Michael Hill meets first half earnings

 

MichaelHillMichael Hill International has posted first half earnings that met its guidance of last month after lifting sales while investing in a trial of bridal products at its North American outlets.

Earnings before interest and tax was $A29.7 million in the six months ended December 31, from $A28.6m a year earlier, the Brisbane-based company said in a statement.

Sales rose 9.8 per cent to $A270.8m.

Net profit dropped about 26 per cent to $A16.2m, mainly reflecting a more than doubling in the company’s tax expense to $A12.2m.

The company has made a provision related to its negotiations with the Australian Tax Office over the restructuring of intellectual property between its New Zealand and Australian units in 2008.

Revenue in Australia, the company’s biggest market with 166 stores, rose 5.5 per cent to $A172m and the operating surplus increased 3.6 per cent to $A29m.

Same store sales rose 1.4 per cent.

Michael Hill recorded a net operating cash outflow of $A2.3m in the first half, from an inflow of $A22m a year earlier, mainly reflecting “significant additional inventory” built up as part of the trial of a new bridal range in US stores and some Canadian stores, it said.

The bridal range was key to the company’s North American expansion and directors were confident it would produce returns in years to come, although it was too soon to comment on the results, it said.

Sales at its US stores fell 8.4 per cent to $US5 million ($A5.55 million) in the first half after it closed one of its nine outlets. The operating loss was $US559,000, from a loss of $US1.27m a year earlier.

In Canada, sales jumped 29 per cent to $Can37.9m ($A38.4 million), and the operating surplus rose to $Can2.85m from $Can1.56m.

Same store sales growth increased to 7.9 per cent from 3.8 per cent and the company said it has now reached a “critical mass” of stores.

New Zealand sales fell 3.5 per cent to $NZ60.9 million ($A56.70m) and the operating surplus slipped 4.5 per cent to $NZ12.4m. Same store sales fell 4.1 per cent.

The shares last traded at $NZ1.40 on the NZX and have gained 15 per cent in the past year.

BusinessDesk

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