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Convenience retail sector report - The case for QSR in convenience

Driving higher shop margins

19 December 2025

Australian convenience retailers Ampol and Viva have an opportunity to roll out quick-service restaurant (QSR) counters across their high traffic sites and lift non-fuel margins to be in-line with US peers. Foodservice penetration in the US is an aspirational target for the domestic market, but Australian fuel retailers can grow gross profit per store by tapping into the circa 70% gross margins in QSR. QSR store rollout supports Ampol and Viva’s five-year outlook for growing non-fuel earnings, whilst elevated refiner margins are also supportive in the near-term.

Myer Holdings (MYR) - 2025 AGM trading update

Better sales, lower gross margin

16 December 2025

Myer reported total sales growth of 3.0% for the first 19 weeks of trade for 1H26e. With Visible Alpha consensus expectations of 2.2% for 1H26e we expect upward revisions to consensus sales. Commentary around costs suggested expenses continue to be tightly managed. The stronger than expected growth came from lower gross margin categories such as concessions and homewares.

We have produced a chart pack about the outlook for the liquor industry. The primary debate is the structural vs cyclical components impacting the decline in consumption. While we see structural decline, we expect it to be in the order of -0.5% per capita, per annum, far lower than the circa -6% p.a in the past two years.  We are seeing signs of improving volumes in on-premise (pubs and restaurants).

Bapcor has provided yet another downgrade in a trading update, making it the third downgrade in 12 months. The company’s decision to stick with 2H26e guidance seems brave given the need to invest in price in its core Trade segment. The gearing is likely to rise to 3.3x on our forecasts, above its bank covenants of 3.0x. A capital raising of circa $200 million seems likely to us.

Premier Investments (PMV) - 2025 AGM trading update

Smiggle - A problem child

10 December 2025

Premier Investments’ AGM trading update gave EBIT guidance for 1H26e of $120 million on a pre AASB-16 basis exclusive of significant items (UK losses for Peter Alexander). Visible Alpha consensus estimates appeared muddied by various factors causing uncertainty around earnings changes. Limited AGM detail provided suggests Peter Alexander continues to perform but sales and gross margins at Smiggle have continued to deteriorate.

Retail spending for October 2025

Surprisingly upbeat

09 December 2025

Australian retail sales rose 6.2% in October 2025 year-on-year, a surprise given our feedback of modest spending in October in what felt like anticipation of Black Friday deals. The theme of a strong consumer continued from the National Accounts update for the September quarter in which household income was revised higher. Higher house prices and improved savings rates are buffering the consumer with sentiment trending higher.

Our view on the festive season in 2025

Will Santa deliver even more gifts?

08 December 2025

The 2025 festive season is shaping up as a good one for consumers. They are opening their wallets and buying bargains. The challenge for retailers is the spend is not evenly distributed. Consumers bought more in November and may buy less in December. We have had positive sales feedback for furniture, auto and online and expect these to do well over 1H26e. At the other end of the spectrum, we have had weak sales feedback on footwear and liquor. The challenge for electronics is lapping incredibly good growth from November and December 2024. Using Visible Alpha consensus as the reference point, we see downside risk to sales for JB Hi-Fi, Harvey Norman and Endeavour. Retail has been more promotional and 1H26e risks to gross margin also exist. At EPS, we see downside risk for Accent, JB Hi-Fi, Endeavour Group and Myer. For those wanting a more light-hearted take, further down we have our Christmas gift ideas.

Australian consumer insights - National Accounts for Sep 2025 quarter

Income growth good news for retail

08 December 2025

The national accounts for the September 2025 quarter provide an insight to the strength of the Australian consumer. The ABS has revised up historical income growth and in the September quarter household income rose 6.7%, with consumer spending up 5.7%. Income growth has averaged close to 8% so far in 2025. No wonder discretionary retail spending began growing above trend this year. The challenge is identifying sources that will result in any further acceleration in retail spending in 2026. We expect retail spending to continue to trend near current levels. The upside case relies on lower household savings which is possible if house prices rise double-digits, a low probability now given the lack of interest rate cuts any time soon.

Metcash Ltd (MTS) - 1H26 result analysis

Waiting for margin repair

03 December 2025

Metcash reported a 2% drop in EBIT for 1H26. The company’s sales trends are likely to soften a little from here, particularly as it laps Woolworths DC strikes and the Black Friday boost to Total Tools dissipates. The swing factor for Metcash is its corporate hardware stores that need a meaningful upswing in the residential construction cycle. Profit margins are depressed and should recover. The combination of optionality around hardware upside, contract wins in convenience and a good dividend yield give us reason to be positive.

Temple & Webster (TPW) - AGM Trading update

Sales growth coming more slowly

01 December 2025

Temple & Webster reported sales growth for the first 20 weeks of 18%. The update implied a slowdown from the August trading update from 28% to 14% in the interim to the AGM. Growth of 18% was below Visible Alpha consensus expectation for 1H26e at 23% and the share price response reflected the concerns around retaining sales growth at more than 20%. Temple continues to win share and will eventually reach scale to achieve a higher EBITDA margin, where we forecast 12% for FY40e.

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