Can Warehouse boss Powell deliver profits from investments   14 Apr 2014

Article - BusinessDesk

FEATURE – Can Warehouse boss Powell deliver profits from new investments

By Tina Morrison

April 14 (BusinessDesk) Warehouse Group, New Zealand’s largest publicly listed retailer, expects its ‘red sheds’ to return to earnings growth next financial year as its store rejuvenation bears fruit and says the success of its drive to expand through acquisitions should be evident within three years.

Under chief executive Mark Powell, who notches up three years in the job next month, the company is investing $430 million over five years improving the quality of its private label brands, investing in staff and modernising the stores, in a bid to lure back customers and revive sales.

Powell says that two thirds of the way through the programme, the strategy is paying off with the ‘red sheds’ – its distinctive large store general goods format - posting 12 consecutive quarters of same store sales growth following seven years of decline.

“That’s a big swing,” Powell said on a tour of his store at the Albany Mega Centre. “We have got to put a lot of investment into the red sheds to turn around customer perception, invest in the stores, invest in the stock and invest in people. This is definitely starting to translate into increased transactions from more customers coming into store.”

Still, analysts and investors say the store improvements and rise in sales have come at the expense of profitability, with margins and profits at the red sheds declining in the first half of this financial year. Powell concedes that the rise in sales hasn’t yet translated into profits.

“It hasn’t translated into operating leverage yet,” Powell said. “The key word is yet. We would want to see it translating into operating leverage in the next financial year.”

Powell says Warehouse had underinvested in its 92 discount stores in the past, refitting just 10 stores in the nine years before he took over, when it should have been upgrading 12 to 13 stores a year.

“We have had to make a big step to catch back up and it will drop down by the end of calendar 2015 to a normal rate,” he said.

Powell is phasing out “cheap and nasty” private label brands for better quality products without raising the price after some products had a 20 percent return rate, damaging the Warehouse brand. Their Veon televisions are now the nation’s highest selling by unit after replacing Transonic two years ago. Under the new regime, a product is pulled from sale if it has a return rate of 5 percent.

To improve customer service, Warehouse has undertaken what it believes is the country’s biggest training programme of 6,000 employees, using actors to help staff understand what it feels like emotionally to interact with customers. Powell says he is avoiding short term benefits that could result from cutting staff numbers because unstocked shelves, unpriced products or longer checkout queues “insidiously eats away at the experience”.

“The ‘red sheds’ is on a journey, it has taken a lot of investment and some heavy lifting after underinvestment,” Powell said. “We have now really speeded that up, whilst improving the product, improving the experience. It has taken a lot of investment. I think we are directionally right but it is not translating into profit enough yet.”

Analysts such as Nick Dravitzki at Devon Funds Management say the fundamental issue for the company is that it reached maturity as a discount retailer several years ago, as rivals such as Bunnings and Mitre 10 encroached into areas where Warehouse had been dominant. Meanwhile, Kmart and Farmers improved their competitiveness, and there is limited capacity for the company to expand its large-scale store format further.

But Powell rejects suggestions the ‘red sheds’ growth days are behind it.

“Red is not ex-growth at all, but the scale of growth wouldn’t be what we would expect in some of the other businesses,” he says. “Red is an important business. I will never accept it is mature. It will keep on evolving, but it is not going to be 20 percent growth or 15 percent growth.”

The stores are likely to increase underlying sales 3 to 5 percent in the future, which should translate into operating leverage and profit, he said. He declined to estimate profit growth.

For the second half of the current financial year, Warehouse executives are keeping a watchful eye on unseasonally warm weather, concerned it may dent winter sales. Meanwhile, the second-most important event after Christmas, the six-week period leading up Easter Sunday, is going well so far, with confectionary sales from its Waikato Valley chocolate factory up 20 percent on last year, said Red Sheds chief executive Simon Turner.

To expand group earnings, Powell aims to grow the ‘non-red’ side of his business to be as large as the red sheds, though he says this is a long-term aspirational target, given red sheds have about $1.6 billion in annual sales compared to non-red at about $650 million.

Warehouse has failed at some of its previous attempts to grow outside of its core business with its unsuccessful move into Australia, where it bought two small discount chains and tried to expand them to compete with larger Australian rivals, and its recent flirtation with a supermarket offering.

Powell, who succeeded in improving the performance of the company’s ‘blue shed’ stationery chain before taking the top job, is expanding the group through acquisition, buying 11 businesses in the past 18 months, adding technology and appliance retailer Noel Leeming, outdoor sports chain R&R Sports and online sporting goods retailer Torpedo7.

“In retail as a public company if you are not growing, you will end up in trouble,” Powell said. “As a group, we have got to add value to anything we acquire.”

Investors aren’t yet convinced that the strategy will improve profits. Warehouse shares are the second-worst performer on the NZX 50 benchmark index this year, down 14 percent against the index’s 7.5 percent gain. The stock is rated an average “sell” according to analysts polled by Reuters.

“Not too many people would disagree with the idea that you probably need to do something to the business now because it has been weak for a number of years,” said Dravitzki, whose Devon Funds Management doesn’t own the shares. “You certainly can’t argue that they are not trying things, but the question is whether or not those things are successful and I think that thus far you would have to say that they are not.

