10 December 2024
Naked Wines
plc
('Naked
Wines' or 'Group')
Half year results for the 26
weeks ended 30 September 2024
'Trading in line with
guidance; strategic initiatives and testing are generating valuable
learnings and progressing according to plan'
Naked Wines is pleased to announce
its results for the 26 weeks ended 30
September 2024 (HY25)
Commenting on the HY25 performance, Rodrigo Maza, CEO,
said:
"Naked Wines is in a better position, both financially and
strategically. We now have robust financial foundations, and our
members remain loyal and engaged. Our strategic initiatives centred
around customer acquisition and retention are generating learnings,
and we are currently experiencing solid trading during the peak
season period."
"I am pleased to welcome Dominic as our new CFO. His
experience in digital and international businesses have helped him
quickly transition, and I look forward to working with him as we
focus the business on cash, profitability and
growth."
Financials
|
HY25
|
HY24
|
vs. HY24
|
Constant FX
|
Income Statement
|
Total revenue
|
£112.3m
|
£132.3m
|
(15)%
|
(14)%
|
General and administrative
costs1
|
£(15.7)m
|
£(18.6)m
|
(16)%
|
(15)%
|
Adjusted EBIT2 - excl.
inventory liquidation costs*
|
£0.6m
|
£2.6m
|
(77)%
|
(77)%
|
Inventory liquidation
costs*
|
£(3.7)m
|
£(0.5)m
|
640%
|
640%
|
Adjusted
EBIT3
|
£(3.1)m
|
£2.2m
|
(241)%
|
(248)%
|
Adjusted
items4
|
£(1.9)m
|
£(10.9)m
|
(83)%
|
(84)%
|
Statutory operating
loss
|
£(5.0)m
|
£(8.7)m
|
(43%)
|
(48%)
|
Statutory loss before
tax
|
£(5.6)m
|
£(9.7)m
|
(42)%
|
(46)%
|
Cash and Inventory
|
Net cash (excl. lease
liabilities)5
|
£22.9m
|
£2.8m
|
716%
|
546%
|
Closing inventory
|
£139.2m
|
£188.7m
|
(26)%
|
(21)%
|
Customer metrics
|
|
Active members in last 12
months6
|
706,000
|
799,000
|
(12)%
|
|
Customer
NPS7
|
76
|
73
|
4%
|
|
5-Year forecast
Payback8
|
1.0x
|
1.3x
|
(0.3)x
|
|
Repeat customer sales
retention
|
74%
|
72%
|
+200bps
|
|
* Inventory liquidation
costs include changes to the US stock provision, losses on disposal
and other wine liquidation costs
Notes:
1. Refer to the reconciliation of
general and administrative (G&A) costs in the APM section at
the end of this announcement for a reconciliation of G&A costs
shown here to those reported in the income statement.
2. Refer to the table in the APM
section at the end of this announcement for a reconciliation of
adjusted EBIT excluding inventory liquidation transactions to
adjusted EBIT.
3. Refer to the reconciliation of
reported performance to management adjusted basis in the APM
section at the end of this announcement for a reconciliation of
adjusted EBIT to operating loss (reported EBIT).
4. Refer to note 6 Adjusted items
for further details.
5. Refer to the table in the APM
section at the end of this announcement for an analysis of net cash
(excluding lease liabilities).
6. Active members includes all
members with either an Angel or Wine Genie membership. HY24
restated from 792k to include Wine Genie members
7. HY24 customer NPS updated for
new calculation methodology, comparable to HY25. HY24 reported
score of 66 is not comparable to HY25
8. HY24 is the latest forecast,
original forecast 1.5x.
Financial highlights
Trading remains in line with previously communicated
guidance:
●
Liquidity continues to improve, and is slightly
ahead of the Group's treasury policy target:
o Net cash (excluding lease liabilities) of £22.9m, is an
increase of £20.1m versus HY24, driven by stock reductions,
partially offset by a reduction in payables; this also includes
£9.1m inflow from the early redemption of the Vendor Loan
Note
●
HY25 revenue declined to £112.3m (HY24
£132.3m)
●
HY25 adjusted EBIT excluding inventory
liquidation and associated costs were £0.6m
●
HY25 adjusted EBIT of £(3.1)m is down on HY24 by
£5.3m, reflecting:
o +£2.9m of G&A savings from the FY24
reorganisation
o -£4.6m impact of lower sales
o -£3.7m of inventory liquidation and associated costs,
including a £2.5m increase to the US stock provision and £1.2m of
losses on disposal and other wine liquidation costs
●
Statutory loss before tax of £(5.6)m (HY24:
£(9.7)m), includes £1.9m of adjusted items, £1.8m of which relates
to under-absorption of current year's winery overheads in the
US
Operational highlights
Enhancements to the management team:
● Rodrigo Maza
appointed as CEO in April 2024, implementing a comprehensive
strategic initiatives and testing programme, and leading the
adoption of a high performance culture
● Dominic Neary
was welcomed to the Naked Wines team in November 2024 as CFO, and
brings significant experience at international high growth
consumer, digital and FMCG companies
Our 'Core' members remain highly engaged:
customer NPS remains excellent, increasing to 76
(from 73 in HY24) and retention of core customers (greater than 24
months since acquisition) has increased to 79% (from 77% in
HY24).
Strategic initiatives and testing have resulted in valuable
learnings and are progressing according to plan; improvements are
required in payback:
● Retention: Material improvements in
retention are feeding through to KPIs, including the impact of
redesigned on-boarding flows and processes such as
ratings
● Acquisition: Customer acquisition cost
increases have been a key driver in the decline of payback to 1.0x
in HY25 (HY24: 1.3x), largely reflecting the industry-wide decline
in the voucher mechanic, as well as testing of increased volumes in
the Wine Genie product. In the second half, we are testing the
redirection of some of our voucher spend into more efficient
channels such as Earned Media. Payback will benefit from this
alongside tailwinds from improvements in retention and
personalisation
● Personalisation: Recently re-launched
new user journeys are delivering significant improvements in
conversion, most notably the newly launched Angel acquisition
journey, where we have seen improved conversion uplifts in the UK
of between 16% and 43% across channels
Outlook
●
Early peak season trading has been solid;
liquidity and cash continuing to improve
●
FY25 performance is currently expected to be in
line with the guidance previously given (as detailed at the end of
the CFO statement)
●
US inventory, whilst in line with previously
communicated plans, remains overstocked; we are reviewing options
to release capital from inventory; some of these would drive
improved cash in FY26 and FY27, but could lead to increased
liquidation costs, and result in EBIT at the lower end of
guidance
●
A performance review is underway, proactively
evaluating options to maximise shareholder value; we will report
back by the end of the financial year.
Analyst and investor conference call:
Naked Wines plc will host an
analyst and investor conference call at 9am UK-time today (10
December 2024). The briefing will be webcast using the following
link:
Naked Wines Half Year Results | SparkLive | LSEG
A recording will also be made
available on the Results section of the investor website
www.nakedwinesplc.co.uk
shortly after the conference
call
For further information, please contact:
Naked Wines plc
Rodrigo Maza, CEO
Dominic Neary, CFO
Catherine Miles / Libby
Bundock
|
IR@nakedwines.com
|
Investec (NOMAD & Joint Broker)
David Flin / Ben Farrow
|
Tel: 0207 597 5970
|
Jefferies (Joint Broker)
Ed Matthews / Harry le
May
|
Tel: 0207 029 8000
|
Vigo Consulting (Financial PR)
Tim McCall
|
Tel: 0207 390 0230
|
About Naked Wines plc
Naked Wines is not just an online
wine retailer; we're trailblazers on a mission to enable
enthusiastic wine drinkers to enjoy great wine without the
guesswork.
Founded in 2008, on the pillars of
quality, choice and fair pricing, we set out to create the most
inclusive wine club in the world - dedicated to transforming the
wine-buying experience and empowering people to make their own wine
choices, and championing world-class independent winemakers. We've
proudly been delivering outstanding wines to our customers for over
15 years.
Our business model is simple yet
innovative: Naked Wines funds the production costs for winemakers
upfront, allowing them to focus on creating exceptional wines
without the financial burdens of traditional wine production, while
passing the resulting savings back to our customers.
The virtuous circle is a win-win
for both wine lovers and winemakers, and enables us to deliver
superior benefits to our customers:
- Better quality wine
- More choice
- Personalised wine
recommendations
- Elimination of guesswork and
uncertainty
- Fair payments for all
involved
Our customers have direct access
to 290 of the world's best independent winemakers and over 2,300
quality wines from 23 countries. In the last 12 months, we served
more than 706,000 members in the US, UK and Australia, making us a
leading player in the fast-growing direct-to-consumer wine
market.
For more information visit
nakedwinesplc.co.uk
and nakedwines.co.uk or follow us @nakedwines
Group CEO review
Overview
I articulated my observations and
priorities in August during our FY24 results presentation, and
these remain unchanged:
● We now
have robust financial foundations in place. We restructured
our costs, landed a fit-for-purpose credit facility in July, and we
continue the sale of our surplus inventory with the UK and
Australia now returning to normal inventory levels, and US
inventories, whilst still significantly in excess, are nevertheless
down £20.5m on HY24.
● We have
embedded resilient management systems. These ensure focus
and alignment, enable the adoption of a high-performance culture
(with Engagement Results improving for the first time since 2022),
and drive winemaker success.
● We are
fully focused on getting Naked Wines back to sustainable
growth. We have been rolling out a comprehensive testing
plan since the start of the fiscal year to recruit the right
customers for the right reasons (Acquisition), bring them into the
relationship that best suits their needs (Personalisation), and
drive their long-term engagement and activation
(Retention).
