6 June 2024
FULL YEAR RESULTS FOR THE 52
WEEKS ENDED 2 MARCH 2024
Continued strategic progress
delivering for our customers
Adjusted EBITDA above market
expectations and return to profit
Strong balance sheet and
liquidity
£m
|
52 weeks to 2 Mar 2024
(FY24)
|
52 weeks
to 25 Feb 20231
|
Change
52 weeks v 52 weeks
|
53 weeks
to 4 Mar 2023 (FY23)1
|
Group revenue
|
600.9
|
666.0
|
(9.8)%
|
677.5
|
Product revenue
|
381.2
|
426.6
|
(10.6)%
|
433.4
|
Financial Services revenue
|
219.7
|
239.4
|
(8.2)%
|
244.1
|
Adjusted
EBITDA2
|
47.6
|
54.4
|
(12.5)%
|
57.3
|
Adjusted EBITDA
margin
|
7.9%
|
8.2%
|
(0.3)ppts
|
8.5%
|
Adjusted profit before tax2
|
13.3
|
4.9
|
171.4%
|
7.5
|
Statutory profit / (loss) before
tax
|
5.3
|
N/A
|
N/A
|
(71.1)
|
Cash and cash
equivalents
|
65.2
|
N/A
|
N/A
|
35.5
|
Adjusted net
debt2
|
(236.3)
|
N/A
|
N/A
|
(297.4)
|
Gross customer
receivables
|
517.0
|
N/A
|
N/A
|
555.2
|
Steve Johnson, Chief Executive,
said:
"We have delivered
against our strategic and financial objectives this year. We have
kept to our transformation plans, despite the macro-economic
backdrop, whilst building resilience through our strong balance
sheet, and achieving adjusted EBITDA above market
expectations.
"Our customers are
now seeing tangible benefits from our transformation, with an
enhanced experience being delivered by our new websites and our
recently launched Product Information Management system ensuring
customers have more detailed product descriptions to inform their
purchases.
"Looking ahead,
our strong liquidity position allows for continued investment in
our strategy, positioning the business for sustainable growth
whilst always improving the customer experience.
"I'd like to thank
all our colleagues for their continued hard work in progressing our
transformation and for the results achieved this year. We are
confident in our strategy and in building a stronger N Brown for
all stakeholders."
Highlights
Delivering strong
strategic and operational progress
·
Improved customer experience through the launch of Jacamo's new
mobile-first website and launch of Product Information Management
('PIM') system, fundamental to our marketing strategy, initially on
Simply Be
·
Successful launch of new product lines across our strategic
brands:
o JD Williams
launched its Anthology premium line, increasing prominence of own
brand offering
o Simply Be enriched
its third-party offering with the launch of lifestyle sports brand
TALA and started offering select lines in Sainsbury's stores
o Jacamo enhanced its
own brand offer, expanding across key categories including smart
casual, denim, and footwear
·
Financial Services ('FS') transformation continues to progress
well, with the new platform build underway and end to end testing
commencing this year
· Net
Promoter Score ('NPS') 6pts ahead of last year, including benefits
from better delivery performance as well as customer experience
improvements
·
Approval by the Science Based Targets initiative ('SBTi') of
commitment to reduce Scope 1, 2 and 3 greenhouse gas emissions by
46% by FY31 against a FY22 base year, aligned with Paris Climate
Agreement
·
Received Drapers Award for Diversity and Inclusion for 2023 and
named as one of The Sunday Times Best Places to Work 2024
Financial
Adjusted EBITDA above market
expectations3, supporting a return to statutory
profit
· Despite
macro-economic challenges, management actions drove adjusted EBITDA
margin up c. 4ppts from H1 to H2, with full year margin of 7.9%
broadly in line with FY23
· Group
revenue decreased 9.8%, reflecting the continued challenging market
conditions and a focus on driving profitable sales
· Full
year adjusted group gross profit margin increased 1.5ppts to
47.7%:
o Product margin up
1.2ppts, benefiting from a cleaner year-end stock position, the
focus on profitable sales and lower freight rates
o FS margin rate up
1.8ppts driven by lower write offs and more active debt management
strategy
· Full
year adjusted operating costs reduced by £15m, with volume-related
