sharetrader
Page 186 of 733 FirstFirst ... 86136176182183184185186187188189190196236286686 ... LastLast
Results 1,851 to 1,860 of 7330
  1. #1851
    Member
    Join Date
    Sep 2012
    Posts
    221

    Default

    I agree that the Warehouse do need to improve their performance. All very well saying the yield is great but if the way in which they have been turning profits have has been changed by their own doing then profits going forward may remain in this region for some time. Briscoes is all over them like a cheap suit in terms of how to run a business... Seems to me that the warehouse's scale and market share is now their biggest liability...

  2. #1852
    Member
    Join Date
    Jan 2015
    Posts
    355

    Default

    It shouldn't be surprising report is not as good as last year. One off costs of rebranding T7 and NL, asset selling etc. There are long term positive signs including WH increasing online sales, T7 taking off. I will continue to hold for the long term and take the dividend, happy they reduced it rather than load debt.

    Holding, may top up.

  3. #1853
    Legend Balance's Avatar
    Join Date
    Feb 2003
    Posts
    21,618

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by benjitara View Post
    Seems to me that the warehouse's scale and market share is now their biggest liability...
    And potentially their greatest asset if they know how to leverage off that retail footprint.

    Agree btw that BGR shows what an inert bunch of directors and management the WHS has got.

  4. #1854
    Member
    Join Date
    Mar 2010
    Posts
    473

    Default

    Comments posted today and the SP tanking are indicative how confused the market is. Nothing has changed in financial reporting (as forecast by WHS last year) from previous period so what were people expecting from this report to sell it down today? Sure the James Pascoe foray has supported the SP recently but fact remains they still in play. Remember WHS said at the outset of the capital spending/acquistion programme it would take a few years to complete turnround. Retail is going thru a transformation, WHS are addressing this issue, capital spending will be slowing. The calls from some members for WHS to do something seems to not recognise they are doing plenty-sowing the seed.

  5. #1855
    Legend Balance's Avatar
    Join Date
    Feb 2003
    Posts
    21,618

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by kiwitrev View Post
    Comments posted today and the SP tanking are indicative how confused the market is. Nothing has changed in financial reporting (as forecast by WHS last year) from previous period so what were people expecting from this report to sell it down today? Sure the James Pascoe foray has supported the SP recently but fact remains they still in play. Remember WHS said at the outset of the capital spending/acquistion programme it would take a few years to complete turnround. Retail is going thru a transformation, WHS are addressing this issue, capital spending will be slowing. The calls from some members for WHS to do something seems to not recognise they are doing plenty-sowing the seed.
    Agree with you but problem for WHS is that the seeds are germinating on either infertile ground and/or barren grounds!

    Sp is down on small volume - when the real volume sp is $2.85 paid by Pascoe.

  6. #1856
    ShareTrader Legend Beagle's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jul 2010
    Location
    Auckland
    Posts
    21,362

    Default

    Warehouse eyes costs, better products as it targets earnings growth
    Friday 6th March 2015
    Text too small?

    Warehouse Group is turning its focus to reducing costs and improving its products and productivity as it seeks to get a return from its increased spending on the business.

    The Auckland based company today lowered its forecast for annual profit after first half earnings fell, prompting it to renege on its dividend pledge. The company's shares dropped 4.8 percent to $2.77, making the stock the biggest decliner on the benchmark NZX 50 Index today.

    Warehouse shares are rated an average 'sell' and have shed 23 percent of their value over the past year as analysts and investors say they want the company to start producing profit growth after spending hundreds of millions of dollars overhauling stores and buying new businesses the past few years. Chief executive Mark Powell, who has led the spending programme after taking over almost four years ago, previously expected annual profit growth to resume this financial year.

    "We have done a lot of investment, we have changed the shape of the group considerably and we have got a base there now to deliver, but we do need to deliver that profitable growth and that's well understood," Powell said on a conference call today. "We fully understand that the translation into profit growth needs to come."

    Warehouse, which gets the bulk of its earnings from its 'red shed' general merchandise stores, bought 11 businesses over 18 months as part of a plan to grow the 'non-red' side of the business to be as large as the red sheds. That saw it add technology and appliance retailer Noel Leeming, sports chains Torpedo7 and R&R Sports and finance company Diners Club NZ.

