DANIEL
THWAITES PLC
RESULTS
FOR YEAR ENDED 31 MARCH
2024
CHAIRMAN’S
STATEMENT
The
Company has grown and turned in a robust performance during a
period of high-cost inflation and economic uncertainty. The market
positioning of its managed properties towards more premium segments
and the resilience of its tenanted community pubs, together with
its freehold property model has prevailed.
The first
half of the year was level with the previous year and a stronger
Christmas period allowed growth in both turnover and profits year
on year, although conversion was a challenge due to higher costs.
The winter period saw a succession of storms batter the UK and was
one of the wettest on record. Easter fell early, but coincided with
another wet and cold period and so did not kick start the spring
season as it would usually do. That has not happened until the
middle of May, with the arrival of some warmer and more settled
weather.
The
previously announced development of Langdale Chase Hotel in the
Lake District is complete and the hotel is open and trading
profitably. This is the largest investment the Company has made in
the past 15 years and it has made quite an impact on the Lake
District hotel market with favourable press reviews and strong
customer feedback.
Results
Turnover
for the year to 31 March 2024 grew by
6% to £115.5m (2023: £108.8m).
Operating
profit before property disposals grew by 4% to £11.3m (2023:
£10.9m).
The
earnings per share was 12.4p (2023: 21.9p).
Net Debt
at 31 March 2024 was £70.8m (2023:
£66.7m), which is an increase of £4.1m as a result of a larger than
normal investment programme.
The Bank
of England has continued to
respond to higher inflation by raising interest rates to 5.25% from
4.25% at the end of March 2023. This
increase in interest rates impacts the discount rate used to value
the Company’s pension scheme and interest rate swap liabilities. As
a result, we have seen a decrease of £1.3m in our swap liabilities
to £2.6m and an increase in our pension scheme surplus of £2.7m to
£34.9m.
The
profits retained for the year together with these positive impacts
on our balance sheet provided a net asset value per share at
31 March 2024 of £4.26 (2023:
£4.12).
Acquisitions,
Developments and Disposals
During the
year we have not acquired any trading assets, although we have
evaluated a number of opportunities. Valuations remain uncertain in
the current economic climate and prices for high quality assets
have not adjusted much from the past few years despite increases in
interest rates.
We
invested £18.3m (2023: £15.6m) to improve the quality and offering
in our existing properties including the completion of the full
refurbishment of Langdale Chase, which was a significant
spend.
The
Company has sold eleven bottom end pubs and two ancillary
properties with total proceeds of £3.8m (2023: £3.1m).
Dividend
An interim
dividend of 0.85p (2023: 0.75p) was paid in January 2024 and the Board recommends a final
dividend of 2.5p (2023: 2.4p). The Board will keep the level of
dividend under review, continuing to assess the level of future
dividend in the light of Company performance.
Board
I would
like to recognise and celebrate the contribution made to the
Company by Ann Yerburgh, who joined
the Board in March 1974. Over 50
years she has been a longstanding director, inspiring chairman and
a wonderful champion of the business. I would like to thank her for
her ongoing support and wise counsel.
People
Daniel
Thwaites is unbeatable when it harnesses the immense power of a
family of teams working together, collectively we are more than the
sum of our parts.
We have
continued to celebrate the outstanding efforts made by individuals
and teams across the Company at our Pride of Daniel Thwaites
Awards. This year the event was held in Manchester and was a tremendous success with
over 230 attendees. Over 1,000 nominations were received from
across the business with our team members calling each other out
for the amazing contributions being made by their colleagues. It is
a very positive event and serves well to highlight both the
individual and team performances that help us to be such a
successful business.
Fortunately,
the challenges of inflation that have been a problem for us all
over the past two years appear, for the moment, to be receding.
Wages are currently growing faster than inflation and that will
help the pressure to ease. I would like to thank all of the
Company’s employees for their hard work over the past year to help
the Company deliver a robust performance.
I would
also like to thank our shareholders, your support has helped us to
come through a rocky period, but the Company is in excellent shape
for the future.
Outlook
Factors
that have been against us for the last few years, including
inflation, a difficult employment market and the cost of living
crisis are now abating and we are hopeful that the coming year will
present a more stable trading environment.