Strategic
Initiatives
As shared a few months ago, we
continue to see improvements from our Testing Plan and are building
learnings across a number of areas, which we are already taking
action on. In Q4 we will share more details of this and the
implications they have on the trajectory of our company.
This plan challenges the
fundamental aspects of the business and, because of that, some of
our metrics are likely to be volatile during the testing phase.
Payback in H1 has been an example of this, although we see
tailwinds as we head into H2. Pleasingly, we note that early "peak
season" trading has been solid, and we are tracking in line with
FY25 expectations.
Retention improvements are
feeding through in our KPIs
We are increasingly confident of
improvements in both our Immature and Mature Retention (refer to
Glossary for definition). Redesigned on-boarding flows are helping
customers understand Naked's value proposition from the start, and
a new engagement approach (moving from focusing on discounts to
sharing relevant information about our wines and winemakers) is
reinvigorating our relationships with members across most
tenures.
A good example of this is our
recently relaunched 'wine ratings'; we know that there is a strong
correlation between completion of ratings and long-term retention
and value. The new ratings process has resulted in a 94% completion
of ratings versus 63% before. We are also seeing improvement in key
retention metrics - sales retention is up 2% year-on-year, and
retention of our core customers (more than 24 months since
acquisition) has improved from 77% in HY24 to 79% in
HY25.
Acquisition testing has
identified significant efficiencies to reverse the recent trend in
payback
The payback metric has
deteriorated in HY25 - a key driver of this has been Customer
Acquisition Cost (CAC), which has been adversely impacted by the
industry-wide decline in voucher efficiency. Naked has historically
over-invested in this area, and recent analysis and testing has
identified the opportunity to generate significant efficiencies as
we re-direct investment to more efficient channels such as earned
media. Included within guidance are identified efficiencies in H2
FY25, with incremental opportunities likely in FY26 - these should
improve payback going forward as we move away from legacy
strategies.
Finding the right channels to
develop continues to be a top priority. We're seeing early signs
that our priority channels are driving a virtuous cycle, e.g. using
PR and content creators for cost effective brand wide reach, then
converting more efficiently into new members via Meta, member
referral and brand search. We've invested in more robust mechanisms
to measure the effectiveness of our efforts and remain confident in
the potential of new growth avenues.
Recently re-launched product
journeys are delivering significant improvements in
conversion
Testing around Personalisation
continues to show good progress, with the LTVs of members acquired
through new funnels proving to be materially above average and the
conversion gaps being actively improved upon. I'm pleased to share
that enhancements to our Angel journey as well as our check-out
have produced material conversion benefits at this early stage. As
an example, we are seeing conversion uplifts in the acquisition of
new Angels across all channels, ranging from 16% to 43% - this
launch is being rolled out channel by channel between September and
January.
Current trading and
performance
We are currently within our peak
trading period, and results so far are tracking in line with our
expectations and overall guidance for FY25, but December remains
important to delivery. We'll provide a full trading update in late
January 2025. This will be followed by further insight into the
Strategic Initiatives outlined above and their outputs before the
end of our financial year.
Summary
Naked is in a better position,
both financially and strategically, than it was at the start of
FY25. While it is still early to claim definitive wins, we are
seeing positive outputs from our experiments and Strategic
Initiatives. We have big ambitions and are focused on the execution
of our strategy, with lots of opportunities available to us to
return to growth and a capable and motivated team in place to
deliver on it. We look forward to providing regular updates on
outputs and progress.
Rodrigo Maza
Group Chief Executive Officer
CFO Review
I would like to thank Maza and the
team for their warm welcome since joining as CFO in November. The
business has made significant progress in the last 12 months. Some
of this is clear with net cash (excluding lease liabilities) of
£22.9m, up £20.1m on HY24. Other improvements will take
longer to impact financial results fully.
Our members remain engaged
and loyal:
●
Customer NPS is excellent and improving at 76 (HY24: 73) -
once acquired, customers love our proposition
●
Sales retention has improved a further 200 bps to 74% (vs.
72% in HY24)
●
The trend in member decline is improving, in part due to the
fact that the exceptional acquisition levels, and therefore
attrition levels, from FY21 to FY23 cohorts are naturally reducing
over time
The strength of our core
membership continues to improve:
●
Sales from core members, who are more than 24 months old, has
increased to 74% of our business versus 67% in HY24
●
Member retention of this group has increased to 79% from 77%
last year
Payback has deteriorated in
the first half; actions are in hand to address
this:
The key drivers of the
deterioration to 1.0x in HY25 (HY24: 1.3x) are:
●
CAC (Customer Acquisition Cost) has substantially increased
in the US and the UK, although it has declined in Australia; this
reflects the increasingly inefficient cost of the voucher mechanic.
Testing has identified significant non-voucher channel
opportunities which will drive down investment levels in H2 and
into FY26, resulting in significant efficiencies, some of which
will drop down to the bottom line.
●
In the last 12 months, Naked Wines has been investing in
higher converting 'Wine Genie' members. Testing in the last three
months has shown that longer-term performance through this product
is weaker than forecast. Acquisition has largely pivoted back to
the Angel channel.
We are stepping up our focus
on profitability
Key drivers of this are: the
significant opportunities highlighted above in redirecting voucher
spend, and also ongoing improvements in procurement and arising
from our tech investments
Cash and liquidity are
strong
Naked Wines has made considerable
progress with liquidity in the last 12 months. Net cash (excluding
lease liabilities) of £22.9m is up £20.1m on HY24. As previously
communicated, the new credit facility was completed in July 2024
and total cash and credit facility capacity at half year was £62m.
Of this, £11m has been committed, via payment partners, to provide
security to Angel customer balances and £8m has been drawn
down. The remaining £43m is unpledged and puts the Group's
liquidity slightly in excess of the position required under our
treasury policy. As such, as part of our performance review, we are
assessing whether we are likely to have potential excess funds in
the future.
Separately, we are considering the
potential for making early duty payments to help offset increased
wine taxes coming into effect in 2025 - this would impact cash
levels at the end of FY25, and into FY26.
We are investigating options to speed up the proposed
reduction in our inventory
UK and Australia stock levels are
now returning to normal levels. Whilst progress has been made in
the US in line with previously communicated plans, the region
continues to remain significantly overstocked. We are currently
investigating options to reduce inventory levels more quickly; some
of these would drive improved cash in FY26 and FY27, but could lead
to increased liquidation costs, and result in EBIT at the lower end
of guidance.
The opportunities in the business
are significant, but considerable work remains to be done. For
example, we need to step up the pace of our digital simplification
and associated effectiveness. Having only recently joined, I am now
working with the team to perform a review, with a focus on
efficiency, speed and cashflow.
Group financial summary1:
|
HY25
|
HY24
|
HY25 vs
HY24
|
Constant
currency2
|
|
|
|
|
|
Total revenue3
|
£112.3m
|
£132.3m
|
(15)%
|
(14)%
|
Total adjusted revenue3
|
£112.3m
|
£131.6m
|
(15)%
|
(14)%
|
New
|
£7.9m
|
£9.1m
|
(13)%
|
(12)%
|
Repeat
|
£102.6m
|
£121.8m
|
(16)%
|
(15)%
|
Other
|
£1.9m
|
£0.7m
|
171%
|
36%
|
|
|
|
|
|
Investment in New
Customers
|
£(9.4)m
|
£(9.2)m
|
2%
|
3%
|
Repeat Customer
contribution
|
£25.9m
|
£30.5m
|
(15)%
|
(14)%
|
Other contribution
|
£(3.8)m
|
£(0.5)m
|
(660)%
|
(660)%
|
|
|
|
|
|
General and administrative
costs excluding adjusted items4
|
£(15.7)m
|
£(18.6)m
|
(16)%
|
(15)%
|
Operating
general and
administrative
costs
|
£(14.9)m
|
£(17.9)m
|
(17)%
|
(16)%
|
Share-based
payments
|
£(0.8)m
|
£(0.7)m
|
(14)%
|
(14)%
|
Memo: statutory general
and
administrative costs
|
£(15.8)m
|
£(18.7)m
|
(16)%
|
(14)%
|
Adjusted EBIT5
|
£(3.1)m
|
£2.2m
|
(241)%
|
(196)%
|
Adjusted
items6
|
£(1.9)m
|
£(10.9)m
|
(83)%
|
(84)%
|
Statutory operating loss
|
£(5.0)m
|
£(8.7)m
|
(43)%
|
(48)%
|
Net finance costs
|
£(0.7)m
|
£(1.0)m
|
(35)%
|
(24)%
|
Statutory loss before
tax
|
£(5.6)m
|
£(9.7)m
|
(42)%
|
(46)%
|
|
|
|
|
|
Net cash excl. lease
liabilities7
|
£22.9m
|
£2.8m
|
716%
|
546%
|
Net assets
|
£67.3m
|
£88.8m
|
(24)%
|
(19)%
|
Inventory (including that under
staged payments)
|
£139.2m
|
£188.7m
|
(26)%
|
(21)%
|
Notes:
1. In addition to statutory
reporting, Naked Wines reports alternative performance measures
(APMs) which are not defined or specified under the requirements of
UK-adopted international accounting standards. The Group uses these
APMs to improve the comparability of information between reporting
periods by adjusting for certain items which impact upon IFRS
measures to aid the user in understanding the activity taking place
across the Group's businesses. Definitions of the APMs used are
given at the end of this announcement.
2. Constant currency basis using
current period FX rates for the translation of the comparative
period.
3. Refer to the reconciliation of
reported performance to management adjusted basis in the APM
section at the end of this announcement for a reconciliation of
total revenue to total adjusted revenue.
4. Refer to the reconciliation of
general and administrative (G&A) costs in the APM section at
the end of this announcement for a reconciliation of G&A costs
shown here to those reported in the income statement.