“Some of the strategies make sense but won’t all necessarily be successful or add value to the business,” Dravitzki said. “It’s a matter of looking for evidence that they are beginning to actually show some signs of traction. It’s quite risky to imply into the price now significant value for these businesses that they have bought. “

Powell says he isn’t planning any more significant acquisitions in the next year and understands that investors may be wary at this stage.

“We think we have done the right things, we don’t think we have overpaid,” said Powell. “I can understand people saying the jury is out because we are in the middle of that transformation. Two or three years from now you can say whether we are successful or not.”

Devon’s Dravitzki says Powell’s attempts to grow the business are admirable.

“He deserves credit for being active,” Dravitzki said. “I’m looking forward to being convinced that the things he is doing will be successful but we are not there yet in terms of evidence of that.”

(BusinessDesk)

Add a comment

News

Hilary Timmins' Award-Winning UK Documentary Series To Inspire NZ Students

29 Jun 2020 Education
Dream Catchers, produced and directed by Hilary Timmins, celebrates the success stories of more than thirty inspirational New... more

New Zealand reaffirms support for Flight MH17 judicial process

7 Mar 2020 News By Rt HON WINSTON PETERS
Ahead of the start of the criminal trial in the Netherlands on 9 March, Foreign Minister Winston Peters has reaffirmed the need to... more

Business

NZ Government's Economic package to fight COVID-19

17 Mar 2020 Business News By RT HON JACINDA ARDERN
The Coalition Government has launched the most significant peace-time economic plan in modern New Zealand history to cushion the... more

NZ Government announces aviation relief package

19 Mar 2020 Business News By Hon Phil Twyford
Transport Minister Phil Twyford today outlined the first tranche of the $600 million aviation sector relief package announced earlier... more

Living

Diversity was Key at New Zealand Trade Tasting in London

6 Jun 2022 Food & Wine
New Zealand Winegrowers Annual Trade Tasting was recently held in London, on Wednesday 4 May, in Lindley Hall. It was the first... more

Kiwi author stuns Behind the Butterfly Gate

12 Jan 2022 Arts By Charlotte Everett
Hidden behind the Butterfly Gate is where the secret has been kept for 76 years...  New Zealand writer Merryn Corcoran’s... more

Property

Fairer rules for tenants and landlords

17 Nov 2019 Property By Minister Kris Faafoi
17 NOVEMBER 2019 The Government has delivered on its promise to the over one million New Zealanders who now rent to make it fairer... more

New Zealand Government will not implement a Capital Gains Tax

17 Apr 2019 Property By RT HON JACINDA ARDERN
The Coalition Government will not proceed with the Tax Working Group’s recommendation for a capital gains tax, Jacinda Ardern... more

Migration

Boosting border security with electronic travel authority – now over 500,000 issued

19 Nov 2019 Migration By Hon Iain Lees-Galloway
19 NOVEMBER 2019 We’ve improved border security with the NZeTA, New Zealand Electronic Travel Authority, which helps us to... more

Christchurch reinstated as refugee settlement location

18 Aug 2018 Migration
18 AUGUST 2018 HON IAIN LEES-GALLOWAY The announcement that Christchurch can once again be a settlement location for refugees... more

Travel

Gallipoli Anzac Day services cancelled

19 Mar 2020 Travel & Tourism By RT HON JACINDA ARDERN
The New Zealand and Australian Governments have announced this year’s joint Anzac Day services at Gallipoli will be cancelled... more

New Zealanders advised not to travel overseas

19 Mar 2020 Travel & Tourism
New Zealanders advised not to travel overseas more

Sport

The Skipper's Diary: Sir Richard Hadlee honouring his father and NZ's Forty-Niners

27 Oct 2019 Cricket By Charlotte Everett
NZNewsUK London Editor Charlotte Everett spoke to Sir Richard Hadlee about why he’s chosen to publish his father’s... more

PREVIEW: All Blacks v England semi-final

26 Oct 2019 Rugby
The two most convincing quarterfinals winners are set to square off in a semifinal showdown for the ages when the All Blacks meet old... more

Columns

Gordon Campbell on the Gareth Morgan crusade

11 Nov 2016 Opinion
Gordon Campbell on the Gareth Morgan crusade First published on Werewolf The ghastly likes of Marine Le Pen in France and Geert ... more

Gordon Campbell on the US election outcome

10 Nov 2016 Opinion
Column - Gordon Campbell   Gordon Campbell on the US election outcome Well um.. on the bright side, there (probably)... more

Kiwi Success

Congratulations to Loder Cup winner

26 Sep 2018 People By Hon Eugenie Sage
25 SEPTEMBER 2018 The Loder Cup, one of New Zealand’s oldest conservation awards, has been awarded to Robert McGowan for 2018... more

Appointments to New Zealand National Commission for UNESCO

16 Aug 2018 Appointments
16 AUGUST 2018Appointments to New Zealand National Commission for UNESCO HON JENNY SALESA Associate Education Minister Jenny Salesa is... more

Recruitment

Historic pay equity settlement for education support workers

14 Aug 2018 Recruitment By RT HON JACINDA ARDERN
14 AUGUST 2018Historic pay equity settlement for education support workers RT HON JACINDA ARDERN HON CHRIS HIPKINS Prime Minister The... more

Historic pay equity settlement for education support workers

22 Aug 2018 Recruitment By RT HON JACINDA ARDERN
14 AUGUST 2018Historic pay equity settlement for education support workers RT HON JACINDA ARDERN HON CHRIS HIPKINS Prime Minister The... more