The UEFA
European football championships present a good opportunity for pubs
this summer, the inns continue to increase market share locally,
our hotels are benefitting from a stronger corporate market and we
have high hopes for the first full year of trading at Langdale
Chase.
This last
year has been one of confident investment across every area of the
Company and that places us in a very strong position to move our
performance forward in this current financial year. We have high
expectations that, all things being equal, this coming year will be
a good one.
R
A J Bailey
Chairman
18 June
2024
|
|
|
|
OPERATING
REVIEW
Overview
The
Company got off to a strong start this financial year, with a fine
period of weather early in the year helping the pubs and inns to
post excellent early results. The summer was largely a wash-out,
but September and October were good months and Christmas held up to
expectations, before a prolonged period of storms and wet weather
took hold until the spring.
The
employment market now seems to have stabilised such that we have
largely been able to fully staff our properties, which has been a
challenge in the last few years. This has been aided by the staff
accommodation that we have invested in over the last two years and
we are in as good a position to capitalise on our opportunities
when they present themselves as we have been for a
while.
The level
of investment in our properties and teams has paid off, with
improving Net Promoter Scores and customer reviews across both our
inns and hotels both of which will help drive return visits and
increased profitability.
Financial
results
Turnover
for the year was £115.5m, (2023: £108.8m), an increase of 6%. The
operating profit for the year was £11.5m, (2023: £12.3m). The
profit before tax, which benefited from a mark to market gain on
interest rate swaps was £9.1m (2023: £15.1m). Net debt increased to
£70.8m, (2023: £66.7m) an increase of £4.1m. At the year end the
company had banking facilities of £82m, giving headroom to its debt
facilities of £11.2m.
The
tenanted pubs continued to benefit from the 2023/24 Retail,
Hospitality and Leisure Business Rates Relief (RHL) scheme which
provides eligible, occupied, retail, hospitality, and leisure
properties with a 50% relief, up to a cash cap limit of £110,000
per business from 1 April 2023 to
31 March 2024. We received £110,000
in total for our managed business.
Pubs
and Inns
Understanding
our Pubs
Our
freehold estate of tenanted pubs numbers approximately 200
properties. We continue to recycle capital into new, more
attractive tenanted and managed pub opportunities, where there is
the potential to invest and add value and so we continue to dispose
of pubs that we do not believe have a long-term future with
us.
Our pub
estate encompasses community locals to destination food led pubs in
both rural and town centre locations, ranging geographically from
Cumbria to the Midlands, and from North Wales to Yorkshire.
We have
been operating tenanted pubs for a long time, and we have a strong
reputation for our well-established approach. We strongly value our
reputation as a partner of choice, acting with integrity, and
focusing on investing alongside proven operators to expand and
improve the premises with a focus on establishing good quality food
offerings. Where the property has the scope, and we believe the
demand exists, we support the development of letting bedrooms. We
have an estate of high quality, sustainable businesses with
multiple income streams that have the ability to generate
attractive cashflows.
Our
tenanted pubs are a mature business, looking to deliver returns at
least in line with inflation. They tend to be heavily influenced by
weather and so are subject to the vagaries of the British
summer.
Pubs
performance
The
turnover of our tenanted pubs increased year on year by 8%, with
EBITDA and operating profit increasing by 4%.
The pub
market continues to be a very challenging environment in which to
trade, and we have continued to see a churn in our pub customers in
our tenanted estate, albeit at a lower level than in the previous
year. As a result, disruption in the tenanted estate continues to
be at a higher level than we have historically
experienced.
The number
of pubs that needed to be re-let started the year at 21, with nine
closed pubs and finished the year at 20, with eleven closed pubs –
eight of which were under offer to new tenanted customers, which
was encouraging. Enquiries from parties looking to run their own
business in one of our pubs are high and we continue to see high
quality candidates coming forward.
In
addition, we have continued to run pubs on our WayInn Franchise
Agreement, which helps to keep pubs open when an operator leaves
and we do not have an operator ready to take the pub on with a
traditional brewery tenancy, these have increased to 16 pubs at the
year end, up by one pub year on year. Several of these pubs have
become multi- year WayInn franchises as some operators prefer this
lower risk approach to running a pub.