5. Refer to the reconciliation of
reported performance to management adjusted basis in the APM
section at the end of this announcement for a reconciliation of
adjusted EBIT to operating loss (reported EBIT).
6. Refer to note 6 Adjusted items
for further details.
7. Refer to the table in the APM
section at the end of this announcement for an analysis of net cash
(excluding lease liabilities).
Drivers of Group P&L performance
In HY25 total revenue declined by
14% on a constant currency basis to £112.3m (HY24: £132.3m). This
broadly reflected the drop in active members which were down by
12%. Active member numbers have been trending more positively since
the start of the year and were down by 6% on the start of the
financial year.
Repeat Customer contribution
dropped in line with Repeat Customer sales. There was a 12% decline
in New Customer sales on a constant currency basis, with investment
in the acquisition of new customers growing by 3% in
HY25.
Statutory general and
administrative (G&A) costs of £15.7m were down 16% on prior
year (HY24: £18.6m), reflecting the annualisation of the cost
savings implemented in FY24.
This resulted in adjusted EBIT
excluding inventory liquidation and associated costs of £0.6m
(HY24: £2.6m). The adjusted EBIT including liquidation of inventory
was £(3.1)m (HY24: £2.2m). The statutory loss of £5.6m (HY24: loss
of £9.7m) includes both the £3.7m of inventory liquidation costs
and £1.9m of adjusted items.
Key adjusted items
|
HY25
£m
|
HY24
£m
|
Right-sizing of US
inventory
|
-
|
0.8
|
Under-absorption of current year's
winery overheads
|
(1.8)
|
-
|
Impairment of non-current
assets
|
-
|
(11.5)
|
Software as a Service costs
incurred in the implementation of new ERP platform
|
-
|
(0.2)
|
Fair value movement on forward
foreign exchange contracts
|
(0.1)
|
0.1
|
Refer to note 6 Adjusted items for
further details of all these key adjusted items. These are adjusted
as they are either material one-time charges we do not expect
to be repeated or they are non-trading related. We feel that
treating them as adjusted items provides clarity of these
non-recurring events and also a more comparable view of business
trading performance.
Cash flow drivers
HY25 net cash excluding lease
liabilities was £22.9m, up £20.1m on HY24. There was £4.3m of net
cash generation in HY25 (excluding the impact of FX), when we
typically see cash outflow in the six months ahead of peak trading.
This is a significant improvement in cash performance vs the
typical cash outflow in the first half of the financial
year.
Cash flow analysis
|
HY25
£m
|
HY24
£m
|
Operating loss
|
(5.0)
|
(8.7)
|
Add back: depreciation and
amortisation
|
1.1
|
1.6
|
Add back: other non-cash
amounts1
|
0.6
|
(0.7)
|
Add back: impairments
|
-
|
11.5
|
Change in inventory
|
0.6
|
(19.8)
|
Change in payables
|
1.0
|
3.8
|
Change in Angel funds and other
deferred income
|
7.7
|
8.5
|
Change in
receivables
|
1.8
|
0.2
|
Operating cash flow
|
7.8
|
(3.6)
|
Tax and net interest
paid
|
(2.4)
|
(1.9)
|
Capital expenditure
|
(0.4)
|
(0.6)
|
Repayments of principal under
lease liabilities
|
(0.8)
|
(1.0)
|
Movement in net cash excluding lease
liabilities
|
4.3
|
(7.1)
|
Opening net cash excluding lease
liabilities
|
19.6
|
10.3
|
Movement in net cash excluding
lease liabilities
|
4.3
|
(7.1)
|
FX
|
(1.0)
|
(0.4)
|
Closing net cash excluding lease
liabilities
|
22.9
|
2.8
|
Notes:
1 Other non-cash amounts is made
up of share-based payment charge of £0.8m, fair value movement on
foreign exchange contracts of £0.1m, less movement in inventory
provision of £0.3m and fair value movement on foreign exchange
contracts of £0.1m
Net interest charges totaled £0.7m
in HY25 (HY24: £1.0m), being the net of interest receivable on cash
at bank and interest payable relating to the Group's asset-backed
lending facilities in place in first half of the year, as well as
interest costs of right-of-use assets.
The Group's statutory effective
tax rate of (16)% (HY24: (20)%) is substantially driven by tax
charges on overseas taxable profits and a reduction in US deferred
tax assets recognised at the half year.
Liquidity and going concern
The Group has continued to build
its net cash excluding lease liabilities position during FY25,
primarily by focusing on inventory reduction. Angel funds, which
are heavily weighted to our core members who have been with the
business for more than 24 months, have remained resilient during
the period, reflecting the loyalty of our longer-term and most
engaged members.
The combination of this
improvement, the additional liquidity and reduction in covenant
limitations afforded by the new credit facility, and the
expectation of additional cash generation that is typical through
the peak trading period, has improved the Group's resilience to
weather any downturn. The Board has stress-tested a range of
trading scenarios, which incorporate a range of inventory
liquidation costs and also potential early duty payments, and have
a reasonable expectation that the Group and the Company will be
able to operate within the level of their available liquidity. For
this reason, and the reasons given above, the Board considers it
appropriate for the Group and the Company to adopt the going
concern basis in preparing these financial statements.
Dominic Neary
Group Chief Financial Officer
Guidance1
Our view on headline FY25 metrics
remain unchanged as follows:
|
FY25
|
Revenue
|
£240 -
£270m
|
Revenue trend (%)
|
(16)% -
(4)%
|
Repeat contribution
|
£54 -
£65m
|
New customer investment
|
£(22) -
£(25)m
|
G&A
|
£(29) -
£(31)m
|
Adjusted EBIT excluding inventory
liquidation
|
£3 -
£8m
|
Inventory liquidation and
associated costs
|
£(2) -
£(5)m
|
Adjusted EBIT
|
£(2) -
£6m
|
Finance charges
|
£(1.5)
- £(2)m
|
Closing net cash excluding lease
liabilities
|
£25 -
£35m
|
Notes:
1. This
guidance is provided based on FX rates of 1 GBP = 1.27 USD and 1.85
AUD
Condensed consolidated income statement
For the 26 weeks ended 30
September 2024
Continuing operations
|
|
26 weeks ended
30 September 2024
|
26 weeks
ended
2 October 2023
|
|
Note
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
Revenue
|
5
|
112,301
|
132,339
|
Cost of sales
|
|
(72,173)
|
(78,939)
|
Fulfilment costs
|
|
(21,402)
|
(25,764)
|
Gross profit pre US inventory provision
|
|
18,726
|
27,636
|
Movement in US inventory
provision
|
6*
|
282
|
1,327
|
Gross profit
|
|
19,008
|
28,963
|
Advertising costs
|
|
(8,148)
|
(7,440)
|
General and administrative
costs
|
|
(15,827)
|
(18,732)
|
Impairment of non-current
assets
|
6,7
|
-
|
(11,539)
|
Operating loss1
|
|
(4,967)
|
(8,748)
|
Finance costs
|
|
(802)
|
(2,329)
|
Finance income
|
|
151
|
1,333
|
Loss before tax
|
|
(5,618)
|
(9,744)
|
Tax
|
8
|
(907)
|
(1,930)
|
Loss for the period
|
|
(6,525)
|
(11,674)
|
|
|
|
|
Loss per share
|
|
|
|
Basic and diluted
|
9
|
(8.8p)
|
(15.8p)
|
* Note reference relates to
HY24.
1.
Operating loss analysed as:
|
|
26 weeks ended
30 September 2024
|
26 weeks
ended
2 October 2023
|
|
Note
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
Adjusted EBIT2
|
5
|
(3,061)
|
2,159
|
Adjusted items:
|
6
|
|
|
Right-sizing of US
inventory
|
|
-
|
774
|
Under-absorption of current year's
winery overheads
|
|
(1,798)
|
-
|
Impairment of non-current
assets
|
|
-
|
(11,539)
|
Other adjusted items
|
|
(108)
|
(142)
|
Operating loss
|
|
(4,967)
|
(8,748)
|
2.
Refer to the table in the APM section at the end
of this announcement for analysis of
adjusted EBIT identifying inventory liquidation
transactions.
The notes to the condensed
consolidated interim financial statements following the primary
statements are an integral part of these condensed consolidated
interim financial statements.
Condensed consolidated statement of comprehensive
income
For the 26 weeks ended 30
September 2024
|
26 weeks ended
30 September 2024
|
26 weeks
ended
2 October 2023
|
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
Loss for the period
|
(6,525)
|
(11,674)
|
Items that may be reclassified subsequently to the income
statement:
|
|
|
Exchange differences on
translation of foreign operations
|
(3,727)
|
1,115
|
Other comprehensive (loss)/income for the
period
|
(3,727)
|
1,115
|
Total comprehensive loss for the period
|
(10,252)
|
(10,559)
|
The total comprehensive loss for
the period and the prior period is wholly attributable to the
equity holders of the parent company, Naked Wines plc.
The notes to the condensed
consolidated interim financial statements following the primary
statements are an integral part of these condensed consolidated
interim financial statements.
