Monday, February 18, 2008

Restaurant Brand's Pizza Hut faces further increase in competition

A very interesting article in the New Zealand Herald yesterday(see below my preamble) about the cut throat pizza business in New Zealand.

I have been ranting and raving about this for years, in respect to Restaurant Brands(RBD) and their badly run Pizza Hut brand.

More competition from the likes of great fast food companies like Hell and Dominos Pizza are continuing to make the going for Pizza Hut as hard as the crust on their flat crust dough and it is only going to get worse because management at RBD continue to flounder.

Hell and Dominos are rapidly expanding while the Pizza Hut business falls away.

The next profit announcement for RBD will be sometime in May and sales figures should be out for their 3 different Brands: KFC, Starbucks and the aforementioned Pizza Hut, soon.

Profit is likely to be better this year because of a slightly recovering KFC but Pizza Hut is likely to drag on overall profit, again.


Restaurant Brands @ Share Investor


Finger Lick'n Good Management
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Delivering increased profit in October 2007
No reason for optimism in latest sales figures

Discuss RBD @ Share Investor Forum

Download RBD company reports



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Pizza war to enter next battle

5:00AM Sunday February 17, 2008
By Chris Daniels
The cut-throat pizza business in New Zealand is gearing up for a new round of hostility, as market heavyweight Domino's and Hell try to hold on to slipping profit margins in a world of soaring cheese.

Domino's - which pitches itself as the "value" end of the market - is tomorrow launching a new, healthier pizza, hoping its fat-free crust will attract punters watching the kilos as well as sport on the TV.

It is also staging a push into the "premium" side of the market, where it will find itself in a more direct fight for customers from local pizza heroes, Hell Pizza. A new push to online ordering is also under way, with Domino's this month rolling out its new internet ordering process.

Statistics New Zealand last week reported a 14.7 per cent jump in butter and cheddar cheese prices - prices difficult to pass on to pizza buyers taking advantage of fierce competition between Hell, Domino's and once-dominant Pizza Hut.

Pizza Hut used to command the biggest slice of the market but has been in steady decline for a few years, slugged on one side by the popular iconoclastic Hell brand and on the other by the cheaper Domino's.

"Pizza Hut continued to experience tight trading conditions in a competitive market, which had meant a continuing short-term sales decline," said the stock exchange-listed owner Restaurant Brands in December.

Total sales for the quarter were down 13.4 per cent, with same store sales falling by less than 9 per cent. Year-to-date sales of $56.5 million were down 9.7 per cent, and down 6.6 per cent on a same-store basis.

"Marketing strategy changes, which started to be implemented towards the end of the quarter, were expected to deliver better sales in the last quarter of the year," the company said.

Pizza Hut store numbers fell from 105 in the third quarter last year to 98. Restaurant Brands is progressively closing its "red-roofed" restaurants as leases expire or the "opportunity arose to exit a store".

Despite sales heading through the floor at its Pizza Hut rival, the fast-food industry is in good shape, says Colin Mellar, general manager of Hell in New Zealand. Hell enjoyed some huge sales increases in a record two weeks over Christmas, he says. "That was a bit out of the bag. We were ready, not so much to 'batten down the hatches', but expected the Christmas period to be patchy. But we got a couple of nice surprises."

Domino's is now increasingly looking to "come and play a little in their market", says Mellar.
"They are the cheaper end. We are not of a mind to play too much in that market, but sometimes it's interesting to have a look over the fence.

"We need to continue to grow. We need to grow top lines. We can't just sit in the niche market all the time. Our marketing itself is going through some changes."

Growth last year was reasonable, says Mellar, with a period of "checking the foundations later in the year. But over the Christmas period, same-store sales were up by 15-17 per cent.

What about its rivals, particularly with Domino's moving this week to more healthier fare? Is Hell concerned more health-conscious consumers may start looking elsewhere?
"At the end of the day of the day, pizza has got cheese on it generally, and people want cheese," says Mellar.

