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Edgars profit slides

08 Jun, 2018 - 16:06 0 Views
Edgars profit slides

eBusiness Weekly

HARARE – Listed clothing retailer Edgars Stores Limited’s after-tax-profit for the year to April 2018 stood at $1,3 million, down 2,5 percent from prior comparable period.

Management however said the profit was “well above budget”.

Despite the dip in profit, group managing director Linda Masterson said turnover for the period grew 37 percent, and was 10 percent above budget.

For the period under review, Edgars’ unit sales rose 13,9 percent over the same period in 2017

“This is pleasing in the constrained environment of foreign currency shortages and the negative impact this has on margins and merchandise assortments.”

“Growth in turnover has slowed due to under-planning of winter assortments in the Jet chain and Edgars has been affected by the civil servant involvement in electoral roll verification. Despite these setbacks we are still showing real growth on the top line,” said Masterson in a trading update.

Gross margins for the Edgars Chain have come down from 46 percent in 2017 to 43 percent, while Jet has maintained sales margins at 38 percent.

The MD said finance income (LPC and debtors interest) dropped from $3 million last year to $2,3 million this year.

“This is a result of a cleaner debtors’ book driven by consistent civil servants salaries, enhanced control environment from the ERP system and good efforts from our collections teams.”

The retail business’s operating loss has come down from $1 million last year to $0,3 million this year.

Edgars said it “continues to focus on cost control,” with factory loss reducing from $208k last year to $25k in the current year.

“The factory now trades as a division of Edgars Stores Limited (from January 2018). The drive to export remains at the top of our agenda.”

Club Plus, the group’s new micro finance subsidiary, has grown to a loan book of $1 million at the end of April 2018. It however made a loss $54k year-to-date loss, which management attributed to ‘growing pains.’ They expect it to breakeven by June 2018.

Current debtors (net of allowance for credit losses) for the period under review stood at $21,4 million, a 3 percent increase from last year.

The group’s number of accounts as at end of April 2018 was 267 611, up from 255 080 in the prior period, with 59 percent being active. Active accounts however declined by 28k from last year.

Masterson said the clothing retailer’s inventory grew by 30 percent over last year.

Total borrowings for the period were down to $3, 7 million from $5, 3 million last year. The group says $1,3 million is payable within 12 months and the balance is payable over the next 3 years.

Finance costs have consequently come down by 50 percent compared to last year.

“We expect our borrowings to grow to fund the growth of the micro finance business unit and Capex requirements in the retail and manufacturing divisions,” said the MD.

Trade and other liabilities include foreign liabilities of $2,8 million and dividend accrual of $1 million.

Going forward, management said it maintains expectation of achieving 14 percent and 32 percent growth in turnover and PAT, respectively.

 

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