Condensed consolidated statement of changes in
equity
For the 26 weeks ended 30
September 2024
|
Share
capital
|
Share
premium
|
Capital redemption
reserve
|
Currency translation
reserve
|
Retained
earnings
|
Total
equity
|
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
At 1 April 2024
|
5,550
|
21,162
|
363
|
6,497
|
43,195
|
76,767
|
Loss for the period
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
(6,525)
|
(6,525)
|
Other comprehensive loss for the
period
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
(3,727)
|
-
|
(3,727)
|
Total comprehensive loss for the
period
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
(3,727)
|
(6,525)
|
(10,252)
|
Credit to equity for
equity-settled share-based payments
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
806
|
806
|
At 30 September 2024
|
5,550
|
21,162
|
363
|
2,770
|
37,476
|
67,321
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
At 3 April 2023
|
5,550
|
21,162
|
363
|
7,930
|
63,673
|
98,678
|
Loss for the period
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
(11,674)
|
(11,674)
|
Other comprehensive income for the
period
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
1,115
|
-
|
1,115
|
Total comprehensive income/(loss)
for the period
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
1,115
|
(11,674)
|
(10,559)
|
Credit to equity for
equity-settled share-based payments
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
664
|
664
|
Deferred tax on share-based
payments
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
(32)
|
(32)
|
At 2 October 2023
|
5,550
|
21,162
|
363
|
9,045
|
52,631
|
88,751
|
The notes to the condensed
consolidated interim financial statements following the primary
statements are an integral part of these condensed consolidated
interim financial statements.
Condensed consolidated balance
sheet
As at 30 September 2024
|
|
30 September
2024
|
1 April
2024
|
|
Note
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
Non-current assets
|
|
|
|
Goodwill and intangible
assets
|
|
5,859
|
5,859
|
Property, plant and
equipment
|
|
2,219
|
2,468
|
Right-of-use assets
|
|
2,063
|
2,794
|
Deferred tax assets
|
|
2,247
|
3,425
|
|
|
12,388
|
14,546
|
Current assets
|
|
|
|
Inventory staged payments to
winemakers
|
|
13,223
|
13,273
|
Inventories
|
|
125,953
|
131,581
|
Trade and other
receivables
|
|
8,396
|
10,460
|
Corporation tax
recoverable
|
|
1,965
|
-
|
Financial instruments at fair
value
|
|
-
|
21
|
Cash and cash
equivalents
|
10
|
29,264
|
31,851
|
|
|
178,801
|
187,186
|
Current liabilities
|
|
|
|
Trade and other
payables
|
|
(38,152)
|
(38,738)
|
Current tax liabilities
|
|
-
|
(249)
|
Angel funds and other deferred
income
|
|
(73,948)
|
(68,314)
|
Lease liabilities
|
10
|
(1,353)
|
(1,392)
|
Provisions
|
6(b)
|
(2,209)
|
(1,475)
|
Borrowings
|
10
|
-
|
(12,248)
|
Customer-funded bonds
|
10
|
(35)
|
(35)
|
Financial instruments at fair
value
|
|
(374)
|
(268)
|
|
|
(116,071)
|
(122,719)
|
Net current assets
|
|
62,730
|
64,467
|
Total assets less current liabilities
|
|
75,118
|
79,013
|
Non-current liabilities
|
|
|
|
Lease liabilities
|
10
|
(1,510)
|
(2,246)
|
Borrowings
|
10
|
(6,287)
|
-
|
|
|
(7,797)
|
(2,246)
|
Net assets
|
|
67,321
|
76,767
|
Equity
|
|
|
|
Share capital
|
|
5,550
|
5,550
|
Share premium
|
|
21,162
|
21,162
|
Capital redemption
reserve
|
|
363
|
363
|
Currency translation
reserve
|
|
2,770
|
6,497
|
Retained earnings
|
|
37,476
|
43,195
|
Total equity
|
|
67,321
|
76,767
|
The condensed consolidated interim
financial statements of Naked Wines plc (company registration
number 02281640) have been prepared in accordance with
International Accounting Standard 34 Interim Financial Reporting,
as adopted for use in the UK.
The notes to the condensed
consolidated interim financial statements following the primary
statements are an integral part of these condensed consolidated
interim financial statements.
By order of the Board,
Dominic Neary
Chief Financial Officer
9 December 2024
Condensed consolidated cash flow statement
For the 26 weeks ended 30
September 2024
|
|
26 weeks ended
30 September 2024
|
26 weeks
ended
2 October 2023
|
|
Note
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
Operating activities
|
|
|
|
Net cash flows from/(used in)
operations
|
10
|
7,817
|
(3,580)
|
Overseas income tax
paid
|
|
(2,157)
|
(511)
|
Net cash from/(used in) operating
activities
|
|
5,660
|
(4,091)
|
Investing activities
|
|
|
|
Purchase of property, plant and
equipment
|
|
(358)
|
(647)
|
Proceeds on disposal of property,
plant and equipment
|
|
12
|
39
|
Net cash used in investing activities
|
|
(346)
|
(608)
|
Financing activities
|
|
|
|
Interest paid
|
|
(376)
|
(1,479)
|
Interest received
|
|
151
|
247
|
Repayments of principal under
lease liabilities
|
|
(791)
|
(1,178)
|
Debt issuance costs
paid
|
|
(1,801)
|
-
|
Other loans
|
|
-
|
1,000
|
Repayment of borrowings
|
|
(12,303)
|
-
|
Drawdown of borrowings
|
|
8,301
|
-
|
Net cash used in financing activities
|
|
(6,819)
|
(1,410)
|
Net decrease in cash
|
|
(1,505)
|
(6,109)
|
Cash and cash equivalents at the
beginning of the period
|
|
31,851
|
39,474
|
Effect of foreign exchange rate
changes
|
|
(1,082)
|
403
|
Cash and cash equivalents at the end of the
period
|
10
|
29,264
|
33,768
|
The notes to the condensed
consolidated interim financial statements following the primary
statements are an integral part of these condensed consolidated
interim financial statements.
Notes to the financial statements
1. General Information
Naked Wines plc, (the Company), is
a public limited company and is limited by shares. It is
incorporated in the United Kingdom under the Companies Act 2006 and
is registered in England and Wales. The Company is the ultimate
controlling party of the Naked Group and its ordinary shares are
traded on the Alternative Investment Market (AIM).
The Company's registered address
is Norvic House, 29-33 Chapel Field Road, Norwich, NR2 1RP, UK. The
Group's principal activity is the direct-to-consumer retailing of
wine. The Company's principal activity is to act as a holding
company for its subsidiaries.
2. Basis of preparation
The annual financial statements of
the Group are prepared in accordance with UK-adopted international
accounting standards.
These condensed consolidated
interim financial statements have been prepared applying the
accounting policies set out in the Annual Report and Accounts for
the 52 weeks ended 1 April 2024.
The auditor's report on those
accounts was not qualified and did not contain statements under
section 498(2) or (3) of the Companies Act 2006.
The condensed consolidated interim
financial statements included in this report have been prepared in
accordance with International Accounting Standard 34 Interim
Financial Reporting, as adopted for use in the UK. The
condensed consolidated interim financial statements are not
statutory accounts. They include the financial statements of
Naked Wines plc and entities controlled by the Company (its
subsidiaries), Naked Wines plc has control over the Naked Wines plc
Share Incentive Plan Trust and the Naked Wines Employee Benefit
Trust, which have not been consolidated on the basis of
materiality.
The financial reporting period
represents the 26 weeks ended 30 September 2024 and the prior
period, 26 weeks ended 2 October 2023, and are presented in GBP
which is the Group's functional currency, and all values are
rounded to the nearest thousand (£'000), except when otherwise
indicated.
The new accounting standards that
came into effect in the current accounting period beginning 2 April
2024, noted below, do not introduce any new disclosures that are
explicitly required in the condensed consolidated interim financial
statements.
Effective date 1 January
2024
· Non-current
Liabilities with Covenants - Amendments to IAS 1
· Classification of
Liabilities as Current or Non-current - Amendments to IAS
1
· Lease Liability
in Sales and Leaseback - Amendments to IFRS 16
· Supplier Finance
Arrangements - Amendments to IAS 7 and IFRS 7
At the reporting date, the Group has not
applied the following new and revised IFRSs that have been issued
but are not yet effective.
· Lack of
Exchangeability - Amendments to IAS 21
· Sale or
Contribution of Assets between an Investor and its Associate or
Joint Venture - Amendments to IFRS 10 and IAS 28 (effective date
deferred indefinitely).
3. Significant estimates
Inventory provision
The Group continues to closely
assess the recoverability of its inventory holdings, especially in
its US market.
In this market, the Group has
continued to hold elevated inventory levels. It has continued
to assess expected levels and product mix of consumer demand and
has also continued to liquidate inventory through secondary market
activity.
As such, whilst disposals
amounting to £5m of cost of goods have been completed through
secondary market channels in the period, the Group has seen a
smaller reduction in US inventory provision level from £12.5m at
the end of FY24 to £11.5m at the half year, with an inventory
provision charge of £2.5m in the period (FY24: £7.4m).
A number of critical judgements
have been made in the calculation of the US segment inventory
provision analysis, including:
-
Realisable volumes and value of bulk wine in the open
market;
-
Changing consumer consumption patterns between wine product
families resulting in changing bottling plans; and
-
Estimates of future trading activity and utilisation of inventory
on hand.
For both bulk and cased wine
inventory in the US, the full range of reasonably possible outcomes
is inherently difficult to calculate as it is dependent on key
assumptions such as future expected sales of wine and sales
proceeds. The Directors highlight therefore it is possible that
outcomes may differ from their estimates made at the half year, and
that the magnitude of the inventory provision in the Group's US
business unit could materially change in subsequent reporting
periods. Two relevant sensitivities that are readily
quantifiable are the expected proceeds from the disposal of bulk
inventory on hand not currently in planned wine production and the
possible value of further cased good inventory provision required
following a change in future sales versus expectation. Management
have prepared their estimates of these sensitivities based on
expected disposal of inventory volumes through secondary market
channels, recent experience of realisation values for wine disposed
of on the secondary market and recent forecast sales run
rates.
