Bapcor reported a 4% decline in EBITDA for FY25. The decline in both the Trade and NZ division’s profit margins was notable in the second-half. We expect the company to have another decline in sales for 1H26e given some store closures and a more competitive environment in Australia and NZ. The NZ segment’s margins look to be resetting lower following a COVID-19 peak. Even so, margins are still healthy relative to peers. The company’s indication that profit will skew to 2H26e is vague. The shape of earnings suggests the profit recovery begins in FY27e.
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.
Domino’s recently announced that its relatively new CEO Mark Van Dyck would step down. While the Board is supportive of his strategic plan, it wanted faster progress. The limited detail we have on its strategy shows a focus on improved profit margins more so than store growth. We expect limited sales growth and margin recovery will only be evident in 2026 onwards.
The more alarming features of Bapcor’s trading update are the rapid deterioration in sales and immediate departure of three board members. While somewhat “glass half-full” we interpret the FY25e trading update as more a “clean out” of the financials and a reset. Management targets over FY25e to FY30e will be easier to achieve.
Bapcor reported 1H25 underlying sales up 0.3% and EBITDA of $132 million, down 8%. Sales have started the second half up slightly. The full year cost saving guidance for $20 to $30 million has been reiterated and will lead to lower total costs in 2H25e, supportive of an improvement to EBITDA. Bapcor will host a Strategy Day in late April 2025 at which the new CEO will provide more clarity on the strategic direction.
The new information in Domino’s 1H25 result about its franchisee profitability and pending strategic update leave a degree of uncertainty on the stock. Franchisee profitability is still 34% lower than where it needs to be. We expect a strategic update in May or June 2025 to focus on margin improvement opportunities. Given EBIT margins are 5% vs a potential of 7%, the upside is meaningful. Domino’s will need a new investor audience attracted to the margin upside, because store growth is likely to be lower.
Domino’s trading update and news of store closures in Japan signals a clear shift towards improving profit margins and existing store sales productivity. We expect profit margins to improve from 5% last year to 7% medium-term. The unknown is whether this occurs by shrinking the network further.
Domino’s recently announced that Don Meij, CEO of the company for the past 22 years, will retire. The Board announced the appointment of Mark van Dyck, as CEO. He is an executive with experience at Compass Group and within the Coca-Cola system. Mr van Dyck presented a sensible approach to improving profit margins, but it will take time as improving franchisee profitability is a first-order priority in our view.
Lovisa has enjoyed a relatively low level of competition. The company has a moat related to the breadth of its frequently refreshed and low-price product offering. How defensive is that moat? A new entrant in Harli + Harpa, led by ex Lovisa CEO, Shane Fallscheer will launch shortly. Lovisa has derisked its Australian exposure, but its domestic market remains a key funding source for its global expansion aspirations. There are early signs of weakness in Australia and increasing competition will put downward pressure on the highly attractive margins. The global expansion is the key driver of growth for Lovisa but the domestic market still matters.
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%.