"We do have a healthier pizza, but trying to pretend we are lettuce and tomato is, I believe, a joke. We serve good food, but we will never pretend to be a healthy option."
Domino's, says Mellar, will end up seeing that the pizza is the main thing, not the healthier food options. And in the true style of a business rival, Mellar suggests a less benevolent reason for Domino's new-look healthy image.

"If anything this may distract them from their main strategy," he says.
"But I think their main strategy isn't working any more - because [of] their margins. Margins get tight, we know that commodity prices have gone through the roof. The price of cheese is ridiculous - walk into the supermarket and it's nine bucks for a small block.

"Because they are charging so little for their pizzas, they have to look for an alternative, because their franchisees will be screaming at them - saying, 'we're getting no margin with this current pricing strategy'."

The failure of fast-food chain Georgie Pie in the 1990s showed this, says Mellar. Georgie Pie sold pies for $1 each - but the price of inputs went up "and it kills them".

"This is probably a more desperate move by Domino's rather than one of proactivity," says Mellar.

Margins in the business are coming under real pressure, with fuel, commodity and labour prices all going up.

Peter Jones, Domino's New Zealand general manager, backs up the reports of rising pizza sales coming from his rivals at Hell Pizza.

"We have had a really good last 12 months, in fact the best 12 months in our short history over here."

Domino's arrived in New Zealand in mid-2003 and now has 67 stores, with plans for eight more.

This week it's launching what it calls the "superlite thin pizza", a push into healthier food. It's served on a "Lebanese style bread", which has no sugar and is 98 per cent fat free.
But it hasn't gone all health store on the customer. Salads, available in its Australian operation, are yet to appear on this side of the Tasman.

Jones says: "Realistically the message we're giving is that 'we don't condone you should eat any sort of food, let alone pizza, seven days a week'. You should combine it with healthy meals, a good balanced diet and exercise, and pizza should be a treat.

"We really can't go out on a limb and say we stand for a complete healthy food.

"However, we do look for a balance. We should never be arrogant about the fact the world is becoming more focused on eating healthy."

So is Domino's trying to move into better profit territory by selling more premium products?

"We have talked about this, but not just for the dollars either, because the more time goes on, we are seeing our consumers getting more mature in their palate as well," says Jones.

"While we'll never niche ourselves as gourmet pizza, we are examining pizza such as 'seven meats' and about to come out with a range of pizzas called the 'big taste', which is a premium product.

"We don't deliberately try to gain market share as such. What we're trying to do is build same-store sales for all of our franchisees."

The company has also just launched a full online ordering system, which it hopes will make things easier for customers and franchise owners, with more accurate orders and less hassle phoning a noisy store during busy periods.

Domino's biggest rival is probably fish and chips, says Jones, because like pizza, it is a shared meal. Burgers, by comparison, are more individual.

"But having said that, whenever someone is buying a burger or fish and chips or even a pizza from a rival, they're not buying a pizza from us.

"Domino's is a value alternative. It doesn't mean we're cheap and nasty. It means you're getting a good pizza for a good price."

Regardless of whether Domino's is moving up the value chain, its presence in New Zealand has increased the pizza slice of the fast-food sector.

Jones says Domino's research in 2003 showed an average US consumer ate pizza once every 11 or 12 days, an Australian every 29 days, while New Zealanders only once every 50 days. "There's no doubt that has changed."

Poll cements National Party as Election winner

http://www.dontvotelabourcartoons.com/gallery/cartoon2.jpg
c Stan Blanch 2007

It looks like the momentum has gained traction and polls taken before Christmas have continued to show John Key the most preferred Prime Minister, should an election be held today.

The fact that Clark continue to slip behind as leader to a 27% Prime Ministerial approval rating means she is less favoured than the likes of the great George Bush as the leader of the country.

Previously Clark has had a historically very high ranking in the polls as most preferred leader.

Vote in our new Political Animal poll on the left of this blog, not far from the top. You must tick two boxes, one for your constituency and one for the party vote.