Bulk wine (provision of £8.7m
(FY24: £7.7m)) disposal assumptions: If management are not able to
realise expected proceeds for bulk wine reaching commercial expiry
in the next 24 months, an additional £1.0m (FY24: £0.9m) of
inventory would be written off. Additionally, there is a further
net £2.1m of remaining bulk wine at the balance sheet date which is
considered to be most at risk. This wine is expiring after more
than 24 months and is either currently expected to be used in
future wine projects or has anticipated proceeds on disposal
assumed. However, if these assumptions prove to be inaccurate, then
the Company would be exposed to this additional £2.1m of inventory
write down.
Cased wine (provision of £2.8m
(FY24: £4.9m)) sales volume sensitivity: Management have forecast
expected consumption of cased goods in hand at the balance sheet
date by using product level or product family level historic run
rates to calculate forward days cover and to assess the calculated
SKU consumption date against SKU family expected prime marketing
life. A pro-forma 5% reduction in SKU level run rates across the
cased goods inventory holding at the half results in an additional
£0.1m of cased goods inventory provision
requirement.
4. Going concern
Background and context
The Group's financial statements
for the year ended 1 April 2024 were signed on 27 August
2024. These financial statements were prepared on a going
concern basis.
Credit facility
On 8 July 2024 the Group entered
into a 60-month senior secured revolving credit facility with PNC
Bank, National Association, as administrative agent and lender for
up to $60m of credit based on the inventory held by the Group's US,
UK and Australian subsidiaries. The purpose of this facility
is to provide the Group with access to working capital and also to
be used as a source of security for strategic stakeholders.
The Group has met all of its credit facility covenant requirements
since signature of the agreement up to the date of the signing of
these financial statements.
Base case forecast
In assessing the appropriateness of
the going concern assumption, the Board has considered (i) the cash
requirements of the business to pursue its intended strategy, (ii)
the funding available to the Group from existing cash reserves and
its credit facility (iii) the level of security to be held against
Angel fund balances and (iv) potential variations in the cash
requirements of the Group, including taking into account a severe
but plausible downside scenario that appropriately reflect Naked's
recent trading and the current macroeconomic outlook.
The Directors have prepared cash
flow scenarios extending for a period of at least 12 months from
the date of the approval of these interim financial statements
("the going concern assessment period") to assess the liquidity of
the Group.
A baseline forecast was prepared in
which business unit trading KPIs were assumed to be in line with
current expectations for the remainder of FY25 and flat
year-on-year, adjusted for known one-off distortions, in the
remainder of the going concern period. The forecast
anticipated continued upward pressure on customer acquisition
costs. Costs were assumed to be in line with current
underlying run rates allowing for reasonable market
inflation. Liquidity was forecast on the basis of the Group's
current credit facility alongside anticipated inventory
holdings. In this scenario, the Group maintained more than
£20m of headroom above its springing covenant liquidity test of
more than $12m of facility availability and US PNC banked cash
across the forecast period, above which it does not need to measure
compliance with its fixed charge cover ratio covenant test of
greater than 1.2x.
Severe but plausible downside and reverse stress
test
The Directors have then prepared a
severe but plausible downside scenario incorporating a number of
sensitivities and also available mitigating
actions.
Sales performance
driver:
- A 5% decline in revenue per Angel from the beginning of the
base case forecast period, described above, extending over the
entire forecast period.
Cost mitigations:
- A 10% reduction in new customer investment from the beginning
of the FY26, amounting to a saving of £1.8m across the forecast
period;
- Reduction to £nil payable variable compensation in FY25,
resulting in a £1.4m P&L saving in the second half of the year
and the associated cash outflow reduction in H1 FY26;
and
- A further reduction of P&L cost of £1.0m relating to FY26
variable compensation for the remainder of the forecast
period.
Working capital
mitigations:
- Reduction in inventory intake in FY26 of £10m in response to
lower sales expectation.
The net impact of the severe but
plausible downside is to reduce the Group's headroom to its
springing covenant test to £14m in October 2025, reflecting the
phasing of inventory intake for peak trading in the following
periods. In all other periods of the assessment, the severe
but plausible downside scenario showed that the Group retained more
than £20m of headroom. This reduction in headroom still does
not require the testing of the Group's fixed charge cover ratio in
the forward forecast period.
A further 'reverse stress test'
scenario has also been run, deliberately designed to identify the
point at which the Group failed its banking facility
covenant. This scenario required a further 8% decline in
revenue per Angel, without any further cash or cost mitigation,
before the Group would trip its covenant commitments. In this
scenario, the Group failed its covenant test in October
FY26.
Summary
After considering the forecasts,
sensitivities and mitigating actions available and having regard to
the risks, uncertainties and challenges in recent trading and the
macroeconomic environment, in the modelled scenarios Naked Wines
has sufficient liquidity to continue trading and to meet its
minimum facility liquidity requirements, avoiding the need to
assess its fixed charge cover ratio covenant
commitment.
The Board believes that the
flexibility afforded to it by its new financing arrangements and
the generation of net cash since the beginning of the current
financial year mean that the Directors have a reasonable
expectation that the Group will be able to operate within the level
of their available liquidity and meet their liabilities as they
fall due for the forecast period. For this reason, the Board
considers it appropriate to adopt the going concern basis in these
condensed consolidated interim financial statements.
5. Segmental reporting
IFRS 8 Operating segments requires
operating segments to be determined based on the Group's internal
reporting to the Chief Operating Decision Maker (CODM). The
Board has determined that the Executive Directors of the Company
are the CODM of the business. This is on the basis that they have
primary responsibility for the allocation of resources between
segments and the assessment of performance of the segments.
In line with the information presented to the Executive Directors
of the Company, the Group presents its segmental analysis based on
the three geographic locations in which the Group
operates.
Performance of these operating
segments is assessed on revenue and
adjusted EBIT (being operating profit excluding
any adjusted items), as well as analysing the business between new
customer, repeat customer and other lines of
business.
These are the financial performance
measures that are reported to the CODM, along with other
operational performance measures, and are considered to be useful
measures of the underlying trading performance of the
segments. Adjusted items are allocated in accordance with how
they are reported to the CODM.
The table below sets out the basis
on which the performance of the business is presented to the CODM.
The CODM considers that, as a single route to market and solely
consumer-facing business in three geographically and economically
diverse locations, the business comprises three operating
segments. The Group reports revenue from external customers
as a single product group, being principally wine and some
spirits.
Unallocated assets include goodwill
and other intangible assets held by holding companies and
unallocated impairment charges relate to impairments recorded
against these assets. These assets are unallocated for the purpose
of the segmental disclosure as these are not included in the assets
and liabilities reported to the CODM for each operating segment.
For the purposes of the geographical analysis, these assets are
allocated to the UK as these assets arose as a result of an
acquisition by a UK holding company. For impairment analysis, these
assets are allocated to the relevant CGU.
Costs relating to global Group
functions are not allocated to the operating segments for the
purposes of assessing segmental performance and consequently global
costs are presented separately. This is consistent with the
presentation of those functions to the CODM.
Revenues are attributed to the
countries from which they are earned. The Group is not reliant on a
major customer or group of customers.
All revenue is recognised at a
single point in time when it is probable that the economic benefits
will flow to the Group and the revenue can be reliably
measured. Specific to the Group, the performance obligations
of the Group are deemed to be fulfilled when the product is
delivered to our customer or Angel, typically within one to three
days following dispatch, which is when the customer obtains control
of their purchase and there is reasonable certainty regarding the
recovery of the consideration.
The Group is subject to seasonal
fluctuations resulting in varying profits over the full year
period. The Group experiences increased sales in the third
quarter which covers the holiday period, accounting for around 40%
of total revenue compared to around 20% in each of the other
quarters.
Included within Angel funds and
other deferred income is deferred income of £6.5m (1 April 2024:
£3.1m). These balances represent value of funds received in
advance, but the order is yet to be fulfilled or delivered.
This will be recognised as revenue when the order is fulfilled or
delivered, which is expected to occur over the next six
months.
26 weeks ended
30 September 2024
|
Naked Wines
US
|
Naked Wines
UK
|
Naked Wines
Australia
|
Unallocated
|
Total
|
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
Total segment revenue
|
51,989
|
47,513
|
13,964
|
-
|
113,466
|
less intercompany
revenue
|
(1,165)
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
(1,165)
|
External revenue
|
50,824
|
47,513
|
13,964
|
-
|
112,301
|
Analysed as:
|
|
|
|
|
|
New Customer sales
|
4,245
|
2,317
|
1,296
|
-
|
7,858
|
Repeat Customer sales
|
44,699
|
45,196
|
12,668
|
-
|
102,563
|
Other revenue
|
1,880
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
1,880
|
Revenue
|
50,824
|
47,513
|
13,964
|
-
|
112,301
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Investment in New
Customers
|
(4,747)
|
(3,513)
|
(1,183)
|
-
|
(9,443)
|
Repeat Customer
contribution
|
15,069
|
7,437
|
3,372
|
-
|
25,878
|
Other
contribution1
|
(3,545)
|
(232)
|
-
|
-
|
(3,777)
|
Total contribution after advertising
costs2
|
6,777
|
3,692
|
2,189
|
-
|
12,658
|
General and administrative
costs3
|
(3,781)
|
(2,093)
|
(1,149)
|
(8,696)
|
(15,719)
|
Adjusted EBIT
|
2,996
|
1,599
|
1,040
|
(8,696)
|
(3,061)
|
Adjusted items:
|
|
|
|
|
|
Under-absorption of current
year's winery overheads
|
(1,798)
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
(1,798)
|
Other adjusted items
|
(2)
|
(189)
|
(2)
|
85
|
(108)
|
Operating profit/(loss)
|
1,196
|
1,410
|
1,038
|
(8,611)
|
(4,967)
|
Finance costs
|
(674)
|
(102)
|
(25)
|
(1)
|
(802)
|
Finance income
|
147
|
4
|
-
|
-
|
151
|
Profit/(loss) before tax
|
669
|
1,312
|
1,013
|
(8,612)
|
(5,618)
|
Tax
|
(551)
|
(77)
|
(179)
|
(100)
|
(907)
|
Profit/(loss) for the period
|
118
|
1,235
|
834
|
(8,712)
|
(6,525)
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Depreciation
|
1,016
|
84
|
-
|
-
|
1,100
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Total assets
|
112,929
|
48,328
|
20,139
|
9,793
|
191,189
|
Total liabilities
|
56,905
|
52,110
|
12,087
|
2,766
|
123,868
|
Capital expenditure
|
220
|
138
|
-
|
-
|
358
|
Geographical analysis
|
|
US
|
UK
|
Australia
|
Total
|
|
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
Revenue
|
|
50,824
|
47,513
|
13,964
|
112,301
|
Non-current assets excluding
deferred tax assets
|
3,460
|
6,681
|
-
|
10,141
|
|
1. Other contribution constitutes loss on inventory liquidation
and associated transactions
2. Contribution after advertising costs is calculated as gross
profit (£19.0m), less advertising costs (£8.1m), excluding
transactions associated with the under-absorption of current year's
winery overheads (£1.8m) (details in note 6 Adjusted
items).