Beer
volumes increased by 1% year on year with wines and spirits down by
2% and soft drinks 1% ahead. Tenanted pub sales increased by 5% and
gross margin fell by 0.4%, as we chose to support pubs through
discounts. Machine income continued a good run, up strongly year on
year as digital machines and changes in the market provided
attractive conditions.
The costs
of running a pub have increased substantially over the past few
years, and in particular utilities and wage costs are testing pubs
to the limit. From 1 April 2024 the
national minimum wage increased by 9.8%, substantially ahead of
inflation, creating additional pressure on the profitability of
pubs. Utility bills have started to ease and the business rate
relief provided by the government to smaller pubs is welcome, but
due to expire in April 2025. We
continue to lobby the government to extend it, it is an investment
in local communities and employment and it would be short sighted
to abandon it.
We had a
very busy year of investment into the tenanted pubs with 6 major
schemes and a further 44 schemes of up to £100,000. In total a
quarter of our pubs received investment of one sort or another.
Transformational schemes were delivered at The Duke, Blackpool,
The Buck, Clitheroe, The Victoria
and The Grey Horse, both in Accrington.
Brewery
Our
award-winning craft brewery continues to go from strength to
strength. This year we launched a new Pale Ale in keg, Paradise No.
3, at an ABV of 4.3% it plays to an attractive segment of the
market with a strong design and stand out on the bar, the initial
feedback has been most encouraging.
Understanding
our Inns
We own and
manage a growing portfolio of inns and we will continue to look to
expand this segment of our business in the future through the
acquisition of high-quality properties in outstanding
locations.
Our Inns
are positioned at the premium end of the market, they have a busy
bar at their core, a home cooked food offering and high quality,
comfortable accommodation – they focus on providing outstanding
hospitality and offer an attractive and more personal alternative
to the mid-market hotel chains.
This
segment of the market has performed strongly over the past few
years and is positioned for continued growth as customers look for
something special that is authentic and honest, delivered by
operators who can provide a quality experience
consistently.
Inns
performance
Our
strategy this year was to moderate price increases in the Inns in
the face of general pressures on the disposable income of our
customers to protect the volume of sales. This helped the inns to
increase sales by 11% on the previous year, and it was most
encouraging to see strong growth in our drink sales. Last year we
hoped for a rebound in the profitability of the inns this year and
so it was encouraging to record that EBITDA increased by 15%
overall, a strong performance.
The market
for our inns is an attractive one, and when the conditions are
right, they trade very well. The biggest scheme of the year was an
upgrade of eleven bedrooms at the Manor House at The Red Lion,
Burnsall, which was delivered at the start of April. We are in the
process of delivering schemes at The Golden Lion, Settle and The
Fleece, Cirencester which will put
those two properties in a strong position to trade well this
summer.
The
government sponsorship scheme to attract workers from overseas has
played an important role over the past few years in bolstering our
teams both in our kitchens and front of house, for roles that we
could not fill from within the United
Kingdom. It was disappointing therefore that the government
increased the threshold for skilled worker roles from £26,200 to
£38,700 from April 2024.
We
received planning permission to convert Lendal House in York, which we acquired in October 2021, into 7 bedrooms to complement The
Judge’s Lodging and when the York
accommodation market strengthens, we look forward to delivering
that project.
Understanding
our Hotels & Spas
We own and operate ten hotels which are spread across England. Our hotels are positioned towards the
premium end of the market and most have leisure and spa facilities.
In recent years we have invested in them to amplify the individual
character of each hotel in its local area, supported by a great
food and drink offering with local nuances. Our vision, similar to
our inns, is to create a collection of interesting, characterful
contemporary hotels, that are the best in their local
area.
Hotels & Spas performance
Turnover increased by 3%, driven wholly by an increase in
occupancy, as we found it difficult to increase the average room
rate during the year. Overall rooms yield also increased by 3%, our
spas continued to be a positive influence on the overall sales mix,
and their sales were up by 15% year on year. The increase in
turnover was sufficient to cover the increase in our costs and
profits were flat year on year.
