With underlying organic sales growth still negative and the shares trading on a current year prospective operating FCF yield of possibly under 3% markets are clearly reaching out into a future where a restoration in operating margins and possibly also near market average growth rating may also be in prospect. If one were to take a fairy upbeat assessment that the group ought to be able to justify an underlying growth rating of around +4% pa (and circa 7% Op FCF yield), then we estimate that the group needs to convince markets of its capacity to restore operating margins to near peak levels of around 5%, or to over +50% above where consensus estimates are currently for FY17. We may be through the trough, but is the pace of improvement currently being delivered by either Tesco or its competitors really enough to take us to these valuation highlands within a credible investment horizon? At this stage, the group needs to a capacity for some serious over-delivery rather than merely tracking existing expectations.
Wednesday, 7 October 2015
Tesco moves to stage 2 of its 'recovery'
UK supermarkets are a bit like the beer they used to sell; bland and
too many of them. Tesco however is working on that one as it culls its
less profitable sites and brands (including the #4 UK brand, Carlsberg)
to restore its growth and margin metrics, even it means from a lower
base of revenues and margins. Tesco's interim results released yesterday
therefore reflect this dynamic of what was a slight deterioration in
actual UK sales growth in Q2 to -0.9% YoY vs the -0.4% posted for Q1,
but having eliminated the weaker perfomers from the average meant that
the Q2 like for like sales in the UK surged from -1.3% to -1.0%, to take
the first half average to -1.1%. While a considerable improvement on
the prior trajectory, it was not without cost, with UK & RoI
operating profits collapsing by 69% (-£377m) to only £166m and a margin
down -200bps to only 0.9%. Given the profit decline of -£377m
substantially exceeded the underlying revenue decline of -£226m and that
the group had taken around £6.8bn of provisions last year to help pad
out the bottom line this is a pretty remarkable performance. Either
management is keeping its powder dry for the great cost led margin
rebound just ahead of their option vestings in 2-3 year time or the
apparent stabilisation in top line sales was expensively purchased out
of gross margins. While this may keep some pressure off the new
management, this is no substitute for a sustainable recovery,
particularly when the share price is still reaching out to well above
even where consensus forecasts are anticipating in FY17.
With underlying organic sales growth still negative and the shares trading on a current year prospective operating FCF yield of possibly under 3% markets are clearly reaching out into a future where a restoration in operating margins and possibly also near market average growth rating may also be in prospect. If one were to take a fairy upbeat assessment that the group ought to be able to justify an underlying growth rating of around +4% pa (and circa 7% Op FCF yield), then we estimate that the group needs to convince markets of its capacity to restore operating margins to near peak levels of around 5%, or to over +50% above where consensus estimates are currently for FY17. We may be through the trough, but is the pace of improvement currently being delivered by either Tesco or its competitors really enough to take us to these valuation highlands within a credible investment horizon? At this stage, the group needs to a capacity for some serious over-delivery rather than merely tracking existing expectations.
With underlying organic sales growth still negative and the shares trading on a current year prospective operating FCF yield of possibly under 3% markets are clearly reaching out into a future where a restoration in operating margins and possibly also near market average growth rating may also be in prospect. If one were to take a fairy upbeat assessment that the group ought to be able to justify an underlying growth rating of around +4% pa (and circa 7% Op FCF yield), then we estimate that the group needs to convince markets of its capacity to restore operating margins to near peak levels of around 5%, or to over +50% above where consensus estimates are currently for FY17. We may be through the trough, but is the pace of improvement currently being delivered by either Tesco or its competitors really enough to take us to these valuation highlands within a credible investment horizon? At this stage, the group needs to a capacity for some serious over-delivery rather than merely tracking existing expectations.
Labels:
carlsberg,
provisions,
recovery,
store closures,
tesco
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