3. Refer to the table in the APM section at the end of this
announcement for a reconciliation of G&A costs to those
reported in the income statement.
26
weeks ended
2
October 2023
|
Naked Wines
US
|
Naked Wines
UK
|
Naked Wines
Australia
|
Unallocated
|
Total
|
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
External revenue
|
63,924
|
52,372
|
16,043
|
-
|
132,339
|
Revenue associated with the US
inventory impairment
|
(707)
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
(707)
|
Total adjusted revenue 1
|
63,217
|
52,372
|
16,043
|
-
|
131,632
|
Analysed as:
|
|
|
|
|
|
New Customer sales
|
5,336
|
2,313
|
1,462
|
-
|
9,111
|
Repeat Customer sales
|
57,172
|
50,059
|
14,581
|
-
|
121,812
|
Other revenue
|
709
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
709
|
Total adjusted revenue 1
|
63,217
|
52,372
|
16,043
|
-
|
131,632
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Investment in New
Customers
|
(5,953)
|
(2,036)
|
(1,258)
|
-
|
(9,247)
|
Repeat Customer
contribution
|
17,448
|
9,384
|
3,632
|
-
|
30,464
|
Other contribution
|
(468)
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
(468)
|
Total contribution after advertising
costs2
|
11,027
|
7,348
|
2,374
|
-
|
20,749
|
General and administrative
costs3
|
(5,749)
|
(3,070)
|
(1,607)
|
(8,164)
|
(18,590)
|
Adjusted EBIT
|
5,278
|
4,278
|
767
|
(8,164)
|
2,159
|
Adjusted items:
|
|
|
|
|
|
Right-sizing of US
inventory
|
774
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
774
|
Impairment of
non-current
Assets
|
(1,681)
|
-
|
(696)
|
(9,162)
|
(11,539)
|
Other adjusted items
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
(142)
|
(142)
|
Operating (loss)/profit
|
4,371
|
4,278
|
71
|
(17,468)
|
(8,748)
|
Finance costs
|
(2,292)
|
(14)
|
(21)
|
(2)
|
(2,329)
|
Finance income
|
792
|
-
|
-
|
541
|
1,333
|
Profit/(loss) tax
|
2,871
|
4,264
|
50
|
(16,929)
|
(9,744)
|
Tax
|
(2,067)
|
306
|
(169)
|
-
|
(1,930)
|
Profit/(loss) for the period
|
804
|
4,570
|
(119)
|
(16,929)
|
(11,674)
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Depreciation
|
1,235
|
127
|
112
|
57
|
1,531
|
Amortisation
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
100
|
100
|
Impairments
|
1,681
|
-
|
696
|
9,162
|
11,539
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Total assets
|
147,571
|
60,246
|
24,901
|
23,004
|
255,722
|
Total liabilities
|
93,753
|
54,568
|
15,131
|
3,519
|
166,971
|
Capital expenditure
|
636
|
-
|
11
|
-
|
647
|
|
US
|
UK
|
Australia
|
Total
|
|
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
Geographical analysis
|
|
|
|
|
|
Revenue
|
|
63,924
|
52,372
|
16,043
|
132,339
|
Non-current assets excluding
deferred tax assets and the vendor loan note
|
5,248
|
5,983
|
-
|
11,231
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
| |
1. Total
adjusted revenue is calculated as revenue excluding revenue associated with the
right-sizing of US inventory as analysed in
note 6 Adjusted
items.
2. Contribution after advertising costs is calculated as
gross profit (£29.0m), less
advertising costs (£7.4m), excluding transactions associated
with the right-sizing of US inventory included in contribution
(£0.8m), (details in note 6 Adjusted items).
3. Refer to the table in the APM section at the
end of this announcement for a reconciliation of G&A costs to
those reported in the income statement.
6 Adjusted items
The Directors believe that
adjusted EBIT provides
additional useful information for shareholders on trends and
performance. These measures are used for performance analysis.
Adjusted EBIT is not defined by IFRS and
therefore may not be directly comparable with other companies'
adjusted profit measures. It is not intended to be a substitute
for, or superior to, IFRS measurements of profit.
The adjustments made to
reported loss before tax
are:
|
|
26 weeks ended
30 September 2024
|
26 weeks
ended
2 October 2023
|
|
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
Net movement in US inventory
provision
|
|
-
|
1,327
|
Loss on the disposal of US
inventory - contribution
loss1
|
|
-
|
(553)
|
(a) Right-sizing of US inventory
|
|
-
|
774
|
(b) Under-absorption of current year's winery
overheads
|
|
(1,798)
|
-
|
(c) Impairment of non-current assets
|
|
-
|
(11,539)
|
Restructuring costs
|
|
-
|
36
|
Software as Software as a Service costs
incurred in
the implementation of new ERP
platform
|
|
-
|
(248)
|
Fair value movement on foreign
exchange contracts
and associated unrealised foreign
currency inventory
|
|
(108)
|
70
|
(d) Other adjusted items
|
|
(108)
|
(142)
|
Total adjusted items
|
|
(1,906)
|
(10,907)
|
1. Contribution loss analysed as sales of £nil (HY24: £0.7m) less
cost of goods sold of £nil (HY24: £1.3m) resulting in a net
contribution loss of £nil (HY24: loss of £0.6m).
(a) Right-sizing of US
inventory
During the first half of the prior year, the
Group recorded a net credit of £0.8m reflecting the utilisation of
the inventory provision created in FY23 and a contribution loss
where inventory that was provided against that has been sold on the
secondary market as part the right-sizing exercise for less than
historic cost of goods.
(b) Under-absorption of current
year's winery overheads
As a result of a reduction in the
expected volume of wine to be produced by the Group's US business
unit in the year, the Group is unable to allocate all of the
associated wine production overhead costs into the wine
produced. Per the relevant accounting standard (IAS 2
Inventories), unallocated overheads as a result of low production
must be expensed to the income statement in the period in which
they are incurred. The charge reported at the half year
includes both the under-absorption of incurred production costs to
date and a provision for the remainder of an onerous third-party
production cost relating to current year production.
(c) Impairment of non-current
assets
Management have assessed whether
indicators of impairment exist for the remaining non-current assets
on the balance sheet, and whether indicators exist that previously
booked impairments may be reversed. At the end of the current
period, management found no evidence of further impairments
required, nor any reversals of previously booked impairments
required. The Group has therefore recognised an amount of £nil to
the impairments to non-current assets (HY24: £11.5m).
(d) Other adjusted
items
Fair value movement on foreign exchange contracts and
associated unrealised foreign currency inventory
The Group commits in advance to
buying foreign currency to purchase wine to mitigate exchange rate
fluctuations. UK-adopted international accounting standards require
us to mark the value of these contracts to market at each balance
sheet date. As this may materially fluctuate, we adjust this, and
associated foreign currency inventory revaluation, so as to better
reflect our trading profitability.
Restructuring costs
Restructuring costs in the current
period was £nil. In the first half of the prior year, there
was a release of the previous year's provision no longer
required.
Software as a Service cost
During the prior year, the Group
provided for implementation costs relating to the development of a
new ERP system.
7 Impairment of non-current
assets
Management have determined that no
indicators of impairment existed at the balance sheet date and as
such no impairment review has been performed. In the prior year,
impairment indicators were identified and an impairment review
undertaken. As a result of this review, the
carrying value of assets held in Naked Wines US and Naked Wines
Australia were reduced to their recoverable amount through
recognition of an impairment charge of £11.5 million against
goodwill, other intangibles, property, plant and equipment and
right-of-use assets. This charge was recognised within adjusted
items in the income statement and is analysed by segment and asset
type as set out below:
|
Goodwill
|
Other
intangible assets
|
Property, plant and equipment
|
Right-of-use assets
|
Total
|
CGU
value in use *
|
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
Naked Wines US
|
8,128
|
1,034
|
-
|
1,681
|
10,843
|
64,753
|
Naked Wines UK
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
52,709
|
Naked Wines Australia
|
-
|
-
|
11
|
685
|
696
|
(447)
|
|
8,128
|
1,034
|
11
|
2,366
|
11,539
|
117,015
|
* The value in use of each CGU is
calculated after a full allocation of corporate costs necessarily
incurred to generate the cash inflows of the operating business
units and in accordance with IAS36 Impairment of assets.
