11 December 2024
ProCook Group
plc
Interim
results for the 28 weeks ended 13 October 2024
Strong first half trading
momentum as we deliver on our plan to accelerate profitable
growth
ProCook Group plc ("ProCook" or
"the Group"), the UK's leading direct-to-consumer specialist
kitchenware brand, today announces its interim results for the
first half of FY25 (the 28 weeks ended 13 October 2024).
£m
|
H1 FY25
|
H1 FY24
|
YoY
|
|
|
|
|
Revenue
|
28.3
|
26.3
|
+7.5%
|
LFL Revenue
|
26.7
|
25.7
|
+4.2%
|
|
|
|
|
Gross Profit
|
18.4
|
17.6
|
+5.1%
|
Gross margin %
|
65.1%
|
66.7%
|
(160bps)
|
|
|
|
|
Underlying operating loss1
|
(1.8)
|
(1.5)
|
|
|
|
|
|
Underlying loss before
tax1
|
(2.8)
|
(1.7)
|
|
Reported loss before
tax
|
(3.2)
|
(3.2)
|
|
|
|
|
|
Underlying EBITDA1
|
1.2
|
1.2
|
|
Net debt
|
(4.2)
|
(3.2)
|
|
Financial and strategic highlights
· Total
revenue increased by +7.5% to £28.3m and like for like revenue
increased by +4.2%, outperforming the market by +5%2 and
reflecting an improving trend within the period (Q2 revenue growth
+8.8%, LFL: +4.7%)
o Retail revenue increased by +6.5% benefitting from like for
like growth of +1.9% having now delivered five consecutive quarters
of positive like for like growth, with the impact of new store
openings contributing a further +4.6% points
o Ecommerce revenue increased by +9.4%, with like for like growth of +8.5%, driven by increased conversion following migration to the new
website in the comparative period, alongside marketing improvements
and the planned relaunch of sales on the Amazon UK marketplace to
broaden our customer reach which contributed +0.9%
points
· Attracting new customers by broadening brand reach and product
ranges, and providing excellent service and value
o 315,000 new customers (+9.8%) shopped with ProCook for the
first time
o Record high L12M active customers of 1.1m (+11.7%)
· Gross
margin and operating expenses in line with expectations for H1,
annualising investment in pricing from H2 last year and reflecting
typical seasonal H1 operational leverage
· Net
debt at the end of the first half was £4.2m (H1 FY24: £3.2m),
reflecting an increased inventory position as a result of prudent
intake planning in response to global supply chain disruption, with
available liquidity of £11.8m
· Good
strategic progress to support second half weighting to the Group's
revenues and profit, and improved profitability over the medium
term:
o Opened 4 new stores in H1, with committed pipeline to exceed
our ambition of 10 new stores in the full year, in locations
providing new access to >150m
centre visitors (combined) per year
o Launched phase three of small electricals, with our fourth
phase (coffee machines) ready to launch in Q4
o Driven greater brand awareness and marketing efficiency
including through shifting digital channel mix and
lifestyle-centred marketing campaigns
o Enhanced store customer service and online experience,
improving NPS score and achieving higher conversion
rates
Current trading
In the first eight weeks (ending 8
December 2024) of Q3, including Black Friday and the early part of
Christmas trading:
· Total
revenue increased by +7.5%, and like for like revenue grew by +0.9%
reflecting continued trading momentum and market
outperformance
· Retail
performance was hampered by weak footfall during the early weeks of
the second half, coinciding with the Budget event, but has improved
since. As a result, Retail like for like revenue was -4.0%. New
stores contributed a further +10.3% points to deliver total Retail
revenue growth of +6.3% over the eight weeks
· Ecommerce performance continued to increase year on year with
like for like growth of +7.7% and total growth of +9.3% when
including revenue generated from the recently re-launched Amazon UK
marketplace channel
· During
the eight weeks we opened five new stores as planned, taking the
year to date total up to nine new stores, with two smaller garden
centre stores closed during the eight weeks.
Lee Tappenden, Chief Executive Officer,
commented:
"We delivered a strong performance
in the first half, outperforming a subdued market, and growing our
customer base whilst maintaining cost discipline. We have made good
progress against our strategic priorities and continue to invest
carefully in the areas that will support profitable growth in the
medium term.
"We now expect to open a further
three new stores in the remainder of the financial year, taking the
total up to 12 new stores and, by closing two smaller garden centre
stores, adding a net 10 new stores to our Retail network across the
year.
"We are pleased with trading
results in the first half of the year. Whilst the important Q3
trading period had a subdued start in the early weeks coinciding
with the Budget event, and a later Black Friday year on year, we
are well positioned to take advantage of
the improved momentum we are now experiencing, supported by our
Christmas campaign, new product launches and strong inventory
levels.
"Notwithstanding recent continued challenging trading
conditions, our expectations for the Group's full year performance
are unchanged, as we anticipate our typical second half weighting
of revenue and profitability, supplemented by the actions we have
taken to expand our retail network, combined with continued margin
and cost discipline.
"We remain confident in delivering
continued strategic progress and sustainable growth over the medium
term, as we work towards our ambitions of 100 stores, £100m revenue
and 10% operating profit margin."
Analyst Presentation:
An interim results presentation
for analysts and investors will be made available on the Group's
corporate website at
https://www.procookgroup.co.uk/investors/reports-and-presentations/
this morning from 9.00am.
For
further information please contact:
ProCook Group plc
Lee Tappenden, Chief Executive
Officer
Dan Walden, Chief Financial
Officer
|
investor.relations@procook.co.uk
|
MHP Group (Financial PR Adviser)
Katie
Hunt
Robert Collett-Creedy
|
procook@mhpgroup.com
Tel: +44
(0)7711 191 518
|
Next scheduled event:
ProCook expects to release its
third quarter trading update in early-mid January 2025.
Notes to editors:
ProCook is the UK's leading
direct-to-consumer specialist kitchenware brand. ProCook designs,
develops, and retails a high-quality range of direct-sourced and
own-brand kitchenware which provides customers with significant
value for money.
The brand sells directly through
its website, www.procook.co.uk, and through 64 own-brand retail
stores, located across the UK.
Founded over 25 years ago as a
family business, selling cookware sets by direct mail in the UK,
ProCook has grown into a market leading, multi-channel specialist
kitchenware company, employing over 600 colleagues, and operating
from its Store Support Centre in Gloucester.
As a B Corp, a Real Living Wage
employer and a certified Great Place to WorkTM, ProCook
is committed to being a socially responsible and environmentally
conscious business for the benefit of all
stakeholders.
ProCook has been listed on the
London Stock Exchange since November 2021 (PROC.L).
Further information about the
ProCook Group can be found at
www.procookgroup.co.uk.
Quarterly revenue performance:
|
FY25 (52 weeks ending 30
March 2025)
|
|
Q1
|
Q2
|
H1
|
Q3
|
Q4
|
H2
|
FY
|
Revenue (£'m)
|
11.3
|
17.0
|
28.3
|
|
|
|
|
Revenue growth %
|
5.6%
|
8.8%
|
7.5%
|
|
|
|
|
LFL revenue (£'m)3 & 5
|
10.8
|
16.0
|
26.7
|
|
|
|
|
LFL growth %
|
3.5%
|
4.7%
|
4.2%
|
|
|
|
|
|
FY24 (52 weeks ending 31
March 2024)
|
|
Q1
|
Q2
|
H1
|
Q3
|
Q4
|
H2
|
FY
|
Revenue (£'m)
|
10.7
|
15.7
|
26.3
|
23.1
|
13.2
|
36.2
|
62.6
|
Revenue growth %
|
(6.7%)
|
(1.8%)
|
(3.8%)
|
3.0%
|
5.0%
|
3.7%
|
0.4%
|
LFL revenue (£'m)4
|
10.2
|
15.0
|
25.3
|
21.4
|
12.2
|
33.6
|
58.5
|
LFL growth %
|
(7.9%)
|
(1.8%)
|
(4.4%)
|
(0.6%)
|
1.5%
|
0.2%
|
(2.0%)
|
Notes
1 Underlying operating loss, underlying loss before tax and
underlying EBITDA are presented before non-underlying items of
£0.3m in H1 FY25 (H1 FY24: £1.5m) in relation to IPO-related
share-based awards and, in FY24, transition and dual running costs
in respect of the Group's new Store Support Centre
2 UK Kitchenware market growth (excluding ProCook) calculated
using weekly GfK data and management estimates.
3 FY25 LFL (Like For Like) revenue reflects:
-
Ecommerce LFL - ProCook direct website channel
only.