In September 2022 we closed Langdale
Chase for a major refurbishment which was scheduled to reopen in
November 2023. The project was
delivered on time and largely to budget and has reopened to strong
reviews and coverage in the press. We were pleased that it was
placed third in the Times Top 100 Hotels in the UK, and the best
hotel in the North.
During the year we invested in bedrooms and meeting rooms at Aztec
Hotel & Spa and in solar panels on the roofs of Aztec Hotel
& Spa, Kettering Hotel & Spa and Solent Hotel & Spa.
Investment in energy saving is at the heart of our investment
programme where it makes sense and we can deliver a reasonable
return on capital, the initial signs from these schemes are
positive and they are delivering mid-teens returns on capital
employed.
Summary and future developments
The Company has delivered top line growth of 6% in the past year,
which has converted to operating profit (before property disposals)
growth of 4%. This has been delivered against a backdrop of large
swings in our costs, particularly utility costs, embedded inflation
and pressure on people’s discretionary spend.
A lot of focus this year has been directed towards the development
of Langdale Chase, which was shut for the key trading period and
was a drag to performance this year. However, we are pleased with
the development that we have undertaken and it is now open, trading
profitably and contributing to our overall results. We look forward
to it making a meaningful contribution in the coming
years.
The pubs are trading well and whilst we have more closed than we
would like, our disposal programme has slowed considerably, and we
are positive about their future prospects We have prospective
operators identified and signed up to continue reopening many of
our closures over the next few months. Our investments in the pubs
are working and making us good returns, ahead of our hurdle rates.
Our customers continue to look for more premium products and our
drinks range, food offering and pubs, inns and hotels cater to that
trend.
We have a strong development pipeline right across the business,
but are not looking to significantly increase our debt levels. If
anything, we would like to reduce them slightly so that when
opportunities arise to make acquisitions, we are in a strong
position to do so.
There is plenty of opportunity within the business to grow our
profitability without acquisitions and we are wholly focused on
delivering that this coming year.
Financial
Review
Results
Turnover for the year ended 31 March
2024 increased by 6% to £115.5m (2023: £108.8m), whilst
operating profit was 7% lower at £11.5m (2023: £12.3m), due to
lower profits on disposal of properties.
The measurement of the interest rate swaps at fair value resulted
in a gain in the profit and loss account of £1.3m (2023:
£6.6m).
Profit before taxation for the year was £9.1m (2023:
£15.1m).
Business Review
The key issues facing the Group are covered in the Chairman’s
Statement and Strategic Report. The KPIs used by the Group to
monitor its overall financial position can be summarised as
follows:
|
2024
|
2023
|
|
|
|
Group
|
£m
|
£m
|
|
|
|
Turnover
|
115.5
|
108.8
|
EBITDA
|
18.0
|
19.1
|
Depreciation
|
6.5
|
6.8
|
Operating profit
|
11.5
|
12.3
|
Profit before tax
|
9.1
|
15.1
|
Net debt
|
70.8
|
66.7
|
Earnings per share (pence)
|
12.4
|
21.9
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Pubs and Inns
|
|
|
|
£m
|
£m
|
Turnover
|
63.0
|
57.7
|
EBITDA
|
17.1
|
17.6
|
Depreciation
|
3.2
|
3.2
|
Operating profit (before Group central charges)
|
13.9
|
14.4
|
Average number
Tenanted
Managed
|
204
14
|
211
14
|
|
|
|
Hotels & Spas
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
£m
|
£m
|
Turnover
|
52.5
|
51.1
|
EBITDA
|
9.1
|
9.3
|
Depreciation
|
2.9
|
3.1
|
Operating profit (before Group central charges)
|
6.2
|
6.2
|
Average number
|
10
|
10
|
The principal non-financial indicators monitored by management
are:
Pubs and Inns
Utility consumption, health and safety incidents, beer volumes,
customer ratings and tenant recruitment.
Hotels
Utility consumption, room occupancy rates, customer ratings, health
and safety incidents, spa memberships and wedding and event
numbers.
Interest rate swaps measured at fair
value
The Group holds derivative liabilities in the form of interest rate
swaps for £45m which are recognised as a financial
liability.
The movement in the fair value of these interest rate swaps during
the year resulted in a gain in the profit and loss account for the
year ended 31 March 2024 of £1.3m
(2023: £6.6m). See note 18 to the financial statements for further
details.