8 Tax
Tax for the 26 weeks ended 30
September 2024 is charged at an effective tax rate of (16.1)%
(HY24: (19.8)%) representing the best estimate of the Group's
expected annual effective tax rate, applied to the profit before
tax of the period. The effective tax rate is substantially
driven by tax charges on overseas taxable profits and a reduction
in the US deferred tax assets recognised at the balance sheet
date.
|
|
|
26 weeks ended
30 September 2024
|
26 weeks
ended
2 October 2023
|
|
|
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
Current tax
|
|
|
(183)
|
(544)
|
Deferred tax
|
|
|
|
|
Change in UK deferred tax asset
recognition
|
|
|
(177)
|
429
|
Change in US deferred tax asset
recognition
|
|
|
(551)
|
(1,768)
|
Other deferred tax
movements
|
|
|
4
|
(47)
|
Deferred tax
|
|
|
(724)
|
(1,386)
|
Total tax charge for the period
|
|
|
(907)
|
(1,930)
|
Effective tax rate
|
|
|
(16.1)%
|
(19.8)%
|
9 Loss per share
Basic loss per share is calculated
by dividing the loss attributable to ordinary shareholders by the
weighted average number of ordinary shares in issue of the Company,
excluding 137,298 (HY24: 180,161) shares held by the Naked Wines
plc Share Incentive Plan Trust and the Naked Wines Employee Benefit
Trust (which have been treated as dilutive share-based payment
awards).
The dilutive effect of share-based
payment awards is calculated by adjusting the weighted average
number of ordinary shares in issue to assume conversion of all
dilutive potential ordinary shares. Share options granted over
830,701 (HY24: 6,855,248) ordinary shares have been excluded from
the calculation as they are anti-dilutive. There are no outstanding
share awards that are potentially dilutive at the year
end.
|
26 weeks ended
30 September 2024
|
26 weeks
ended
2 October 2023
|
Basic and diluted loss per share
(pence)
|
(8.8)p
|
(15.8)p
|
Loss for the purposes of basic
earnings per share calculation (£'000)
|
(6,525)
|
(11,674)
|
|
|
|
Weighted average number of
ordinary shares used as the denominator in calculating basic
earnings per share
|
73,844,059
|
73,770,908
|
Total number of shares in issue
|
74,004,135
|
74,004,135
|
As noted above, the denominator for
the purposes of calculating both basic and diluted loss per share
has been adjusted to exclude the shares held by the Naked Wines plc
Share Incentive Plan Trust and the Naked Wines Employee Benefit
Trust.
If all the Company's share option
schemes had vested at 100%, the Company would have 78,727,032
issued shares (HY24: 74,624,159).
10 Notes to the cash flow
statement
(a) Cash flows from
operations
|
|
26 weeks ended
30 September 2024
|
26 weeks
ended
2 October 2023
|
|
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
Cash flows from operations
|
|
|
|
Loss for the period
|
|
(6,525)
|
(11,674)
|
Adjustments for:
|
|
|
|
Tax expense
|
|
907
|
1,930
|
Net finance costs
|
|
651
|
996
|
Depreciation and
amortisation
|
|
1,100
|
1,631
|
Impairment of non-current
assets
|
|
-
|
11,539
|
Profit/(loss) on disposal of fixed
assets
|
|
(9)
|
1
|
Profit on early termination of
leases
|
|
(1)
|
-
|
Fair value movement on foreign
exchange
contracts
|
|
126
|
(70)
|
Inventory provision
movement
|
|
(282)
|
(1,327)
|
Share-based payment
charges
|
|
806
|
664
|
Operating cash flows before movements in working
capital
|
|
(3,227)
|
3,690
|
Decrease/(increase) in
inventories
|
|
576
|
(19,842)
|
Increase in customer funds and
other deferred income
|
|
7,704
|
8,515
|
Decrease in trade and other
receivables
|
|
1,790
|
235
|
Increase in trade and other
payables
|
|
974
|
3,822
|
Net cash flows from/(used in) operations
|
|
7,817
|
(3,580)
|
(b) Analysis of movement in
net cash and changes in liabilities arising from financing
activities
|
1 April
2024
|
Cash
flows
|
Non-cash
movements1
|
30 September
2024
|
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
Cash and cash equivalents
|
31,851
|
(1,505)
|
(1,082)
|
29,264
|
Borrowings:
|
|
|
|
|
Borrowings2
|
(12,468)
|
12,303
|
165
|
-
|
Borrowings3
|
-
|
(8,301)
|
379
|
(7,922)
|
Issuance costs
|
220
|
1,801
|
(386)
|
1,635
|
Borrowing, net of issuance
costs
|
(12,248)
|
5,803
|
158
|
(6,287)
|
Customer-funded bonds
|
(35)
|
-
|
-
|
(35)
|
Lease liabilities
|
(3,638)
|
791
|
(16)
|
(2,863)
|
|
(15,921)
|
6,594
|
142
|
(9,185)
|
Total net cash/(borrowings)
|
15,930
|
5,089
|
(940)
|
20,079
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
3 April
2023
|
Cash
flows
|
Non-cash
movements1
|
2
October 2023
|
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
Cash and cash equivalents
|
39,474
|
(6,109)
|
403
|
33,768
|
Borrowings:
|
|
|
|
|
Borrowings
|
(29,516)
|
-
|
(932)
|
(30,448)
|
Issuance costs
|
385
|
-
|
140
|
525
|
Borrowing, net of issuance
costs
|
(29,131)
|
-
|
(792)
|
(29,923)
|
Other loans
|
-
|
(1,000)
|
-
|
(1,000)
|
Customer-funded bonds
|
(35)
|
-
|
-
|
(35)
|
Lease liabilities
|
(5,851)
|
1,178
|
(660)
|
(5,333)
|
|
(35,017)
|
178
|
(1,452)
|
(36,291)
|
Total net cash/(borrowings)
|
4,457
|
(5,931)
|
(1,049)
|
(2,523)
|
1.
Non-cash movements relate to lease additions and foreign
exchange movements.
2.
Borrowings held with Silicon Valley Bank, repaid on 8 July
2024.
3.
Borrowings held with PNC Bank, National Association, drawn
down on 8 July 2024.
11 Borrowings
On 8 July 2024, the Group entered
into a 60-month senior secured revolving credit facility with PNC
Bank, National Association, as administrative agent and lender for
up to $60m of credit based on the inventory held by Nakedwines.com
Inc, www.nakedwines.com
Ltd and Naked Wines Australia Pty Ltd. The
facility is secured against the assets of the Group.
The principal terms of the new
facility are:
• Maximum revolving advance amount of $60m, with available
liquidity based on the value of inventory held (as defined in the
facility terms);
• Facility term of five years;
· Margins, depending on facility headroom, of principally the
Secured Overnight Financing Rate (SOFR) plus an applicable margin
of between 2.75% and 3.25% and an unused line fee; and
• A
single financial performance covenant requiring fixed charge cover
of greater than 1.2x, but only tested if outstanding available
liquidity (as defined in the facility terms) is less than
$12m.
On completion of this agreement
with PNC Bank, the Group's commitments and obligations under its
previous senior secured credit facility with Silicon Valley Bank, a
division of First Citizens Bank, fell away.
Indicatively, the facility's
financial effect, using a representative current SOFR rate which
cannot be predicted in the future and average facility margins
which may not be representative of actual final applicable margins,
is that a representative $10m of drawdown for 12 months would
amount to a total interest and unused line fee payable of
approximately £0.8m. In addition, the Group anticipates
amortisation charges of the new facility arrangement fees of around
£0.4m.
12 Events after the balance sheet
date
There were no post balance sheet
events that have a material impact on the financial position and
performance of the Company.
Glossary of definitions, alternative performance measures
(APMs)
and
key performance indicators (KPIs)
Definitions
|
|
|
5-Year Forecast Payback
|
The ratio of projected future
Repeat Customer contribution we expect to earn from the new
customers recruited in the year, divided by the Investment in New
Customers. We forecast contribution at a customer level using a
machine-learning algorithm that weighs several characteristics
including demographics, interactions and transactions forecast over
a five-year horizon. This is then aggregated to a monthly, then
annual, cohort level for reporting purposes. As this is an
undiscounted forward-looking estimate it cannot be reconciled back
to reported financial results.
|
Investment measure
|
5-Year Lifetime Value (LTV)
|
The future Repeat Customer
contribution we expect to earn from customers recruited in a
discrete period of time. We calculate this future contribution
using a machine-learning model. Collecting data for a number of key
customer characteristics including retention, order frequency and
order value along with customer demographics and non-transactional
data, the machine-learning algorithms then predict the future
(lifetime) value of that customer.
|
Investment measure
|
Active member
|
An active subscriber who has
placed an order in the last 12 months.
|
|
Adjusted EBIT
|
Operating profit adjusted for
amortisation of acquired intangibles, acquisition costs, impairment
of non-current assets, restructuring costs and fair value movement
through the income statement on financial instruments and
revaluation of funding cash balances held and any items that are
either material one-time charges we do not expect to be repeated or
are non-trading related. A reconciliation to operating profit can
be found on the face of the consolidated income
statement.
|
APM
|
Adjusted EBITDA
|
Adjusted EBIT plus depreciation
and amortisation but excluding any depreciation or amortisation
costs included in adjusted items e.g. amortisation of acquired
intangibles.
|
APM
|
Angel
|
A customer who deposits funds into
their account each month to spend on the wines on our
website.
|
|
Company, Naked or Naked Wines
|
Naked Wines plc
|
|
Contribution
|
A profit measure equal to gross
profit. We often split contribution into that from new and repeat
customers as they can have different levels of profitability. A
reconciliation of operating profit to contribution is shown in note
5 Segmental reporting.
|
APM
|
DtC
|
Direct-to-consumer
|
|
EBIT
|
Operating profit as disclosed in
the consolidated income statement.
