Endeavour Group reported a weak FY25 result with EBIT down 12%. There were mixed fortunes with Retail earnings down and Hotels up. Recent sales trends suggest a similar dynamic in FY26e. However, we see more cost savings and less headwinds from its One Endeavour restructuring costs. We make EPS downgrades of 5% in both FY26e and FY27e given lower Retail sales and some gross margin pressure. Endeavour’s balance sheet has high gearing. When combined with its management changeover in January 2026, the risks are growing that an equity raising is used to improve its balance sheet and provide the capital to turnaround the business.
Endeavour Group’s announcement that Executive Chairman, Ari Mervis, will step down naturally raises many questions. However, one question it helps answer is that near-term sales and earnings look like they are stabilising. The teleconference call made it clear that the strategy “refresh” is just the beginning. As a result, there could still be substantial change in Endeavour and earnings risk under new CEO Jayne Hrdlicka who starts in January 2026.
Endeavour Group reported 3Q25 sales down 1.7%. The Retail division shrank further, while Hotels had a good quarter. The good news for the company and shareholders is the decline in retail sales should now be over. We forecast Retail comp growth of 2.1% for 4Q25e and 3.0% for FY26e. Hotels should see stronger growth, but investors should factor in an earnings dip associated with cashless gaming in Victoria from the end of 2025.
The upcoming 3Q25e sales results for Coles, Woolworths and Endeavour Group are likely to show Coles in front in both supermarkets and liquor. The shift of Easter timing will distort growth rates. We forecast Coles Supermarket comparable sales at 3.0% and Woolworths at 2.6%. For Coles Liquor, we forecast 2.6% and Endeavour Retail at -0.3%. All figures are Easter-adjusted. We will be interested in any step change in inflation for produce and meat given recent weather disruptions. Overall industry sales growth rates remain lacklustre, particularly relative to cost growth
Endeavour reported 1H25 EBIT down 10% with a poor result in the Retail segment the primary driver. Higher transition costs to its new systems, distribution centre strikes and weak liquor industry sales all contributed to the challenging half. However, these issues are transitory. We expect another soft result in 2H25e given One Endeavour costs and wage inflation. However, we can see an inflection point emerging. Earnings should recover as industry-wide sales improve and cost savings flow through.
Category forecasts for the Australian liquor industry
19 November 2024
We have produced a chart pack with category forecasts for the Australian liquor industry reset (see PDF report). This liquor outlook provides two insights – 1) The weakness in sales is more a function of the COVID-19 spike in demand than a structural concern. 2) The recalibration of liquor demand differs across categories, with wine and RTDs likely to see better demand from affordability and drinking preference. The data includes actual consumption trends for Australian households to the end of FY23.
Endeavour Group’s 1Q25 result showed weaker retail sales trends and indications that gross margins are coming under pressure. The company said that Retail segment EBIT margins will fall by 50-100bp in 1H25e. We expect weak sales trends to persist a little longer, but the problem isn’t structural. The company has increased discounting to improve sales, which has hurt margins, but is yet to help sales.
Coles (31 October) and Woolworths (30 October) 1Q25 sales results are likely to reflect a small improvement in industry growth with a slight edge for Coles in terms of supermarket growth rate. We forecast Coles comparable sales growth of 2.6% and Woolworths at 2.1%. The bigger debate is whether industry growth will improve further given supermarket volumes remain sluggish and whether the retailers face any limits on their ability to sustain profit margins as the ACCC Supermarket inquiry continues. We expect softer results from Coles and Woolworths’ other segments in 1Q25e.
Metcash reported FY24 EBIT down 1% and, adjusted for acquisitions, it was a similar result in both the first and second-half. The company is actively managing costs to offset weak sales trends and this thematic is likely to be a feature again in FY25e. Metcash’s performance relative to market growth remains impressive and is the primary reason for our positive stance on the stock.
Endeavour Group reported normalised sales growth of 1.0% for 3Q24. The retailer’s challenge is a tough industry backdrop. We expect soft sales trends to continue as the liquor retail industry undergoes a normalisation of volume and pubs experience some trading down behaviour. Even so, sales trends should improve slightly in 4Q24e and FY25e for Endeavour.