savings and management actions more than offsetting c.£12m of
inflationary pressures
·
Statutory profit before tax of £5.3m, reflecting improvement of
£76.4m, driven by lower adjusting items
·
Adjusted profit before tax of £13.3m, an improvement of £8.4m,
including a reduction in depreciation and amortisation of £15.0m
following the impairment of non-financial assets in FY23
Robust
balance sheet and available liquidity, with no unsecured
borrowings
· Net
cash generation of approximately £30m in the year, after further
investment of £23m in the transformation of the business
· Strong
balance sheet with significant cash and cash equivalents, and total
accessible liquidity of over £148m. RCF and overdraft remain
undrawn with limits of £75m and £12.5m respectively
· £65.2m
cash and cash equivalents; securitisation borrowings of £301.5m
under the facility extended to December 2026 in the year are well
covered by £517.0m gross customer receivables
·
Adjusted net debt of £236.3m reflects the securitisation borrowings
and net cash
Current trading and
outlook - gradual improvement in trading expected through
FY25
· The
rate of FY24's product revenue decline has moderated at the start
of FY25, with Q1 declining by 6%
· This
improvement is expected to continue as the year progresses, and for
full year FY25 the Group anticipates product revenue will return to
a moderate level of growth, alongside a modest improvement in the
rate of decline in Financial Services revenue and a Group gross
margin rate consistent with FY24
· Clear
priorities to set the business up for 2024 peak trading, with the
third of the three strategic brands, JD Williams, launching its new
mobile-first website ahead of peak
· To
support sustainable growth, planning to scale FY25 marketing
investment by around £10m, funded by cost efficiencies
· FY25
year end adjusted net debt is expected to be similar to FY24's
closing position. Strategic investment will continue to be
self-funded through carefully managed cash flows
· The
Board has continued confidence that the investment in the Group's
strategic transformation plan, its differentiated brands and a new
credit proposition in development, leave it well positioned to
deliver future sustainable growth
Webcast for
analysts and investors:
A webcast presentation of these results will take
place at 9.00am on 6 June 2024 followed by a Q&A conference
call for analysts and investors. Please contact Hawthorn on
+44 (0)7719 078 196 or email nbrown@hawthornadvisors.com for
details.
Financial
calendar
The Group's next scheduled update is its FY25
Interim results in October 2024.
For further
information:
N Brown
Group
|
|
David Fletcher, Head of Investor Relations
|
+44 (0)7876 111 242
|
|
|
Hawthorn
|
|
Henry Lerwill
|
+44 (0)7894 608 607
|
Simon Woods
|
+44 (0)7719 078 196
nbrown@hawthornadvisors.com
|
Shore Capital -
Nomad and Broker
|
|
Stephane Auton / Daniel Bush / Rachel
Goldstein
Fiona Conroy (Corporate Broking)
|
+44 (0) 20 7408 4090
|
About N Brown
Group:
N Brown is a top 10 UK clothing
and footwear digital retail platform, with a home proposition,
headquartered in Manchester and employs around 1,700 people
nationwide. Through our strategic retail brands including JD
Williams, Simply Be and Jacamo, we exist to make our customers look
and feel amazing, and take great pride in passionately championing
inclusion and serving the under-served. Our customer-first shopping
experience, supported by our innovative financial services
proposition, is designed to deliver choice, affordability, and
value to our customers, and allows us to be truly inclusive and
accessible.
1 FY23 was the 53 week period
ended 4 March 2023. A detailed comparison of the 53 week
results to 4 March 2023 and 52 week results to 25 February 2023,
for comparability with this year's 52 week period, is set out on
page 15. The Highlights narrative refers to the 52 weeks to 25
February 2023 as the comparative period, except for Statutory
profit / (loss) before tax and balance sheet / cash flow metrics,
for which 52 week comparatives are not available.
