Endeavour Group reported FY24 EBIT up 1.8% on a 52-week basis and EPS dropped 4.3% given higher finance costs. We expect a flat EPS of 28.6 cents for FY25e with subdued 1H25e sales growth and higher finance costs largely offsetting better gross margins and cost savings. Endeavour’s underlying sales momentum shows market share gains and cost savings are likely to continue to build in FY26e.
Inghams reported FY24 EBITDA of $240 million pre AASB-16, growth of 29% (on 52-week basis). While the result was good, second-half earnings growth was soft and the company revealed that Woolworths will cut back volumes with Inghams to diversify its supplier risk. We expect Woolworths’ FY25e volumes will fall 10%-20% with Inghams. Lower feed costs are a strong tailwind for FY25e and should offset much of the headwind from lower Woolworths volumes.
Bapcor reported FY24 sales of $2.03 billion up 1% and EBITDA of $269 million down 10%. Net profit fell by 24% pre significant items on higher interest costs. The company reported a small improvement in sales early in FY25e. However, the drop in 2H24 profit margins is likely to result in only modest EBITDA growth for FY25e even though the company has cost savings to flow through. During the second-half all Bapcor’s divisions had negative same store sales performance with Trade down by 1.5%, Retail down 1.0% and New Zealand lower by 0.5%.
Super Retail Group reported FY24 EBIT of $400 million, which was down 9% year-on-year, but up 57% on FY19 levels. This represents a compound annual growth rate of 9%. Given sales trends are starting to improve EBIT should also start to rise. The question is how much. We expect LFL sales to remain between 1%-3% and EBIT margins will be largely steady. Increased competition in auto keeps us cautious about group profit margin expansion. The company’s FY24 EBIT margin of 10.3% is about 80bp higher than FY19 supported by higher gross margins.
Treasury Wines reported FY24 EBITS of $658 million with organic growth of only 4% adjusted for acquisitions and currency. The result showed the importance of the DAOU acquisition to earnings and its increasing focus on the luxury wine segment. Earnings growth in FY25e will half come from the growth of DAOU and a further quarter from Penfolds price rises. The underlying business is likely to have limited growth outside these factors given pressure on wine demand under $15 per bottle.