-
Retail LFL - Continuing Retail stores which were
trading for at least one full financial year prior to 31 March
2024, inclusive of any stores which may have moved location or
increased/ decreased footprint within a given retail
centre.
4 FY24 LFL (Like For Like) revenue reflects:
-
Ecommerce LFL - ProCook direct website channel
only.
-
Retail LFL - Continuing Retail stores which were
trading for at least one full financial year prior to 2 April 2023,
inclusive of any stores which may have moved location or increased/
decreased footprint within a given retail centre.
5 The LFL revenue growth % by quarter for Q1 and Q2 FY25 has
been adjusted to exclude the closures of two garden centre stores
which were closed during Q3 FY25 and were previously included
within LFL revenue.
FY25 store opening programme:
Location
|
Retail
Centre
|
Anticipated
opening
|
Bracknell
|
Lexicon
|
Opened
April 2024
|
Birmingham, Solihull
|
Touchwood
|
Opened
August 2024
|
Newcastle
|
Metrocentre
|
Opened
September 2024
|
Oxford
|
Westgate
|
Opened
September 2024
|
Epsom
|
Ashley
Centre
|
Opened October 2024
|
Norwich
|
Chantry
Place
|
Opened
November 2024
|
Exeter
|
Princesshay
|
Opened
November 2024
|
Guildford
|
High
Street
|
Opened
November 2024
|
Birmingham, Dudley
|
Merry
Hill
|
Opened
November 2024
|
Bournemouth
|
Castlepoint
|
February 2025
|
Bristol
|
Cabot
Circus
|
February 2025
|
Milton Keynes
|
Centre:MK
|
March
2025
|
CEO's Review
Our first half trading performance
has been encouraging, with continued momentum in revenue growth and
positive like for like momentum in both Retail and Ecommerce
channels. We have attracted more new customers to shop with us year
on year, and our L12M active customer base is at a record high of
1.1m customers, having increased by +11.7% year on year.
We are well positioned for the
remainder of the important peak trading period, having expanded our
store footprint and ranges, with strong inventory levels secured.
Trading in the first eight weeks of the second half, including
Black Friday, has shown improving momentum after a subdued start to
the period which coincided with the Budget event, and our Christmas
campaign will provide customers with our award-winning quality at
great value prices.
Continued trading momentum in challenging
conditions
The consumer backdrop remains
difficult, with improving trends in consumer confidence stalling
more recently, fuelled by uncertainty around the recent UK Budget,
and wider macroeconomic and geopolitical factors. The kitchenware
market remains subdued, with limited growth, with the lack of
consumer confidence impacting discretionary spending.
Against this backdrop, I am pleased
that we grew market share during the first half with revenue growth
of +7.5% year on year and like for like revenue growth of
+4.2%.
We have now delivered five
consecutive quarters of like for like growth in Retail stores, and
by expanding our store network, with the addition of four new
stores in H1, our total Retail revenue growth was +6.5%.
Ecommerce revenue grew by +9.4%
year on year, with like for like growth of +8.5%, recuperating much
of the disruption from the previous year's website migration.
Additionally, our re-launch of sales through Amazon UK contributed
the balance of +0.9% points of growth.
We have continued to invest in
offering outstanding value for customers during the first half,
retaining the lower prices we implemented in H2 last year for the
majority of the first half. Therefore, our revenue growth has been
driven by volume and transaction growth, with a 160bps reduction in
gross margin, in line with our expectations for the first
half.
We have maintained strong cost
discipline throughout the first half, with operating costs as a
percentage of revenue slightly lower year on year, despite
inflationary headwinds. This resulted in a £1.1m increase in
underlying operating costs as we have grown; we continue to focus
on improving operating efficiency for the medium term to offset the
impacts of inflation on our business, especially in pay costs. As a
result, our underlying operating loss in H1 increased by £0.3m to
£1.8m compared to FY24 H1.
H2 is the Group's critical trading
period, as it typically represents approximately 60% of revenue
each year and this seasonal weighting provides improved operating
leverage over our fixed cost base. We have improved our Black
Friday and Christmas offers for customers, and with the right
inventory on hand we are well prepared.
Delivering on our strategic plan
In June we set out our plan to
achieve our medium-term ambition of operating 100 retail stores in
the UK, growing revenue to £100m and delivering 10% operating
profit margins, and we are making good progress with the actions we
set out.
We opened four new stores in the
first half, followed by five new stores during the first seven
weeks of the second half (nine new stores in the year to date).
After closing two smaller and less profitable garden centre stores,
we now operate from 64 stores. We now plan to open a further three
new stores in the balance of this financial year taking our new
store tally for FY25 to 12. Our new property pipeline for FY26 is
taking shape already and we are encouraged by both the performance
in the new stores thus far, and the opportunity these new stores
present to deliver profitable growth, better leverage our fixed
cost base, and build brand awareness.
High quality and great value
products are critical to our continued success, and I am pleased
with the progress we have made in this regard, as highlighted by
Good Housekeeping, Which? and Ideal Home. We have expanded our
promotional Black Friday and seasonal Christmas offers, and
increased the range of small kitchen electricals we now offer
following phase 3 launch in Summer. Phase 4 of small kitchen
electricals (coffee) is on track to launch during Q4. We continue
with efforts to consolidate our supplier base which will improve
quality, service and cost price.
We have continued our relentless
drive to ensure our customer service and experience is the very
best it can be. We now monitor NPS in retail stores and online
transactions, using learnings and customer feedback to enhance
service levels and experience. Our focus on User Experience online
has enhanced conversion rates year on year and we have developed
and deployed a series of enhancements during the year thus
far.
Building brand awareness remains
one of our largest opportunities. Opening the 12 new stores planned
for FY25 will give us access to new centre visitors in excess of
150m per year that we previously did not serve. Additionally, we
have made substantial headway in developing our social marketing
activities, and our mix of spend between digital channels has
already shifted and is delivering improved marketing efficiency.
Concurrently, we have made good progress in developing more
inspirational and lifestyle-centred marketing campaigns, including
for Autumn and Christmas, and we have begun developing our online
recipe bank for customers. We are confident these actions will
support greater engagement and connectivity with our brand. We also
took the decision to launch a curated range on Amazon UK, enabling
more customers to discover us for the first time, whilst also
providing a convenient next day service for those who choose to
shop this way.
Our supply chain transformation
programme is a multi-year initiative, but early progress has been
strong. Our team have shifted thinking to end-to-end cost
effectiveness. Key initiatives launched in the first half include
warehouse operations pick and pack efficiencies, trialling a new
delivery partner with caged deliveries for the South-East region,
and increasing delivery frequency to improve on shelf availability
whilst reducing store inventory levels. These initiatives will,
over time, enable us to run a more efficient business.
Current trading and outlook
In the first eight weeks (ending 8
December 2024) of the second half, including Black Friday and the
early part of Christmas trading, total revenue was +7.5% year on
year, and like for like revenue was +0.9% reflecting continued
trading momentum and market outperformance.
Retail performance was hampered by
weak footfall during the early weeks of the second half which
coincided with the Budget event, and a later Black Friday year on
year, but has improved since. As a result, Retail like for like
revenue was -4.0% year on year, however new store openings added
+10.3% points to deliver total Retail revenue growth of +6.3%.
Ecommerce performance continued to increase year on year with like
for like growth of +7.7% and total growth of +9.3% including
revenue generated from the recently re-launched Amazon UK
marketplace channel.
Whilst the important Q3 trading
period had a subdued start in the early weeks, we are
well positioned to take advantage of the
improved momentum we are now experiencing, supported by our
Christmas campaign, new product launches and strong inventory
levels.
Notwithstanding recent continued
challenging trading conditions, our expectations for the Group's
full year performance are unchanged, as we anticipate our typical
second half weighting of revenue and profitability, supplemented by
the actions we have taken to expand our retail network, alongside
continued margin and cost discipline.
Accelerating profitable growth
Having returned to profitability
last year, we are now committed to building on this and achieving
our medium-term ambition to grow our store network to 100 UK
stores, delivering revenue of £100m and improving operating profit
margins to 10%.
The trading momentum of the first
half and the eight weeks since, combined with the strategic
progress we have made, provides encouragement that we are taking
the right steps, and that despite the macro headwinds, we are
building improved resilience and a performance culture that can
deliver.
The fundamentals of our business
model are strong and becoming stronger, and the Leadership Team,
Board and I are eager to progress the many opportunities we have to
build a stronger customer-focused business. As market conditions
improve, the actions we are taking, and investments we are making
now will help us accelerate and deliver profitable and sustainable
growth for our stakeholders.