|
APM
|
EBITDA
|
EBIT plus depreciation and
amortisation.
|
APM
|
Group
|
Naked Wines plc and its subsidiary
undertakings
|
|
Investment in New Customers
|
The amount we have invested in
acquiring new customers during the year including contribution
profit/loss from New Customer sales and advertising
costs.
|
Investment measure
|
Immature Angel
|
An Angel who has had an account
for less than three months.
|
|
Definitions
|
|
|
Net cash excluding lease liabilities
|
The amount of cash we are holding
less borrowings excluding lease liabilities.
|
APM
|
New customer
|
A customer who, at the time of
purchase, does not meet our definition of a repeat customer; for
example, because they are brand new, were previously a repeat
customer and have stopped subscribing with us at some point or
cannot be identified as a repeat customer.
|
|
New Customer sales
|
Revenues derived from transactions
with customers who meet our definition of a new customer. A
reconciliation of revenue to New Customer sales is shown in note 5
Segmental reporting.
|
|
Mature Angel
|
An Angel who has had an account
for more than three months.
|
|
Member
|
A subscriber with an Angel or Wine
Genie membership.
|
|
Other revenue
|
Revenue from stock optimisation
activities.
|
|
Other contribution
|
The profit or loss attributable to
sales meeting the definition of other revenue.
|
Investment measure
|
Repeat customer
|
A customer (Angel) who has
subscribed and made their first monthly subscription
payment.
|
|
Repeat Customer contribution
|
The profit attributable to sales
meeting the definition of Repeat Customer sales after fulfilment
and service costs. A reconciliation of
adjusted EBIT to Repeat Customer contribution is shown in note 5
Segmental reporting.
|
Investment measure
|
Repeat Customer contribution margin
|
Repeat Customer contribution as a
percentage of Repeat Customer sales.
|
Investment measure
|
Repeat Customer sales
|
Revenue derived from orders placed
by customers meeting our definition of a repeat customer at the
time of ordering. A reconciliation of total sales to Repeat
Customer sales is shown in note 5
Segmental reporting.
|
|
Repeat Customer sales retention
|
The proportion of sales made to
customers who met our definition of repeat last year and who placed
orders again this year, calculated on a monthly basis and summed to
calculate the full year retention.
|
Investment measure
|
Wine Genie
|
A customer who signs up to receive
tailor-made cases at the frequency of their choice. This type of
customer does not deposit funds into an account.
|
|
Year 1 Payback
|
A short-term payback measure
showing the actual return in this financial year of our investment
in the prior year.
|
Investment measure
|
Alternative performance measures (APMs)
Reconciliation of reported results to prior year comparable
figures1
|
|
26 weeks
ended
30 September 2024
|
|
26 weeks
ended
2 October 2023
|
|
|
Reported
|
Adjusted
items
|
Adjusted
|
|
Reported
|
Adjusted
items
|
Adjusted
|
Constant
FX
|
Adjusted
|
|
|
£m
|
£m
|
£m
|
|
£m
|
£m
|
£m
|
£m
|
£m
|
Sales
|
Group
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
New Customer sales
|
7.9
|
-
|
7.9
|
|
9.1
|
-
|
9.1
|
(0.1)
|
9.0
|
Repeat Customer sales
|
102.6
|
-
|
102.6
|
|
121.8
|
-
|
121.8
|
(1.2)
|
120.6
|
Other revenue
|
1.9
|
-
|
1.9
|
|
1.4
|
(0.7)
|
0.7
|
0.7
|
1.4
|
|
112.3
|
-
|
112.3
|
|
132.3
|
(0.7)
|
131.6
|
(0.6)
|
131.0
|
Naked Wines
US
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
New Customer sales
|
4.2
|
-
|
4.2
|
|
5.3
|
-
|
5.3
|
(0.1)
|
5.2
|
Repeat Customer sales
|
44.7
|
-
|
44.7
|
|
57.2
|
-
|
57.2
|
(1.0)
|
56.2
|
Other revenue
|
1.9
|
-
|
1.9
|
|
1.4
|
(0.7)
|
0.7
|
0.7
|
1.4
|
|
50.8
|
-
|
50.8
|
|
63.9
|
(0.7)
|
63.2
|
(0.4)
|
62.8
|
Naked Wines
UK
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
New Customer sales
|
2.3
|
-
|
2.3
|
|
2.3
|
-
|
2.3
|
-
|
2.3
|
Repeat Customer sales
|
45.2
|
-
|
45.2
|
|
50.1
|
-
|
50.1
|
-
|
50.1
|
|
47.5
|
-
|
47.5
|
|
52.4
|
-
|
52.4
|
-
|
52.4
|
Naked Wines
Australia
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
New Customer sales
|
1.3
|
-
|
1.3
|
|
1.5
|
-
|
1.5
|
(0.1)
|
1.4
|
Repeat Customer sales
|
12.7
|
-
|
12.7
|
|
14.6
|
-
|
14.6
|
(0.2)
|
14.4
|
|
14.0
|
-
|
14.0
|
|
16.0
|
-
|
16.0
|
(0.3)
|
15.8
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Contribution after
advertising costs
|
Group
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Investment in New
Customers
|
(9.4)
|
-
|
(9.4)
|
|
(9.2)
|
-
|
(9.2)
|
0.1
|
(9.1)
|
Repeat Customer
contribution
|
25.9
|
-
|
25.9
|
|
30.5
|
-
|
30.5
|
(0.4)
|
30.1
|
Repeat contribution margin
(%)
|
25%
|
-
|
25%
|
|
25%
|
-
|
25%
|
-
|
25%
|
Other contribution
|
(5.6)
|
1.8
|
(3.8)
|
|
0.3
|
(0.8)
|
(0.5)
|
0.7
|
0.2
|
|
10.9
|
1.8
|
12.7
|
|
21.5
|
(0.8)
|
20.7
|
0.4
|
21.2
|
Naked Wines
US
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Investment in New
Customers
|
(4.7)
|
-
|
(4.7)
|
|
(6.0)
|
-
|
(6.0)
|
0.2
|
(5.8)
|
Repeat Customer
contribution
|
15.1
|
-
|
15.1
|
|
17.4
|
-
|
17.4
|
(0.2)
|
17.2
|
Repeat contribution margin
(%)
|
34%
|
-
|
34%
|
|
30%
|
-
|
30%
|
-
|
31%
|
Other contribution
|
(5.3)
|
1.8
|
(3.5)
|
|
0.3
|
(0.8)
|
(0.5)
|
0.7
|
0.2
|
|
5.1
|
1.8
|
6.9
|
|
11.8
|
(0.8)
|
11.0
|
0.0
|
11.0
|
Naked Wines
UK
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Investment in New
Customers
|
(3.5)
|
-
|
(3.5)
|
|
(2.0)
|
-
|
(2.0)
|
-
|
(2.0)
|
Repeat Customer
contribution
|
7.4
|
-
|
7.4
|
|
9.4
|
-
|
9.4
|
-
|
9.4
|
Repeat contribution margin
(%)
|
16%
|
-
|
16%
|
|
19%
|
-
|
19%
|
-
|
19%
|
Other contribution
|
(0.2)
|
-
|
(0.2)
|
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
|
3.7
|
-
|
3.7
|
|
7.3
|
-
|
7.3
|
-
|
7.3
|
Naked Wines
Australia
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Investment in New
Customers
|
(1.2)
|
-
|
(1.2)
|
|
(1.3)
|
-
|
(1.3)
|
0.1
|
(1.2)
|
Repeat Customer
contribution
|
3.4
|
-
|
3.4
|
|
3.6
|
-
|
3.6
|
-
|
3.6
|
Repeat contribution margin
(%)
|
27%
|
-
|
27%
|
|
25%
|
-
|
25%
|
-
|
25%
|
|
2.2
|
-
|
2.2
|
|
2.4
|
-
|
2.4
|
0.1
|
2.5
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
General and
administrative
|
Naked Wines US
|
(3.8)
|
-
|
(3.8)
|
|
(5.6)
|
(0.1)
|
(5.7)
|
0.1
|
(5.6)
|
Naked Wines UK
|
(2.3)
|
0.2
|
(2.1)
|
|
(3.1)
|
-
|
(3.1)
|
-
|
(3.1)
|
Naked Wines Australia
|
(1.2)
|
0.1
|
(1.1)
|
|
(1.6)
|
-
|
(1.6)
|
-
|
(1.6)
|
Unallocated
|
(8.6)
|
(0.1)
|
(8.7)
|
|
(8.4)
|
0.2
|
(8.2)
|
-
|
(8.2)
|
Group
|
(15.9)
|
0.2
|
(15.7)
|
|
(18.7)
|
0.1
|
(18.6)
|
0.1
|
(18.5)
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Other
|
Impairment
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
|
(11.5)
|
11.5
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
EBIT
|
Naked Wines US
|
1.2
|
1.8
|
3.0
|
|
4.4
|
0.9
|
5.3
|
0.7
|
5.9
|
Naked Wines UK
|
1.4
|
0.2
|
1.6
|
|
4.3
|
-
|
4.3
|
-
|
4.3
|
Naked Wines Australia
|
1.0
|
-
|
1.0
|
|
0.1
|
0.7
|
0.8
|
-
|
0.8
|
Unallocated
|
(8.6)
|
(0.1)
|
(8.7)
|
|
(17.5)
|
9.3
|
(8.2)
|
-
|
(8.2)
|
Group
|
(5.0)
|
1.9
|
(3.1)
|
|
(8.7)
|
10.9
|
2.2
|
0.7
|
2.8
|