2 A full reconciliation of
statutory to adjusted measures is included in the FY24 Financial
Performance section.
3 The market consensus for
FY24 Adjusted EBITDA is £44.7m as at 5 June 2024.
PERFORMANCE REVIEW
There is much to be proud of in relation to
the progress N Brown has made this year in challenging
macro-economic conditions. The transformation of our business
gained pace, as we became more agile and able to deliver changes
faster. We made significant strides against our strategic pillars,
which had a meaningful impact on our business. And we delivered a
profit performance ahead of expectations, whilst returning to a
profitable pre-tax position.
There is no denying that we continue to
operate in challenging times but we remain confident in our
strategic direction. We believe that, with our differentiated
brands, improving consumer sentiment and a new credit proposition
in development, we are well positioned for the future. We are also
well-capitalised to continue to invest in our self-funded
transformation.
Strategic
Execution
Although the macro-economic challenges seen during
the year were broadly anticipated in our FY24 guidance, it has been
a year of notable market softness, demonstrated by the online
pureplay market declining by 10%¹. Despite the backdrop, we have
executed against our plans, delivering levels of financial
performance and strategic transformation which means that FY24
represents an important step forward in building a stronger N Brown
for all stakeholders.
We entered the year with a set of streamlined
transformational priorities as laid out in our full year results in
June 2023, concentrating on select programmes to drive mid-term
business change. We are laying the foundations to support our
ambition to return to sustainable, profitable growth, and have
delivered the work we planned against our five transformational
areas. This included the successful rollout of a mobile-first website for Jacamo. It was
delivered in a third of the time of our first rollout for the
Simply Be site, with the faster delivery benefitting from our
commitment to agile ways of
working. Jacamo's site performance has been promising, with
conversion during Black Friday week reaching the highest level in
three years.
We made significant strides in enhancing our
customer experience with the successful launch of a Product Information Management ('PIM')
system on our first strategic brand, Simply Be, towards the
end of FY24. This system is fundamental to our marketing strategy
and enriches product descriptions on display pages, offering
detailed information on sizing, fit, and fabric. By ensuring
greater consistency and accuracy in pre-purchase communications
across all channels, we're empowering our customers to make more
informed purchases. This is anticipated to lower return rates,
thereby elevating the overall customer experience.
We have further developed our data culture, by leveraging analytical
opportunities throughout the year. This has included increasing the
number of categories which use PriceTagger, our in-house tool which
optimises product promotion by leveraging price elasticity.
Our new Financial
Services ('FS') platform has progressed as planned through
FY24, with all discovery phases now concluded. All brand
development work has also been completed, including marketing
guidelines, and the build of a new system has begun. The platform
is anticipated to give the Group further product flexibility to
provide customers with more choices in how they manage their
payments.
Our new agile ways
of working are structured around putting our customers first
and provide the business with the agility required to flex to their
needs. Over 50% of our head office colleagues have officially
adopted our new ways of working, which promotes cross-functional
cooperation and communication, and has allowed us to deconstruct
conventional business silos, enabling acceleration in the pace of
execution for our brand strategies.
1
For the 52
weeks ended 2 March 2024, the online pureplay market according to
IMRG declined by 10%.
Our agile ways of working have ensured we have made
more mature choices in our technology roadmap and continued to
invest iteratively in all areas of our technology estate. In our
continuous feedback loop, we take confidence that our operating
model has allowed the deployment of user changes that release value
now, but set the correct foundations for future releases, whilst
also enabling a higher velocity of change.
Our efforts to establish clearer, more distinct
brand identities continue, highlighting our progress through
engaging and creative campaigns which resonate with our customers.
We continue to develop more unique fashion propositions for all of
our brands, with own brand launches including Anthology, and
multiple third-party releases across our portfolio throughout FY24.
Our own brand fashion propositions have been elevated with
strategic partners, with a strong first year collaborating with
Sainsbury's. Working closely with our logistics partners, we also
continued to optimise our final mile service, which has contributed
to a 6pts increase in Net Promoter Score ('NPS') in the year.