I am excited by the journey we are
on, and I would like to take the opportunity to thank all our
colleagues for their effort, commitment and customer focus over the
first part of this financial year.
Lee Tappenden
Chief Executive Officer
CFO's Review
The market remains challenging and
volatile as consumer confidence is impacted by cost-of-living
pressures, economic and geopolitical uncertainty. Against this
backdrop, we have delivered a strong performance in the first half,
outperforming a subdued market and growing our customer
base.
We maintain a tight grip on gross
margins and operating costs, balancing the need to offer the best
possible value to customers in a competitive market, whilst driving
improved profitability. We have worked to mitigate, where possible,
the effects of inflation, through operating efficiencies and
improved business processes.
As a result of the global supply
chain disruption, we prudently ordered inventory earlier than
normal, to ensure that we were well positioned for the peak trading
period.
We have made good progress against
our strategic priorities, and we continue to invest in the areas
which will support our performance and deliver profitable growth
for the long term, including in particular this year our new store
opening programme which is a key part of our strategy.
The first half of the financial
year typically generates around 40% of full year sales. The larger
and far more profitable second half of the year typically delivers
around 60% of sales, and with strong inventory levels and a robust
trading plan in place we are well placed for the remainder of the
second half.
Revenue
£m
|
H1
FY25
|
YoY
%
|
Revenue
|
28.3
|
7.5%
|
Ecommerce
|
10.0
|
9.4%
|
Retail
|
18.3
|
6.5%
|
|
|
|
LFL Revenue
|
26.7
|
4.2%
|
LFL
Ecommerce
|
9.9
|
8.5%
|
LFL Retail
|
16.8
|
1.9%
|
First half revenue of £28.3m was
+7.5% year on year, and +4.2% on a like for like basis, reflecting
continued trading momentum and +5% market
outperformance.
Ecommerce revenue increased by
+9.4% reflecting a significantly improved performance on last year
(which was impacted by the new website migration in Q2) driven by
conversion and marketing improvements. The planned relaunch of
sales on the Amazon UK marketplace to broaden our customer reach
contributed +0.9% points of non-like for like growth in the second
quarter.
Retail revenue increased by +6.5%
benefitting from the fifth consecutive quarter of positive like for
like growth (+1.9% for the first half) and the impact of new store
openings which added a further 4.6% points.
Gross profit
Gross profit increased +5.1% year
on year to £18.4m, driven by revenue growth. This represented a
gross profit margin decrease of 160bps which was primarily due to
investment in improved pricing for customers (-210bps), increased
freight costs (-30bps) and mix effect (-60bps), partly offset by
favourable foreign exchange impacts (+130bps) and lower promotional
discounts (+20bps).
Operating expenses and other income
Underlying operating expenses net of other
income
Total underlying operating expenses
net of other income increased by £1.1m (+6.3%) year on year,
although despite inflationary headwinds, were 120bps lower year on
year as a percentage of revenue, driven by:
· Volume
growth: +£0.5m
· Payroll inflation: +£0.6m
· Digital marketing: +£0.2m
· New
stores: +£0.2m
· Cost
efficiencies: -£0.3m
Non-underlying operating expenses
It is the Group's policy to
disclose separately such items that relate to non-recurring events
and are material in nature, and incurred outside of the normal
business operations, in order to provide a consistent and
comparable view of the underlying performance of the Group.
Non-underlying operating expenses in H1 FY25 were £0.3m (H1 FY24:
£1.4m).
Consistent with prior periods,
expenses in respect of employee share-based awards which relate to
the IPO in FY22, which itself is non-recurring, have been presented
as non-underlying costs. These expenses amounted to £0.3m in H1
FY25 (H1 FY24: £0.7m). These expenses are expected to continue
through relevant vesting periods to the third anniversary of the
IPO in November 2024.
During the first half of FY24, we
completed the final elements of transition into our new SSC.
Operating expenses associated with the costs of transitioning into
the new site and the dual occupancy of the new and previous sites
were £0.9m in H1 FY24.
Operating profit / (loss)
Total underlying operating loss for
the period increased year on year to £1.8m (H1 FY24: £1.5m)
primarily driven by the lower gross margins in the first half.
Ecommerce operating margins decreased to 18.8% (H1 FY24: 20.5%) and
Retail operating margins decreased to 11.9% (H1 FY24:
13.6%).
£m
|
H1 FY25
|
H1
FY24
|
Underlying operating profit / (loss)
|
|
|
Ecommerce
|
1.9
|
1.9
|
Retail
|
2.2
|
2.3
|
Central costs
|
(5.9)
|
(5.7)
|
Total
|
(1.8)
|
(1.5)
|
|
|
|
As
a % of revenue
|
|
|
Ecommerce
|
18.8%
|
20.5%
|
Retail
|
11.9%
|
13.6%
|
Central costs
|
(20.6%)
|
(21.8%)
|
Total
|
(6.2%)
|
(5.8%)
|
Total reported operating loss in
the first half of FY25 of £2.1m, after £0.3m of non-underlying
operating expense items, improved by £0.9m from £3.0m H1
FY24.
Profit and earnings per share
Underlying losses before tax
increased by 64.7% year on year to £2.9m in the first half of FY25
(H1 FY24: £1.7m).
During the first half there was a
net expense of £1.1m (H1 FY24: £0.2m net expense) in respect of
financial items. Financial items included interest expenses on
lease liabilities and borrowings of £0.7m (H1 FY24: £0.7m), and
unrealised losses of £0.4m in respect of foreign exchange (H1 FY24:
£0.5m unrealised gains).
After non-underlying items, the
loss before tax was £3.2m (H1 FY24: £3.2m). Reported loss after tax
was £2.5m (H1 FY24: £2.4m).
The effective tax rate based on
underlying loss before tax was 25.0% (H1 FY24: 25%).
Earnings per Share
Underlying basic earnings per share
for the first half decreased to -1.98 pence (H1 FY24: -1.18 pence)
and underlying diluted earnings per share decreased to -1.98 pence
(H1 FY24: -1.18 pence).
Reported basic earnings per share
for the first half were -2.30 pence (H1 FY24: -2.22 pence) and
reported diluted earnings per share were -2.30 pence (H1 FY24:
-2.22 pence).
Cash generation and net debt
We have carefully managed our cash
position during the first half, with net debt increasing by £3.4m
since the FY24 year end reflecting investment in new stores, the
typical seasonal impacts of lower cash generation during the first
half and the requirement to build inventory ahead of peak trading
in Q3.
Free cash outflow for the first
half was £3.4m (H1 FY24: outflow of £0.3m, including +£2.6m benefit
of Net Working Capital as inventory was reduced) with net debt at
the period end of £4.2m (FY24 year end: £0.7m; H1 FY24: £3.2m) and
available liquidity of £11.8m.
£m
|
H1 FY25
|
H1 FY24
|
Reported loss before tax
|
(3.2)
|
(3.2)
|
Depreciation, amortisation,
impairment and profit/ loss on disposal
|
2.8
|
2.6
|
Share based
payments
|
0.4
|
0.7
|
Finance expense
|
0.7
|
0.8
|
Unrealised FX losses/
(gains)
|
0.4
|
(0.5)
|
Net working capital
|
(0.3)
|
2.6
|
Net operating cash flow
|
0.9
|
2.9
|
Net capital
expenditure
|
(1.3)
|
(1.0)
|
Interest
|
(0.7)
|
(0.8)
|
Payment of lease
liabilities
|
(2.2)
|
(1.4)
|
Free Cash Flow
|
(3.4)
|
(0.3)
|
Movement in borrowings
|
4.5
|
(0.2)
|
Dividends paid
|
-
|
-
|
Movement in cash and cash equivalents
|
1.1
|
(0.5)
|
|
|
|
Cash and Cash
equivalents
|
3.1
|
1.4
|
Borrowings
|
(7.3)
|
(4.6)
|
Net debt
|
(4.2)
|
(3.2)
|
The reported loss before tax in the
first half includes £0.3m of non-underlying items which did not
result in cash outflows during the period (H1 FY24: £1.5m of
non-underlying items of which £0.7m were cash outflows).
An increase in net working capital
resulted in a cash outflow of £0.3m in the first half (H1 FY24:
£2.6m inflow) driven by increased inventory intake prior to the
peak trading period, as a result of prudent planning in response to
global supply chain disruption. Inventory on hand at the half year
was therefore £12.9m, £4.4m higher year on year, and up from £8.3m
at the FY24 year end. Total inventory at the half year was £16.9m
(H1 FY24: £11.9m).