    It also stepped up investment in its 92 'red sheds' stores, embarking on a plan of store refits, staff training and improving the quality of its products.

    "We started that journey when we had had seven years of ongoing sales decline and ultimately if you projected that forward in the sales and profit decline, you would have ended up projecting forward a profit of about half of what it is now, we just wouldn't have been able to cut costs quick enough on an ongoing basis to combat that ongoing 2 percent decline," Powell said.

    Still returns from the investment hadn't met expectations, with average sales growth of about 2 percent lagging behind estimates of 3-4 percent and weighing on earnings, he said.

    "We certainly have got a higher profit level than we would have had if we had carried on on that path but it has not delivered the growth we would have wanted," Powell said. "As we enter a phase now where we come off that investment we have to adjust our cost base and expectations to those lower sales numbers."

    Powell has been phasing out "cheap and nasty" private label brands for better quality products without raising prices after some products had a 20 percent return rate, damaging the Warehouse brand. Under the new regime, products are pulled from the shelves if they have a return rate of 5 percent.

    Warehouse will continue to focus on product quality as it seeks to improve sales, he said today.

    "The quality image doesn't change overnight, there's still a lot of customers out there who are suspicious of Warehouse quality."Warehouse today posted a 19 percent drop in adjusted first-half profit to $37.2 million, and said annual earnings on the same measure, which excludes one-time items and is the basis for dividend payments, will be between $52 million and $56 million, down from $60.7 million a year earlier.

    Chairman Ted van Arkel reiterated on the conference call that the company is targeting improved profits.

    "We continue to focus on sales growth, however a major priority is also to deliver profit growth and the board and management are very very clearly focused on that", van Arkel said. "The board remains confident in the long-term strategy."

    The company will pay a first half dividend of 11 cents per share on April 16, representing 102.5 percent of adjusted net profit. It lowered its fullyear dividend forecast to 16 cents per share, down from its previous forecast of 19 cents, which it paid last year.

    In order to invest in its business to drive future earnings, the company last year cut its dividend payout ratio to between 75-85 percent of adjusted profit, from a previous policy of 90 percent of adjusted profit. To provide certainty for shareholders, it said the policy would be phased in over two years when a minimum dividend of 19 cents per share would be paid.

    Warehouse today said the dividend policy for future periods will be reviewed against its business plan for the 2016 financial year and announced with its full year results.
    Arguably their biggest problem. The biggest queue on boxing day is always the return line with all the stuff that didn't even work or last one day !!!!

  7. #1857
    Advanced Member
    Join Date
    Oct 2001
    Location
    chch, , New Zealand.
    Posts
    2,494

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by Roger View Post
    Arguably their biggest problem. The biggest queue on boxing day is always the return line with all the stuff that didn't even work or last one day !!!!
    Funny you should say that, my wife had a day off today, and went to the warehouse to buy a DVD to watch. Feet up on the couch, box of chocolatees at the ready, puts the DVD in and it wont work, something about parallel import and DVD region

  8. #1858
    Advanced Member
    Join Date
    Oct 2001
    Location
    chch, , New Zealand.
    Posts
    2,494

    Default

    Reality is that if the Pascoe bunch had not started buying the price would be much lower now. I suspect many bought in recently, expecting that today there would be some kind of announcement.

  9. #1859
    ShareTrader Legend bull....'s Avatar
    Join Date
    Jan 2002
    Location
    auckland, , New Zealand.
    Posts
    11,074

    Default

    [QUOTE=ratkin;563022]Reality is that if the Pascoe bunch had not started buying the price would be much lower now.[QUOTE]

    How true
    one step ahead of the herd

  10. #1860
    ShareTrader Legend bull....'s Avatar
    Join Date
    Jan 2002
    Location
    auckland, , New Zealand.
    Posts
    11,074

    Default

    As an example Its not surprising to see the entertainment division down in sales you only need to look at some of there pricing on say xbox games etc then go to jbhifi etc and check theres and your see why nobody goes to the warehouse for this stuff it diffenately is not a bargain.
    one step ahead of the herd

Tags for this Thread

Bookmarks

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •