Woolworths reported FY24 EBIT of $3,223 million, up 3% on a reported basis, or 1.1% adjusted for the extra week. Second-half EBIT fell by 1.3%. While Australian Food EBIT was decent, New Zealand Food and Big W had very weak results. Online sales are accelerating for Woolworths, but the overall benefit to earnings seems limited given supermarket store profits declined in 2H24. Woolworths also provided guidance on capex at $2.0-$2.2 billion for FY25e.
The Senate Inquiry into Supermarket Prices has escalated into a debate about the merits of return on equity (ROE) as a measure of profitability. We certainly prefer ROE and other returns measures over percentage profit margins. However, in the case of Woolworths, the ROE of 27% (pre sig items) is influenced by historical cost accounting, buybacks and demergers. Care needs to be taken in looking at a single year.