Net capital expenditure of £1.3m in
the first half related to the planned investment in new retail
stores.
Full year guidance
Our expectations for the full year
remain unchanged. The second half reflects the seasonal impact of
higher trading volumes over Black Friday and Christmas, and the
effect this has to improve leverage of our fixed cost
base.
Additionally, we anticipate H2
gross profit margins to improve modestly compared to H1 driven by
FX benefits and targeted price improvements. The new stores opened
in H1 will provide a benefit to profitability in H2, and we expect
to continue to drive operating efficiencies throughout the second
half.
The recent Budget announcements
around National Insurance Contributions will not impact this
financial year, but will add approximately £0.5m of additional tax
burden next financial year, which we will endeavour to offset
through continual process improvements. As a Real Living Wage
employer, the announcements around the increased National Living
Wage were already factored into our plans and we continue to pay
all colleagues, no matter their age, in excess of the adult
National Living Wage.
Banking arrangements
The Group has access to a committed
£10m Revolving Credit Facility ("RCF") to provide additional cash
headroom to support operational and investment activities. This
facility expires in April 2026 and provides an accordion option,
subject to the lender's approval, to extend the facility by a
further £5m.
The RCF facility has covenant terms
in respect of fixed charge cover whereby the test requires EBITDAR
to be no less than 1.30x fixed charges for the FY25 Q1 and Q2 test
dates, and 1.40x thereafter, and also leverage whereby net debt
should be no greater than 2.0x EBITDA. Both covenants are tested
quarterly and are calculated on a last twelve month rolling,
pre-IFRS 16 basis.
The Group's ability to meet these
covenants has been stress tested as part of going concern
considerations, which is described in more detail below.
The Group has retained its access
to an existing uncommitted £6.0m trade finance facility, which is
due to expire in February 2025, although is expected to be renewed
at that date. There is a performance KPI (inventory to payables
ratio), which is monitored on a quarterly basis, however, there are
no covenants or guarantees or other collateral associated with this
facility.
Capital allocation and dividend policy
In normal circumstances, the Board
currently believes that, to ensure operating flexibility through
the business cycle, it must maintain a minimum unrestricted cash /
debt headroom which the Board reviews on an annual basis, or more
frequently as required. Maintaining this headroom provides a level
of flexibility sufficient to fund the working capital and
investment needs of the Group (as well as set aside an appropriate
operating reserve for unexpected events).
The Group's dividend policy targets
an ordinary dividend pay-out ratio of 20% to 30% of profit after
tax during the financial year to which the dividend relates. The
Board anticipates, under normal circumstances, that it will
consider returning surplus cash to shareholders if average cash /
debt headroom over a period consistently exceeds the minimum
headroom target, subject to known and anticipated investment plans
at the time.
The full capital and dividend
policy is available on the Group's website at
www.procookgroup.co.uk.
Dividends
Due to the ongoing challenging
consumer environment and the uncertainty that it creates around
trading performance, and therefore taking a cautious and responsible decision to preserve cash within the
business during these times, the Board have
not recommended any interim dividend in respect of FY25.
Principal risks and uncertainties
The Board regularly reviews and
monitors the risks and uncertainties which could have a material
effect on the Group's results. A summary of the principal risks is
set out below:
Risk
|
Impact
|
Strategy and business
change
|
Failure to identify and
successfully execute appropriate strategies to develop and grow the
brand over the medium to long term could be affected by a range of
factors including changes in competition or products, consumer
behaviours and trends, inadequate change management or leadership.
This could slow or limit the growth of the business, distract from
and / or damage the overall customer proposition, incur additional
cost or serve to demotivate colleagues if not led
effectively.
|
Competition,
market and
macroeconomic
|
Failure to adapt to changing
consumer needs given external macro factors, and to maintain a
compelling customer offer compared to competitors could limit or
reduce profitability and opportunities for growth. Macroeconomic
factors which reduce consumer confidence and / or disposable
incomes or create additional cost pressures could impact revenue
growth and profit generation.
|
Brand and customer
|
Reputational damage leading to
loss of consumer confidence in ProCook products or services, which
could be caused by a variety of factors including customer data
loss, product quality, health and safety, level of direct marketing
activity, ethical or sustainability concerns, poor customer service
or, regulatory non-compliance.
|
Climate change
|
Any failure to implement our ESG
ambitions within acceptable timescales and deliver on stakeholder
expectations to reduce the environmental impact of our business and
progress towards our net zero targets. These include actions linked
to our ESG strategy and managing the potential consequences of
climate change on our business. Failure to meet the expectations of
our customers, colleagues, investors and other stakeholders, may
impact our brand reputation and future trading
performance.
|
Supply chain
|
Failure to source products
effectively and efficiently, potentially relating to geopolitics
surrounding Far East manufacturing reliance, or to ensure inventory
is maintained in the right volumes at the right locations could
adversely impact our short and medium term operational and
financial performance.
|
Technology platforms, data loss
and cyber security
|
Failure to develop and maintain
appropriate technology to support operations, or the loss of key
platforms or data due to cyber-attacks or other failures without an
adequate response, could lead to reputational damage, fines or
higher costs, or a loss of stakeholder and customer confidence in
our Brand.
|
Marketing effectiveness
|
Any failure to attract new
customers and retain existing customers in a cost-effective and
engaging way could impact short term performance and medium
strategic growth ambitions.
|
People and culture
|
Any failure to attract, retain and
develop the right talent, skills and capabilities or to
successfully protect and develop our culture could impact
operational activities including customer service and our
longer-term strategic objectives.
|
Finance and
treasury
|
Any failure to effectively manage
our financial affairs and ensure an appropriate financial position
and sufficient liquidity for future growth, or any failure in
financial planning, financial reporting, compliance with tax
legislation, or the maintenance of a robust financial control
environment, could impact our ability to deliver our strategic
objectives, as well as have an adverse impact on business
viability.
|
Regulatory and
compliance
|
Any failure to comply with legal
and regulatory obligations, or our wider corporate responsibility
could result in financial or legal exposures or damage our
reputation with our Stakeholders as a responsible brand.
|
Dan Walden
Chief Financial Officer
Statement of Directors' responsibilities
The Directors confirm that these
condensed interim financial statements have been prepared in
accordance with International Accounting Standard 34, 'Interim
Financial Reporting', as adopted by the European Union and that the
interim management report includes a fair review of the information
required by DTR 4.2.7 and DTR 4.2.8, namely:
- An indication of important events that have occurred during
the first half of the year and their impact on the condensed set of
financial statements, and a description of the principal risks and
uncertainties for the remainder of the financial year;
and
- Material related-party transactions in the first half of the
year and any material changes in the related-party transactions
described in the last annual report.
The Directors of the Company are
listed in the Company's Annual Report and Accounts for the year
ended 31 March 2024. A list of current Directors is maintained on
the Company's corporate website: www.procookgroup.co.uk.
By order of the Board
Dan Walden
Chief Financial
Officer
Consolidated Income Statement (Unaudited)
For the 28 weeks to 13 October
2024
|
|
28 weeks ended 13 October
2024
|
28 weeks
ended 15 October 2023
|
£'000s
|
Note
|
Underlying
|
Non-underlying1
|
Reported
|
Underlying
|
Non-underlying1
|
Reported
|
Revenue
|
1
|
28,312
|
-
|
28,312
|
26,330
|
-
|
26,330
|
Cost of sales
|
|
(9,870)
|
-
|
(9,870)
|
(8,775)
|
-
|
(8,775)
|
Gross profit
|
|
18,442
|
-
|
18,442
|
17,555
|
-
|
17,555
|
Operating expenses
|
|
(20,252)
|
(342)
|
(20,594)
|
(19,098)
|
(1,435)
|
(20,533)
|
Other income
|
|
46
|
-
|
46
|
23
|
-
|
23
|
Operating Loss
|
|
(1,764)
|
(342)
|
(2,106)
|
(1,520)
|
(1,435)
|
(2,955)
|
Finance expense
|
|
(742)
|
-
|
(742)
|
(708)
|
(77)
|
(785)
|
Other gains/(losses)
|
|
(377)
|
-
|
(377)
|
513
|
-
|
513
|
Loss before tax
|
|
(2,883)
|
(342)
|
(3,225)
|
(1,715)
|
(1,512)
|
(3,227)
|
Tax credit
|
4
|
720
|
-
|
720
|
428
|
378
|
806
|
Loss for the period
|
|
(2,163)
|
(342)
|
(2,505)
|
(1,287)
|
(1,134)
|
(2,421)
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Total comprehensive loss
|
|
(2,163)
|
(342)
|
(2,505)
|
(1,287)
|
(1,134)
|
(2,421)
|
Earnings per ordinary share -
basic
|
|
(1.98)p
|
|
(2.30)p
|
(1.18)p
|
|
(2.22)p
|
Earnings per ordinary share -
diluted
|
|
(1.98)p
|
|
(2.30)p
|
(1.18)p
|
|
(2.22)p
|
|
|
52 weeks
ended 31 March 2024
|
£'000s
|
Note
|
Underlying
|
Non-underlying1
|
Reported
|
Revenue
|
1
|
62,585
|
-
|
62,585
|
Cost of sales
|
|
(21,486)
|
-
|
(21,486)
|
Gross profit
|
|
41,099
|
-
|
41,099
|
Operating expenses
|
|
(39,025)
|
(145)
|
(39,025)
|
Other income
|
|
49
|
-
|
49
|
Operating profit
|
|
2,123
|
(145)
|
1,978
|
Finance expense
|
|
(1,230)
|
(132)
|
(1,362)
|
Other gains
|
|
114
|
-
|
114
|
Profit before tax
|
|
1,007
|
(277)
|
730
|
Tax expense
|
4
|
(165)
|
45
|
(120)
|
Profit for the period
|
|
842
|
(232)
|
610
|
|
|
|
|
|
Total comprehensive loss
|
|
842
|
(232)
|
610
|
|
|
|
|
|
Earnings per ordinary share -
basic
|
|
0.77p
|
|
0.56p
|
Earnings per ordinary share -
diluted
|
|
0.73p
|
|
0.53p
|
1 See note 2 for further information
Consolidated Statement of Financial Position
(Unaudited)
As at 13 October 2024
£'000s
|
Note
|
As at 13 October
2024
|
As at 15
October 2023 (restated)1
|
As at 31
March 2024
|
Assets
|
|
|
|
|
Non-current assets
|
|
|
|
|
Intangible assets
|
|
52
|
164
|
104
|
Property, plant, and
equipment
|
|
8,894
|
8,169
|
8,232
|
Right-of-use assets
|
7
|
20,520
|
25,493
|
20,522
|
Deferred tax asset
|
|
655
|
894
|
655
|
Total non-current assets
|
|
30,121
|
34,720
|
29,513
|
Current assets
|
|
|
|
|
Inventories
|
8
|
16,941
|
11,885
|
9,716
|
Trade and other
receivables
|
|
2,206
|
3,409
|
3,742
|
Current tax asset
|
|
865
|
797
|
145
|
Cash and cash
equivalents
|
9
|
3,091
|
1,446
|
2,005
|
Total current assets
|
|
23,103
|
17,537
|
15,608
|
Total assets
|
|
53,224
|
52,257
|
45,121
|
Liabilities
|
|
|
|
|
Current liabilities
|
|
|
|
|
Trade and other payables
|
|
16,223
|
10,722
|
10,431
|
Lease liabilities
|
7
|
3,251
|
3,772
|
3,347
|
Provisions
|
|
210
|
206
|
253
|
Borrowings
|
10
|
7,273
|
4,624
|
2,754
|
Total current liabilities
|
|
26,957
|
19,324
|
16,785
|
Non-current liabilities
|
|
|
|
|
Trade and other payables
|
|
48
|
357
|
48
|
Lease liabilities
|
7
|
19,279
|
26,267
|
19,295
|
Provisions
|
|
591
|
552
|
565
|
Total non-current liabilities
|
|
19,918
|
27,176
|
19,908
|
Total liabilities
|
|
46,875
|
46,500
|
36,693
|
|
|
|
|
|
Net Assets
|
|
6,349
|
5,757
|
8,428
|
|
Equity and reserves attributable to Shareholders of ProCook
Group plc
|
Share capital
|
|
1,090
|
1,090
|
1,090
|
Ordinary Shares to be
issued
|
|
4,525
|
7,405
|
4,099
|
Share Premium
|
|
1
|
1
|
1
|
Retained earnings
|
|
733
|
(2,739)
|
3,238
|
Total equity and reserves
|
|
6,349
|
5,757
|
8,428
|
1 The deferred tax and current tax assets in the financial year
ending 2 April 2023 has been restated in relation to deferred tax
on share-based payments. Further
information relating to this restatement is set out in the Group's
FY24 Annual Report and Accounts.
Consolidated Statement of cash flows
(Unaudited)
For the 28 weeks to 13 October
2024
|
|
28 weeks
ended
|
28
weeks ended
|
52
weeks ended
|
£'000s
|
Note
|
13 October
2024
|
15
October 2023
|
31 March
2024
|
Cash flows from operating activities
|
|
|
|
|
(Loss)/profit before tax
|
|
(3,225)
|
(3,227)
|
730
|
Adjustments for:
|
|
|
|
|
Depreciation of property, plant,
and equipment
|
|
566
|
489
|
936
|
Amortisation of intangible
assets
|
|
51
|
70
|
131
|
(Gain)/Loss on disposal of
property, plant, and equipment
|
|
(21)
|
-
|
457
|
Gain on disposal of
leases
|
|
-
|
-
|
(2,301)
|
Profit on termination of
leases
|
|
-
|
(5)
|
-
|
Amortisation of right-of-use
assets
|
7
|
2,226
|
2,053
|
3,945
|
Unrealised FX
losses/(gains)
|
|
383
|
(549)
|
(411)
|
Cash outlay on exercise of share
options
|
|
-
|
-
|
(360)
|
Share Based Payments
|
|
426
|
653
|
514
|
Finance expense
|
|
742
|
785
|
1,362
|
Operating cash flows before movements in working
capital
|
1,148
|
269
|
5,003
|
(Increase)/decrease in
inventories
|
8
|
(7,225)
|
(370)
|
1,799
|
Decrease/(Increase) in trade and
other receivables
|
|
1,494
|
(664)
|
(1,459)
|
Increase in trade and other
payables
|
|
5,454
|
3,700
|
3,255
|
(Decrease)/increase in
provisions
|
|
(17)
|
(54)
|
5
|
Income taxes (paid)
|
4
|
-
|
-
|
(9)
|
Net cash flows from operating activities
|
|
854
|
2,881
|
8,594
|
Investing activities
|
|
|
|
|
Purchase of property, plant, and
equipment
|
|
(1,312)
|
(1,060)
|
(1,844)
|
Lease inception costs
|
|
(19)
|
(11)
|
(71)
|
Lease incentives
received
|
|
-
|
10
|
60
|
Net cash (used in) investing activities
|
|
(1,331)
|
(1,061)
|
(1,855)
|
Financing activities
|
|
|
|
|
Interest paid on
borrowings
|
|
(238)
|
(246)
|
(367)
|
Interest paid on lease
liabilities
|
7
|
(494)
|
(539)
|
(982)
|
Proceeds from borrowings
|
10
|
14,142
|
15,785
|
23,974
|
Repayment of borrowings
|
10
|
(9,623)
|
(15,965)
|
(25,923)
|
Lease principle payments
|
7
|
(2,224)
|
(1,371)
|
(3,398)
|
Net cash (used in) financing activities
|
|
1,563
|
(2,374)
|
(6,696)
|
Net movement in cash and cash equivalents
|
|
1,086
|
(516)
|
43
|
Cash and cash equivalents at
beginning of the period
|
|
2,005
|
1,962
|
1,962
|
Cash and cash equivalents at end of period
|
9
|
3,091
|
1,446
|
2,005
|
Consolidated statement of changes in equity
(Unaudited)
For the 28 weeks to 13 October
2024
£'000
|
Note
|
Share
capital
|
Share
Premium
|
Share
Option Reserve
|
Retained
earnings
|
Total
equity
|
As
at 2 April 2023 (restated)1
|
|
1,090
|
1
|
6,891
|
(318)
|
7,664
|
Total comprehensive loss for the
period
|
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
(2,421)
|
(2,421)
|
Employee Share Based Payment
Awards
|
|
-
|
-
|
653
|
-
|
653
|
As
at 15 October 2023 (restated)1
|
|
1,090
|
1
|
7,544
|
(2,739)
|
5,896
|
Total comprehensive loss for the
period
|
|
-
|
-
|
|
3,031
|
3,031
|
Employee Share Based Payment
Awards
|
|
-
|
-
|
(139)
|
-
|
(139)
|
Exercise of share
options
|
5
|
-
|
-
|
(3,306)
|
2,946
|
(360)
|
As
at 31 March 2024
|
|
1,090
|
1
|
4,099
|
3,238
|
8,428
|
Total comprehensive loss for the
period
|
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
(2,505)
|
(2,505)
|
Employee Share Based Payment
Awards
|
|
-
|
-
|
426
|
-
|
426
|
As
at 13 October 2024
|
|
1,090
|
1
|
4,525
|
733
|
6,349
|
1 The deferred tax asset in the financial year ending 2 April
2023 has been restated in relation to deferred tax on share-based
payments, with resulting decreases to retained earnings. Further
information relating to this restatement is set out in the Group's
FY24 Annual Report and Accounts.
Consolidated Financial Statements Accounting Policies
(Unaudited)
For the 28 weeks to 13 October
2024
General Information
The Group interim financial
statements consolidate those of ProCook Group plc (the 'Company')
and its subsidiaries, together referred to as the
'Group'.
ProCook Group plc is a public
limited company incorporated and domiciled in England and Wales
under the Companies Act 2006 (Registration number: 13679248). The
registered office is ProCook, 10 Indurent Park,
Gloucester, GL10 3EZ.
The principal activity of the
Company together with its subsidiary undertakings throughout the
period is the sale of kitchenware and related products in stores
and via ecommerce platforms.
The Group's financial results and
cashflows are subject to seasonal trends throughout the financial
period. Typically, revenue and profit are higher in the last 24
weeks of the financial year due to the seasonal impact of increased
trade in the run up to Christmas.
Basis of preparation
These condensed interim financial
statements for the 28 weeks ended 13 October 2024 have been
prepared in accordance with IAS 34 "Interim financial information".
These condensed interim financial statements do not comprise
statutory accounts within the meaning of Section 434 of the
Companies Act 2006 and are not audited.
The condensed interim financial
statements should be read in conjunction with the annual financial
statements for the year ended 31 March 2024, which were prepared in
accordance with International Accounting Standards in conformity
with the requirements of the Companies Act 2006, UK-adopted IFRS as
issued by the International Accounting Standards Board.
Statutory financial statements for
the period ended 31 March 2024 were approved by the Board of
Directors on 25 June 2024 and delivered to
the Registrar of Companies. The auditors
have reported on those financial statements; their reports were (i)
unqualified, (ii) contained a reference to the material uncertainty
in respect of going concern to which the auditor drew attention by
way of emphasis without modifying their report, (iii) did not
contain a statement under Section 498 (2) or (3) of the Companies
Act 2006.
The presentation of the condensed
financial statements requires Directors to make judgements,
estimates and assumptions that affect the application of policies
and reported amounts of assets and liabilities, income and
expenses. The estimates and associated assumptions are based on
historical experiences and various other factors that are believed
to be reasonable under the circumstances. Actual results may differ
from these estimates.
The Directors have, at the time of
approving the financial statements, a reasonable expectation that
the Group has adequate resources to continue in operational
existence for the foreseeable future. Thus, they continue to adopt
the going concern basis of accounting in preparing the financial
statements.
Basis of consolidation
Group companies included in these
consolidated interim financial statements include ProCook Group plc
and all subsidiary undertakings, which are those entities it
controls. ProCook Group plc controls an entity when it is exposed
to, or has rights to, variable returns from its involvement with
the entity and can affect those returns through its power to direct
the activities of the entity. Subsidiaries are fully consolidated
from the date on which control is transferred to ProCook Group plc
until the date that control ceases. The Company assesses whether it
controls an investee if facts and circumstances indicate that there
are changes in the control indicators listed above.
Transactions eliminated on consolidation
Intra-group balances, and any
unrealised gains and losses or income and expenses arising from
intra-group transactions are eliminated in preparing the financial
information. Losses are eliminated in the same way as gains, but
only to the extent that there is no evidence of
impairment.
Going concern
The interim financial statements
have been prepared on a going concern basis. The Group had net debt
(cash and cash equivalents less borrowings) of £4.2m at 13 October
2024 (15 October 2023: £3.2m) with available liquidity headroom of
£11.8m.
In their assessment of going
concern the Board has considered a period of at least 12 months
from the date of signing these financial statements.
In considering whether it is appropriate to adopt
the going concern basis in the preparation of the financial
statements, the Directors have considered the Group's principal
risks and uncertainties and have assessed the impact of a range of
downside scenarios, including a severe but plausible downside
scenario, on the Group's expected financial performance, position,
and cash generation. The scenarios have been informed by a
comprehensive review of the macroeconomic environment, including
consideration of the current weakened consumer confidence driven by
economic uncertainty, alongside geo-political tensions including
the impacts on our supply chain.
Consideration has been given to
the availability of facility headroom and covenant compliance
within the Group's financing facilities, the recently extended RCF
agreement and amended fixed charge covenant terms, details of which
are as follows:
- ProCook's bank facility agreements include a committed £10m
Revolving Credit Facility "RCF" (expiring in April 2026, although
expected by management to be renewed at that date), with a £5m
accordion option to the RCF, subject to lender approval, and an
uncommitted £6m trade finance facility.
-
The RCF facility has
covenant terms in respect of fixed charge cover whereby the test
requires EBITDAR to be no less than 1.30x fixed charges for the
FY25 Q1 and Q2 test dates, and 1.40x thereafter, and also leverage
whereby net debt should be no greater than 2.0x EBITDA. Both
covenants are tested quarterly and are calculated on a last twelve
month rolling, pre-IFRS 16 basis.
The base case for the scenario
modelling reflects the Group's most recent quarterly forecast that
was presented to the Board in November 2024. Forecasts for FY26 are
based on the Group's strategic objectives and its latest five year
financial plan, which projects forwards from the latest FY25
quarterly forecast.
Key assumptions include Ecommerce
and Retail like for like revenue growth, gross margin performance,
the financial impacts of opening of new stores (including capital
investments and time to maturity), operational efficiencies being
delivered, investment in marketing activity, and the appropriate
level of inventory required to maintain strong product availability
for customers.
In their consideration of the
Group's principal risks and uncertainties the Board believes that
the most likely and most impactful risks that the Group faces are
those surrounding customer and macro-economic factors, and supply
chain disruption risk, and finance and treasury risks (foreign
exchange on account of the US presidential elections) all of which
are heightened as a result of the current
macro-environment.
The Board has reviewed the
potential downside impact of these risks unfolding, modelled under
a number of scenarios including a severe but plausible downside
scenario which reflected the following assumptions:
- A significant reduction in customer demand and shopping
frequency, caused by continued disposable income pressures and
consumer caution in light of political uncertainty, additional cost
impacts driven by continued supply chain disruption associated with
the Suez Canal diversions, and FX impacts on gross profit margins
from a stronger US dollar.
- The impacts of these factors have been reflected in an 6%
lower revenue performance in the balance of the FY25 year compared
to base case, increasing to a 10% decrease in FY26, combining to
reflect a 38% reduction in Group revenue growth over the assessment
period compared to the base case.
- A
reduction in gross margins in the balance of FY25 compared to the
base case of 100bps and by 200bps in FY26 to reflect heightened
supply chain costs and a weaker GBP compared to the US dollar for
product purchasing.
Under this severe but plausible
downside scenario, and before mitigating actions, the Group would
remain comfortably within its available borrowing facilities
throughout the assessment period and remain compliant with the
fixed charge covenant test. However, it would breach the leverage
covenant at the Q2 FY26 test date given the level of planned and
committed inventory intake and new store openings during the
remainder of FY25 and first half of FY26.
The other downside scenario linked
to the key principal risks and uncertainties, which was considered
by the Board, had a less severe cumulative impact than the severe
but plausible downside scenario outlined above and in this scenario
neither of the covenants would be breached, and the Group would
remain comfortably within its available borrowing facilities
throughout the assessment period.
The Board has also considered the
potential impacts of climate change risks. These are not considered
to have a material effect on the Group's financial projections over
the assessment period.
If any of the downside scenarios
were to arise, including the severe but plausible downside
scenario, there are a series of mitigating actions that the Group
could seek to implement to protect or enhance financial performance
and position including to:
- Increase selling prices for products which have lower price
elasticity to help offset additional sourcing costs
- Increase
promotional activity to accelerate trading performance and reduce
stock levels, or alternatively, reduce promotional activity to
better protect gross margins
- Reduce paid media marketing spend and postpone or reduce other
planned marketing activities
- Reduce variable costs in operational functions to reflect the
lower sales volumes
- Reduce central overhead costs (including headcount investment)
over the short or medium term
- Delay new store openings or capital expenditure in technology
and logistics
- Renegotiate or seek extended payment terms with suppliers on a
permanent or temporary basis
- Seek alternative forms of financing or new banking terms to
support working capital and investment requirements
Conclusion
The Board has undertaken a
comprehensive review and assessment of going concern including the
Group's financial projections, debt servicing requirements,
available facility headroom and liquidity, and its principal risks
and uncertainties. In the base case and downside scenarios which
the Directors have reviewed, the Group remains comfortably within
its available facility headroom, and no facility covenants would be
breached. However, the Directors recognise that under the severe
but plausible downside scenario, the Group could breach its
leverage covenant unless mitigating actions were to be successfully
applied sufficiently in advance to prevent such a breach, or were
it to agree a covenant waiver, new banking terms, or alternative
funding arrangements, none of which can be guaranteed. The
Directors therefore acknowledge that this potential breach
represents a material uncertainty which may cast significant doubt
on the Group's ability to continue as a going concern.
The Board considers the likelihood
of such a severe downside scenario materialising to be low and
recognises the range of mitigating actions available to the Group
to prevent such a breach occurring, and the positive and
long-standing relationship which the Group has with its banking
partner HSBC. The Directors therefore have a reasonable expectation
that the Group has adequate resources to continue in operational
existence and meet its liabilities as they fall due over the period
of at least 12 months from the date of approving these financial
statements. Accordingly, the financial statements have been
prepared under the going concern basis of accounting.
Accounting Policies
The condensed interim financial
statements have been prepared under the historical cost convention,
except for derivative financial instruments and share based
payments which are stated at their fair value. The accounting
policies adopted, as well as significant judgements and key
estimates applied, are consistent with those in the annual
financial statements for the year ended 31 March 2024, as described
in those financial statements.
Notes to the Consolidated Financial
Statements
For the 28 weeks to 13 October
2024
1.
Revenue
Group revenue is not reliant on any
single major customer or group of customers. Management considers
revenue to be derived from one business stream being the retail of
kitchenware and related products and services.
Customers interact and shop with
the Group across multiple touchpoints and their journey often
involves more than one channel. The Chief Operating Decision Maker
is the Board of Directors of ProCook Group plc. The Board reviews
internal management reports on a frequent basis, and in line with
internal reporting, the channel reporting below indicates where
customers complete their final purchase transaction.
All of the Group's operations are
carried out in the UK during H1 FY25. All revenue is from external
customers.
|
28 weeks
ended
|
28 weeks
ended
|
52 weeks
ended
|
£'000
|
13 October
2024
|
15
October 2023
|
31 March
2024
|
United Kingdom
|
28,312
|
26,330
|
62,585
|
Total revenue
|
28,312
|
26,330
|
62,585
|
2. Non-underlying items
Consistent with prior periods,
expenses in respect of employee share-based awards which relate to
the IPO event in FY22, which itself is non-recurring, have been
presented as non-underlying costs. These expenses are expected to
continue through relevant vesting periods to the third anniversary of the IPO in November
2024.
During the first half of the prior
year, the Group completed the final elements of consolidation of
its head office and warehouse operations into its new Store Support
Centre ("SSC"). Operating and finance expenses associated with the
costs of transitioning into the new site and the dual occupancy of
the new or previous sites were £0.9m, and were presented as
non-underlying costs as these items are non-recurring, dual-running
and transition-related.
|
28 weeks
ended
|
28 weeks
ended
|
52 weeks
ended
|
£'000
|
13 October
2024
|
15
October 2023
|
31 March
2024
|
SSC transition-related
costs
|
-
|
774
|
1,213
|
Share based payments
|
342
|
661
|
81
|
Net profit on reassignment of
leases
|
-
|
-
|
(1,867)
|
Senior management restructuring
costs
|
-
|
-
|
718
|
Non-underlying operating expenses
|
342
|
1,435
|
145
|
Non-underlying finance
expense
|
-
|
77
|
132
|
Non-underlying loss before tax
|
342
|
1,512
|
277
|
3. Segmental
reporting
The Chief Operating Decision Maker
(CODM) has been identified as the Board of Directors and segmental
reporting analysis is presented based on the Group's internal
reporting to the Board. At 13 October 2024, the Group had two
operating segments, being Ecommerce and Retail. Central costs are
reported separately to the Board. Whilst central costs are not
considered to be an operating segment, it has been included below
to aid reconciliation with operating profit as presented in the
Consolidated Income Statement.
|
28 weeks
ended
|
28 weeks
ended
|
52 weeks
ended
|
£'000
|
13 October
2024
|
15
October 2023
|
31 March
2024
|
Revenue
|
|
|
|
Ecommerce
|
9,979
|
9,124
|
22,695
|
Retail
|
18,333
|
17,206
|
39,890
|
Total revenue
|
28,312
|
26,330
|
62,585
|
|
|
|
|
Operating (loss)/profit
|
|
|
|
Ecommerce
|
1,875
|
1,870
|
5,325
|
Retail
|
2,186
|
2,347
|
8,220
|
Central costs
|
(5,825)
|
(5,737)
|
(11,422)
|
Non-underlying costs
|
(342)
|
(1,435)
|
(145)
|
Operating loss
|
(2,106)
|
(2,955)
|
1,978
|
|
|
|
|
Finance costs
|
(742)
|
(708)
|
(1,230)
|
Other (losses)/gains
|
(377)
|
513
|
114
|
Non-underlying finance
costs1
|
-
|
(77)
|
(132)
|
(Loss)/profit before tax
|
(3,225)
|
(3,227)
|
730
|
1Non-underlying finance costs are the
interest costs on the lease liabilities for the disused warehouses
in FY24.
Substantially all of the assets of
the Group are located in the UK.
4. Tax
expense
The underlying effective tax rate
for the 28 weeks ending 13 October 2024 is 25.0% (28 weeks ended 15
October 2023: 25%; year ended 31 March 2024: 16.4%). Tax expense
has been provided for in H1 FY25 at the prevailing tax rate of
25%.
The standard rate of UK corporate
income tax was 25% for all periods presented.
5.
Dividends
No final dividend was declared in
respect of the period ended 31 March 2024 and the Group has not
declared an interim dividend in respect of the current half year
period.
6. Earnings per
share
Basic earnings per share is
calculated by dividing the profit for the period attributable to
equity holders of the Parent by the weighted average number of
ordinary shares in issue.
Diluted earnings per share is
calculated by dividing the profit for the period attributable to
equity holders of the Parent by the weighted average number of
ordinary shares in issue during the period plus the weighted
average number of ordinary shares that would have been issued on
the conversion of all dilutive potential ordinary shares into
ordinary shares.
|
28 weeks
ended
|
28 weeks
ended
|
52 weeks
ended
|
|
13
October 2024
|
15
October 2023
|
31 March
2024
|
Weighted average number of
shares
|
108,956,624
|
108,956,624
|
108,956,624
|
Impact of share options
|
8,452,918
|
11,897,040
|
7,072,398
|
Number of shares for diluted
earnings per share
|
117,409,542
|
120,853,664
|
116,029,022
|
|
28 weeks
ended
|
28 weeks
ended
|
52 weeks
ended
|
|
13
October 2024
|
15
October 2023
|
31 March
2024
|
£'000
|
Underlying1
|
Reported
|
Underlying1
|
Reported
|
Underlying1
|
Reported
|
(Loss)/profit for the
period
|
(2,163)
|
(2,505)
|
(1,287)
|
(2,421)
|
842
|
610
|
Earnings per ordinary share -
basic
|
(1.98)p
|
(2.30)p
|
(1.18)p
|
(2.22)p
|
0.77p
|
0.56p
|
Earnings per ordinary share -
diluted2
|
(1.98)p
|
(2.30)p
|
(1.18)p
|
(2.22)p
|
0.73p
|
0.53p
|
1Underlying earnings per ordinary share is a non-IFRS
measure.
2In the 28 weeks ended 13 October 2024 and 15 October 2023 the
impact of share options was anti-dilutive.
7. Leased
assets
The Group leases a number of
assets, with all lease payments fixed over the lease term. Where
there are leasehold properties which hold a variable element to
lease payments made these are not capitalised as part of the right
of use asset. All expected future non-variable cash out flows are
reflected within the measurement of the lease liabilities at each
period end.
|
As at 13
October
|
As at 15
October
|
As at 31
March
|
|
2024
|
2023
|
2024
|
Number of active leases
|
74
|
72
|
70
|
Right of use assets
£'000
|
Leasehold
Property
|
Motor
Vehicles
|
Plant and
Equipment
|
Total
|
Cost
|
|
|
|
|
At 31 March 2024
|
31,341
|
125
|
92
|
31,558
|
Additions
|
2,053
|
78
|
-
|
2,131
|
Remeasurement1
|
131
|
-
|
-
|
131
|
Disposals
|
(1,105)
|
(16)
|
-
|
(1,121)
|
At
13 October 2024
|
32,420
|
187
|
92
|
32,699
|
Accumulated amortisation and impairments
|
At 31 March 2024
|
10,916
|
94
|
26
|
11,036
|
Charge for the period
|
2,188
|
28
|
10
|
2,226
|
Disposals
|
(1,067)
|
(16)
|
-
|
(1,083)
|
At
13 October 2024
|
12,037
|
106
|
36
|
12,179
|
Net Book Value
|
|
|
|
|
At 31 March 2024
|
20,425
|
31
|
66
|
20,522
|
At
13 October 2024
|
20,383
|
81
|
56
|
20,520
|
Lease liabilities
£'000
|
Leasehold
Property
|
Motor
Vehicles
|
Plant and
Equipment
|
Total
|
At 31 March 2024
|
22,549
|
29
|
64
|
22,642
|
Additions
|
1,959
|
78
|
-
|
2,037
|
Remeasurement1
|
135
|
-
|
-
|
135
|
Interest expense
|
491
|
2
|
1
|
494
|
Lease payments
|
(2,671)
|
(35)
|
(12)
|
(2,718)
|
Disposals
|
(60)
|
-
|
-
|
(60)
|
At
13 October 2024
|
22,403
|
74
|
53
|
22,530
|
1 Remeasurements have arisen where store lease rental terms and/
or lease expiry dates have been amended.
8.
Inventories
|
As at 13
October
|
As at 15
October
|
As at 31
March
|
£'000
|
2024
|
2023
|
2024
|
Finished goods and goods for
resale
|
16,941
|
11,885
|
9,716
|
Total
|
16,941
|
11,885
|
9,716
|
The cost of inventories recognised
as an expense in the 28 weeks ending 13 October 2024 amounted to
£9.9m (28 weeks ending 15 October 2023: £8.8m).
9. Cash and cash
equivalents
For the purposes of the statement
of cash flows, cash and cash equivalents include cash on hand and
in banks and investments in money market instruments. Cash and cash
equivalents at the end of the financial year as shown in the
statement of cash flows can be reconciled to the related items in
the statement of financial position as follows:
|
As at 13
October
|
As at 15
October
|
As at 31
March
|
£'000
|
2024
|
2023
|
2024
|
Cash at bank available on
demand
|
1,860
|
472
|
854
|
Cash in transit
|
1,231
|
974
|
1,151
|
Total
|
3,091
|
1,446
|
2,005
|
10. Borrowings
|
As at 13
October
|
As at 15
October
|
As at 31
March
|
£'000
|
2024
|
2023
|
2024
|
Current
|
|
|
|
Bank loans
|
7,273
|
4,624
|
2,754
|
Total borrowings
|
7,273
|
4,624
|
2,754
|
11. Derivatives
The Group's local currency is
pounds sterling however but due to purchases of goods and services
in foreign currencies the Group seeks to reduce foreign exchange
risk by entering into forward contracts and other derivatives. At
13 October 2024, the outstanding contracts all mature within 28
months of the period end, with committed purchases of
$33.7m (31 March 2024: $20.8m).
The contracts are measured at their
fair value, which is determined using valuation techniques that
utilise observable inputs. The key inputs used in valuing the
derivatives are the forward exchange rates. There were no
designated hedges in place during the current or proceeding
financial year.
The fair value of derivative
financial assets, included within Trade and other receivables, are
as follows:
|
As at 13
October
|
As at 15
October
|
As at 31
March
|
£'000
|
2024
|
2023
|
2024
|
Derivatives
|
-
|
505
|
42
|
Total
|
-
|
505
|
42
|
The fair value of derivative
financial liabilities, included within Trade and other payables,
are as follows:
|
As at 13
October
|
As at 15
October
|
As at 31
March
|
£'000
|
2024
|
2023
|
2024
|
Derivatives
|
341
|
-
|
-
|
Total
|
341
|
-
|
-
|
12. Financial Risk
Management
Financial risk management
The Group is exposed through its
operation to the following financial risks: credit risk, interest
rate risk, foreign exchange risk and liquidity risk. Risk
management is carried out by the Directors of the Group. The Group
uses financial instruments to provide flexibility regarding its
working capital requirements and to enable it to manage specific
financial risks to which it is exposed.
The Group finances its operations
through a mixture of debt finance, cash and liquid resources and
various items such as trade debtors and trade payables which arise
directly from the Business's operations.
Credit risk
Credit risk is the risk of
financial loss to the Group if a customer or counterparty to a
financial instrument fails to meet its contractual obligations. To
minimise the risk, the Group endeavours only to deal with companies
which are demonstrably creditworthy and this, together with the
aggregate financial exposure, is continuously monitored. The
maximum exposure to credit risk is the carrying value of its
financial receivables, trade and other receivables and cash and
cash equivalents as disclosed in the notes to the financial
information.
The receivables' age analysis is
evaluated on a regular basis for potential doubtful debts,
considering historic, current, and forward-looking information. No
impairments to trade receivables have been made to date. Further
disclosures regarding trade and other receivables are provided
within the notes to financial statements.
Credit risk also arises on cash and
cash equivalents and deposits with banks and financial
institutions. For banks and financial institutions, only
independently rated parties with minimum rating "B+" are
accepted.
Currently all financial
institutions whereby the Group holds significant levels of cash are
rated A+ to A-.
Interest rate risk
As at 13 October 2024 the Group's
drawn borrowings are through its trade finance facility with a
floating interest rate linked to the United States Federal funds
rate and its revolving credit facility with a floating interest
rate linked to the Bank of England base rate. Both are variable on
the amount drawn down and there is no fixed settlement date,
therefore the interest rate risk exposure for the Group is minimal.
The Group's policy aims to manage the interest cost of the Group
within the constraints of its financial borrowings. The Group does
not currently use any form of derivatives to manage interest rate
volatility or future rate increases, however it does seek to
minimise interest costs through careful management of its use of
facilities.
Foreign exchange risk
Foreign exchange risk arises when
the Group enters transactions in a currency other than their
functional currency. The Group's policy is, where possible, to
settle liabilities denominated in a currency other than its
functional currency with cash already denominated in that
currency.
The Group makes purchases of goods
and services from overseas in foreign currencies and uses
additional means to cover its exposure to the foreign exchange
movement. The Group uses various financial derivatives such as
forward exchange contracts, to help mitigate movements in foreign
currency to restrict losses and to ascertain control of expected
cash out flows. All the Group's foreign exchange contracts are
designated to settle the corresponding liability.
Liquidity risk
The Group seeks to maintain
sufficient cash balances to support its working capital and
investment requirements. Management reviews cash flow forecasts on
a regular basis to determine whether the Group has sufficient cash
available to support its operational and investment
activities.
13. Related
Parties
Transactions between the Company
and its subsidiaries, which are related parties, have been
eliminated on consolidation and are not disclosed in this
note.
Transactions with Life's a Beach, a
related party by virtue of one of the Group's Directors during the
period (Daniel O'Neill) being a trustee, relate to charitable
donations made on ProCook sales and other associated transactions.
During the period, ProCook sales generated £19k of donations
payable to Life's a Beach (28 weeks ending 15 October 2023: £17k).
During the period ending 13 October 2024, ProCook made payments
totalling £55k to Life's a Beach (28 weeks ending 15 October 2023:
nil). The amount payable at 13 October 2024 was £13k (15 October
2023: £23k).
Transactions with Conway House
Limited, a related party by virtue of one of the Group's Directors
(Daniel O'Neill) being a Director of the company, relate to the
provision of advisory services to the Group. During the period,
Conway House Limited provided services totalling £69k (28 weeks
ending 15 October 2023: nil). Payments to Conway House totalled
£47k during the period (28 weeks ending 15 October 2023: nil). The
amount payable at 13 October 2024 was £22k (28 weeks ending 15
October 2023: nil).
Transactions with Quella Bicycle
Limited, a related party by virtue of one of the Group's Directors
during the period (Daniel O'Neill) holding a financial interest,
have previously related to the renting of warehouse space from
ProCook Limited. Quella vacated the premises in March 2023,
therefore no charges were made in the period H1 FY25 (H1 FY24:
nil). The amount receivable at 13 October 2024 was nil (16 October
2023: £9k).
14. Subsequent
events
The Group has monitored trading
performance, internal activities, as well as other relevant
external factors throughout the period from the balance sheet date
to the date of approving these interim financial statements. No
material changes in key estimates and judgements have been
identified as adjusting post balance sheet events and there have
been no material non-adjusting events since 13 October
2024.