Interest payable
Net interest payable increased to £5.2m (2023: £4.1m) due to higher
debts levels and higher interest rates.
Taxation
There is a tax charge of £1.8m on the profit for the year, an
effective rate of 19.8%.
Earnings per share
Earnings per share of 12.4p (2023: 21.9p).
Dividend
An interim dividend of 0.85p has been paid and the Board recommends
a final dividend of 2.5p per share, which will make a total of
3.35p for 2024 (2023: 3.15p).
Cash flow and financing
The Group’s net borrowing increased by £4.1m, from £66.7m at
31 March 2023 to £70.8m at
31 March 2024 due to capital
expenditure.
The Group has £45m of long-term debt, £29m of bank loans and cash
balances of £3.2m at 31 March 2024.
The Group has three-year revolving credit bank facilities which
were renewed in the first quarter of 2023.
Pensions
On 31 December 2023 the Daniel
Thwaites Supplementary Pension Scheme was merged into the Daniel
Thwaites 1959 Pension Scheme, in order to simplify the calculation
of benefits and reduce future costs. At 31
March 2024 the scheme had a surplus, before tax, of £34.9m
which was an increase of £2.7m from the combined surplus of £32.2m,
before tax, at 31 March
2023.
The Group did not pay any contributions into the scheme in the year
and the scheme paid all its administration costs.
Property
During the year we sold eleven pubs and two ancillary properties
for a total of £3.8m generating a profit against book value, after
disposal costs, of £0.2m.
In line with our accounting policy, 20% of our properties were
subject to a formal revaluation, and additionally an impairment
review was carried out on the rest of our property
estate.
This resulted in an increase in the total value of our property
portfolio of £2.0m, of which £2.2m was added to the revaluation
reserve and £0.2m deducted from cost and charged to the profit and
loss account.
Treasury policy and financial risk
management
Treasury policies are subject to Board approval. All borrowings are
in sterling and comprise a mixture of fixed interest loans and
facilities carrying SONIA related floating rates. The Group has
interest rate swaps for £45m where it is committed to pay the
difference between SONIA and fixed interest rates. At 31 March 2024 a financial liability of £2.6m has
been recognised in respect of these interest rate swap
contracts.
Going Concern
At 31 March 2024 the Company had
total borrowing facilities of £82m, which were made up of the
long-term loan of £45m, revolving credit facilities of £35m, and
overdraft facilities of £2m. When compared to net debt of £70.8m at
31 March 2024, this gave headroom of
£11.2m.
The Company has generated positive operating cashflows over the
period, such that it has invested £18.3m in capital expenditure
during the year and has comfortably met all of its banking
covenants. Its financial modelling shows that it is expected to be
cash generative and meet its banking covenants for at least the
next twelve months from the date of signing the financial
statements.
The directors therefore have a reasonable expectation that the
Group has sufficient resources to continue in operational
existence, and meet its liabilities as they fall due, for the
period of at least 12 months from the approval of these financial
statements. Accordingly, the directors continue to adopt a going
concern basis of preparation of these financial
statements.