C Political Animal 2008


The full story of the latest poll, courtesy of the NZPA is below:

The TV One Colmar Brunton poll showed National on 53 percent support, down one point since its last poll in December, and Labour also down one point to 34 percent.

The gap between the main parties was 19 points - the same as it was in December.

National's leader, John Key, increased his lead over Helen Clark in the preferred prime minister stakes.

Mr Key gained one point to 36 percent while Miss Clark slipped from 30 percent to 27 percent.

Tonight's poll showed the Greens up from 4.6 percent to 6 percent, putting them safely over the 5 percent threshold the party must achieve in the next election to stay in Parliament.

New Zealand First was down from 2.2 percent to 1.7 percent while the Maori Party was up from 1.7 percent to 3.3 percent.

The Colmar Brunton poll usually rates National higher than other surveys.

On January 26 a New Zealand Herald DigiPoll put National on 47.5 percent and Labour on 38.7, a gap of 8.8 points.

On February 11 a New Zealand Morgan poll showed National slipping 6.5 points to 45.5 percent and Labour gaining three points to reach 36.5 percent, a gap of nine points.

Tonight's poll showed a small drop in the number of people who thought the economic outlook was getting better - 28 percent compared with 31 percent in December.

The poll was conducted between February 9 and 14. It questioned 1000 voters and had a margin of error of plus or minus 3.1 percent.

- NZPA

Sunday, February 17, 2008

Labour Party election funding murky at best

http://www.dontvotelabourcartoons.com/gallery/cartoon4.jpg
c Stan Blanch 2008


The stench surrounding the funding of the Labour Party by ex pat Kiwi Owen Glenn prior to the 2005 election just gets more pungent and darkly ominous, as the weeks and months pass.

Glenn gave NZ$500,000.00 to Labour Party coffers to bolster their empty pockets in the run up the the 2005 stolen election(Labour took over $800,000.00 of taxpayer money to illegally fund their campaign) nothing wrong with that, big money shouldn't be a problem to fund an election run.

It seems though that there is more than meets the eye to this generous individuals gift.

If the bestowing for Glenn, of a New Years honour this year wasn't enough, it seems that the layers of the onion that are the gift to the Labour Party appear to be peeling off to reveal a bit of a rotten core.

It certainly isn't the gift that keeps on giving.

Glenn has revealed that he gifted the money to Labour because of concerns that he had over the Brethren spending their own money(not taxpayers dear readers) to campaign against Labour and the Greens.

But curiously, Glenn made his first donation of $200,000 to Labour in 2004, well before the Brethren's involvement in the 2005 election became public knowledge.

A slip of memory on Glenn's part?

According to Labour Party president Mike Williams yes: "Owen is confused about the timing".

Williams seems very confused since he himself admitted in a May 5 2005 story in the New Zealand Herald that Glenn had been paying funds directly into Labour Party coffers beginning in 2004 and to the tune of $200,000.

The biggest possible scandal exists directly with the Prime Minister though.

Glenn has been reported as saying that he was offered the post of Minister of Transport by Helen Clark, in order to get him back to New Zealand.

Clark has denied Glenn's assertion that he was offered a job in the Labour Cabinet saying on Friday, "...it did not happen..."

Now we have all heard the Prime Minister lie before and caught out multiple times, so Fridays denial seems a trifle perplexing given the status Owen Glenn has reached in his business life. Impeccable business acumen, honesty and straightforwardness have been trademarks of his throughout his distinguished life.

Glenn also loaned the party $100,000.00 to employ fund raisers after the 2005 election, it was paid back without interest but the interest forgone seems to have been in breach of the electoral rules.

I'm unsure whether the changing of the appropriate electoral laws by Labour after the 2005 election to make their illegal pilfering of $800,000.00 of taxpayer funds legal has also made this latest reported breach legal retrospectively, but it bares thinking about when you cast a vote this year.

Whichever way you look at this situation it stinks worse than Parakura Horomia's socks on a wet hot day in Wellington.

Labour have passed laws to crack down on other political parties for the 2008 election but it seems they have some skeletons in the closet left over from 2005.

