20 Morrison’s Q1 IMS • 13 May 20 Ten Entertainment FY numbers • 14 May 20 Premier Foods FY numbers • 30 May 20 Minoan AGM • 7 May 20 Intercontinental Hotels Q1 numbers • 7 May 20 Coca Cola HBC Q1 numbers • 12 May 20 On the Beach H1 • 13 May 20 Marston’s H1 numbers • 13 May 20 Stock Spirits H1 • 13 May 20 Compass Group H1 • 13 May 20 C&C full year numbers • 14 May 20 Flutter AGM • 19 May 20 Cranswick FY numbers • 21 May 20 Young & Co full year numbers • 3 Jun 20 SSP H1 numbers • 3 Jun 20 DP Eurasia AGM • 3 Jun 20 C&C FY numbers • 11 Jun 20 Fuller’s FY numbers • 23 Jun 20 Gear4Music full year numbers • 23 Jun 20 – Cranswick FY numbers • 23 Jul 20 C&C AGM Many results are likely to be delayed. For information purposes, the results below were delivered at these dates last year. 2019 COMPARATIVE RESULTS: • 30 Apr 19 Whitbread FY numbers, 8 May 19 Elegant Hotels H1 numbers, 8 May 19 JD Wetherspoon Q3 update, 10 May 19 Millennium & Copthorne Q1 numbers, 14 May 19 Stock Spirits H1 numbers, 14 May 19 On the Beach H1 numbers, 15 May 19 SSP H1 numbers, 15 May 19 TUI H1 numbers, 22 May 19 Britvic H1 numbers, 22 May 19 C&C FY numbers, 22 May 19 Britvic H1 numbers, 23 May 19 M&B H1 results, 23 May 19 Young & Co FY numbers, 29 May 19 EasyHotel H1 numbers, 11 Jul 19 Dart Group FY numbers, 16 Jul 19 Fulham Shore FY numbers, 17 Jul 19 Nichols H1 numbers, 24 Jul 19 Marston’s Q3 trading update, 25 Jul 19 Fuller’s FY numbers, 25 Jul 19 Compass Group Q3 update, 25 Jul 19 Diageo FY numbers, 30 Jul 19 Gregg’s H1 numbers, 31 Jul 19 M&B Q3 update YESTERDAY’S TWEETS: • Lockdown observations. Doing the quarterly VAT has lost none of its magic just because there’s a pandemic raging. Still succeeds in making plunging he septic tank & cutting the grass something to look forward to. • COVID Qs #17. Where are the winners no.2. Sainsbury says extra security, protection & cleaning costs not quite offset by £450m business rates windfall. Fuel sales cratered, not much clothing or non-food action. Even Deliveroo is laying off staff. • Covid ££ side effects #59. Have we created legions of Cpt Mainwairings? Keep off the grass, turn off that light. Older social justice warriors, wielding weaponised frowns & only an inch from posting poison pen letters, informing on their neighbours etc. How will we unwind that? LANGTON CAPITAL: Made in Hull. Like all the best things. Langton Capital is a financial advisory company providing insightful views on the UK and global leisure industry and the wider consumer sector in general. Subscription to the daily email is free. Unsubscribing is painless. We provide daily off the shelf and bespoke research. 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