Kevin
Wood
Finance Director
18 June 2024
EXTRACT
FROM AUDITED FULL FINANCIAL STATEMENTS FOR THE YEAR
ENDED
31 MARCH 2024
GROUP
PROFIT AND LOSS ACCOUNT
|
|
|
|
|
2024
£’m
|
2023
£’m
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Turnover
|
|
|
|
|
115.5
|
108.8
|
Cost of
sales
|
|
|
|
|
(90.1)
|
(85.2)
|
Gross
profit
|
|
|
|
|
25.4
|
23.6
|
Distribution
costs
|
|
|
|
|
(5.4)
|
(4.4)
|
Administrative
expenses
|
|
|
|
|
(8.8)
|
(8.4)
|
Other
operating income
|
|
|
|
|
0.1
|
0.1
|
Operating
profit before property disposals
|
|
|
|
|
11.3
|
10.9
|
Property
disposals
|
|
|
|
|
0.2
|
1.4
|
Operating
profit
|
|
|
|
|
11.5
|
12.3
|
Net
interest payable
Gain on
interest rate swaps measured at fair value
|
|
|
|
|
(5.2)
1.3
|
(4.1)
6.6
|
Net finance
income on pension asset
|
|
|
|
|
1.5
|
0.3
|
Profit
on ordinary activities before taxation
|
|
|
|
|
9.1
|
15.1
|
Taxation on
profit for the year
|
|
|
|
|
(1.8)
|
(2.2)
|
Profit
on ordinary activities after taxation
|
|
|
|
|
7.3
|
12.9
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Basic
and diluted earnings per share
12.4p
21.9p
DANIEL
THWAITES PLC
GROUP
BALANCE SHEET
At
31 March 2024
|
2024
£’m
|
2023
£’m
|
___________________________________________________________________________
|
_______
|
_______
|
Fixed
Assets
|
|
|
Tangible
assets
|
312.2
|
302.0
|
Investments
___________________________________________________________________________
|
0.8
_______
|
0.8
_______
|
|
313.0
|
302.8
|
Current
assets
|
|
|
Stocks
|
0.9
|
0.9
|
Trade and
other debtors
|
6.7
|
5.9
|
Cash at
bank and in hand
___________________________________________________________________________
|
3.2
_______
|
2.0
_______
|
Creditors
due within one year
|
10.8
|
8.8
|
|
|
|
Trade and
other creditors
|
(20.7)
|
(20.0)
|
Loan
capital and bank overdraft
___________________________________________________________________________
|
-
_______
|
(1.7)
_____
|
|
(20.7)
|
(21.7)
|
Net
current liabilities
___________________________________________________________________________
|
(9.9)
_______
|
(12.9)
_______
|
Total
assets less current liabilities
|
303.1
|
289.9
|
Creditors
due after one year
Deferred
tax
___________________________________________________________________________
|
(76.6)
(10.6)
______
|
(70.6)
(9.5)
_______
|
Net
assets excluding pension asset
___________________________________________________________________________
|
215.9
_______
|
209.8
_______
|
Pension
asset
___________________________________________________________________________
|
34.9
_______
|
32.2
_______
|
Net
assets including pension asset
___________________________________________________________________________
|
250.8
_______
|
242.0
_______
|
Capital
and reserves
|
|
|
Called up
share capital
|
14.7
|
14.7
|
Capital
redemption reserve
|
1.1
|
1.1
|
Revaluation
reserve
|
78.6
|
77.2
|
Profit and
loss account
|
156.4
|
149.0
|
___________________________________________________________________________
|
_______
|
________
|
Equity
shareholders’ funds
___________________________________________________________________________
|
250.8
________
|
242.0
________
|
DANIEL
THWAITES PLC
GROUP
CASH FLOW STATEMENT
For
the year ended 31 March
2024
__________________________________________________________________________
|
2024
£’m
_______
|
2023
£’m
_______
|
Cash
flow from operating activities
|
18.4
|
16.8
|
|
|
|
Tax
paid
|
(1.3)
|
(2.0)
|
Cash flow
from financing activities
|
2.2
|
(5.5)
|
Cash flow
from investing activities
|
(14.5)
|
(12.7)
|
Equity
dividends paid
__________________________________________________________________________
|
(1.9)
_______
|
(1.7)
_______
|
Increase
(decrease) in cash and cash equivalents
Cash and
cash equivalents at beginning of year
__________________________________________________________________________
Cash
and cash equivalents at end of year
Loan
capital
__________________________________________________________________________
Net
debt
|
2.9
0.3
_______
3.2
(74.0)
_______
(70.8)
|
(5.1)
5.4
_______
0.3
(67.0)
_______
(66.7)
|
Reconciliation
of net cash flow to movement in net debt
|
|
|
Increase
(decrease) in cash
|
2.9
|
(5.1)
|
Cash flow
from increase in debt
___________________________________________________________________________
|
(7.0)
_______
|
-
_______
|
|
(4.1)
|
(5.1)
|
Net debt at
beginning of year
___________________________________________________________________________
|
(66.7)
_______
|
(61.6)
_______
|
Net
debt at end of year
___________________________________________________________________________
|
(70.8)
________
|
(66.7)
________
|
Note
The full
Annual Report and Accounts 2024 are available on the website:
www.thwaites.co.uk