The funding from Labours wealthy foreign domiciled backers during the 2005 election needs to be looked at more closely by the appropriate authorities and the public of this country cant be fobbed off again by the likes of a Prime Minister who wouldn't know the truth if it came up and shook her hand then slapped her in the face with it.

The public have a right to the truth.

Clearly this scrutiny should also be applied to the coming election for if we can be sure of one thing, Labour will try similar ploys again.


Related Political Animal reading

NZ Herald gets nasty over the Electoral Finance Bill
Electoral Finance Bill: Day of Protest
Electoral Finance Bill: The purpose is clear
Mike Moore turns the knife on Electoral Finance Bill


C Political Animal 2008

Thursday, February 14, 2008

Broker downgrades of Pumpkin Patch lack long term vision

Columbia Mall

Pumpkin Patch, a children's wear
company with more than 200 stores
in four countries, will open a
6,095-square- foot store at Columbia Mall,
in Baltimore, in the mall's lower level,
near Lord & Taylor, on March 25.
New collections, designed by an in-house
team, are introduced throughout the season.



Broker downgrades on Pumpkin Patch Ltd [PPL.NZX] sent the share price down 9% today, NZ.19c down to a multi year low of $1.97.

Broker ABN Amro has this to say:


... its forecasts for the company's first-half earnings, due out next week, this time by a whopping 19 per cent and down to $NZ12.6 million ($11 million).

Pumpkin Patch's problems centre on the poor prospects for its stores in Britain and the US - the latter no real surprise given the growing likelihood of a recession there. Its many Australian outlets are, by contrast, doing well, thanks to the hot economy, with earnings growth hitting 23 per cent.

However, says the ABN analyst Carolyn Holmes, that won't be enough to offset the declines abroad, which is why she has cut her target price for the NZ-listed shares from $NZ3.13 to $NZ2.53.

It is not clear from analyst Carolyn Holmes how she arrived at her downgrade or the reasons for them but I am going to take an educated stab at it.

Clearly the weak US dollar and stronger Kiwi is affecting repatriated profit back to New Zealand.

Nothing Pumpkin Patch management can do about that and not overly material to the day to day short/medium term running of the company. It is something that could get worse before it gets better.

"...poor prospects for its stores in Britain and the US...", well, I wouldn't go that far, clearly not as good as the long established New Zealand and Australian arms but the bulk of the US stores are trading profitably after a very short time opened and the UK unit has been trading profitably for a couple of years.

When establishing a new retail chain, initial loses are to be expected, due to set up costs and until economy of scale is reached and one would expect those stores that are already operating profitably to pick up margin wise once established for a longer period.

The time frame for analysis of a company by broking houses is notoriously short term and while short term indicators are of definite interest to gauge company health on a half year to 12 month basis, it is the long term prospects for a company that should be the primary interest to an investor. Especially when it is a growth company like Pumpkin Patch.

Directors of Pumpkin Patch commented on their business outlook and strategy when reporting the Full year NZ$27.6 Million 2007 profit last August, down from 28.5 million from 2006:

While interest, store opening costs and local market development costs would continue to have an impact on financial results in the short term the directors and management team were confident current strategies would the best long term financial outcomes...

Something I would concur with.

All listed companies with substantial overseas profit and revenues have been marked down over the last 6 months or so. Two other such notables are Fisher & Paykel Healthcare Ltd [FPH.NZX] and Fisher & Paykel Appliances [FPA.NZX]

Both of these companies are well run and Fisher Health has excellent long term prospects, but their market caps have taken a beating of late.

Pumpkin Patch is currently facing toughish times during a strong growth period but it isn't going to last. How long it will last is hard to say but things are not as bleak as some brokers might have you believe.

ABN Amro and other New Zealand brokers who downgraded Pumpkin Patch today all have shareholdings in the New Zealand Stock exchange and ABN recommended NZX as a "buy" today.

I wonder if they are short on Pumpkin Patch?


Disc
I own PPL shares in the Share Investor Portfolio


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