Further information on the significant progress we
are making with our strategic transformation is included from page
7.
Financial
Review
A strong focus on managing our cost base and driving
profitable sales has helped to drive a number of important
achievements within financial performance. Firstly, Adjusted EBITDA
of £47.6m and Adjusted profit before tax of £13.3m are each ahead
of market expectations. Secondly, the business returned to a
statutory profit before tax, reporting £5.3m, following a statutory
loss before tax of £(71.1)m in FY23 which included the final
settlement of the Allianz litigation and non-cash impairment of
non-financial assets. Thirdly, cash generation has been strong at
nearly £30m and has been achieved after delivering against our
plans to continue to self-fund the transformation of the business,
with c.£23m of further capital expenditure, including the strategic
areas discussed above.
As a result of ongoing cautious consumer behaviour
and our focus on driving profitable sales, product revenue declined
by 10.6% against the prior year, excluding last year's additional
53rd week, leading to Group revenue declining by 9.8%.
The implementation of a number of initiatives, set out in our
Interim results in October 2023, improved both Adjusted gross
profit margin and Adjusted operating costs in H2, leading to growth
in Adjusted EBITDA margin of 4ppts in H2 relative to H1.
Against last year, Adjusted EBITDA reduced by £6.8m
excluding the 53rd week, driven by lower revenue. A year-on-year
increase in Adjusted gross profit margin of 1.5ppts broadly offset
an increase in Adjusted operating costs as a percentage of Group
revenue. The cost ratio was impacted by lower operational leverage,
despite a strong focus on costs having driven a reduction in
Adjusted operating costs of nearly £15m.
The strong cash generation has helped to further
strengthen our balance sheet, with total accessible liquidity
closing the year at £148.5m and with unsecured net cash of £65.2m.
During the year, the Revolving Credit Facility ('RCF') and
overdraft were refinanced to December 2026, and remain undrawn,
with facility limits of £75m and £12.5m respectively. The Group
also extended its securitisation facility commitment to December
2026, maintaining the facility limit of £400m and lender commitment
of £340m.
Year end adjusted net debt of £236.3m is now under
half of the peak level reported at FY20 year-end (£497.2m). A key
achievement over the last few years through the transformation
journey is the improvement in this position - with the only
borrowings within adjusted net debt being £301.5m drawings against
the securitisation facility, and which are well covered by the
£517.0m gross customer receivables. The unsecured net cash position
partially offsets the securitisation drawings, benefitting the
adjusted net debt position. This provides a position of strength
from which to scale marketing spend in FY25.
Leadership
Update
As previously announced, Ron McMillan retired
as Chair and stepped down from the Board, as of 30 April 2024. The
Board would like to thank Ron for his dedication to N Brown and for
the critical role he has played in the transformation of our
company. The search for a permanent Chair has commenced and a
further announcement will be made in due course.
In addition to Ron McMillan's retirement as Chair,
we announced that Vicky Mitchell had announced her intention not to
stand for re-election and will step down from the Board of N Brown
to focus on other professional commitments following the Company's
Annual General Meeting in July 2024. The Board has commenced a
process to identify and appoint an additional Independent
Non-Executive Director and will provide an update on this process
in due course. The Board would like to express their gratitude to
Vicky Mitchell for her service to N Brown.
A number of previously announced Board changes were
also confirmed during the financial year. In June 2023, Dominic
Appleton succeeded Rachel Izzard as Chief Financial Officer and
joined the Board, having previously joined the Group as Chief
Financial Officer Designate in March 2023. In April 2023, Meg
Lustman was appointed as an Independent Non-Executive Director. In
July 2023, following the conclusion of the Annual General Meeting,
Gill Barr and Richard Moross stepped down from the Board. Gill
served as Senior Independent Director. Gill was also Chair of the
Remuneration Committee, in which she has been succeeded by Meg
Lustman.
With regards to our Executive Leadership team, we
were pleased to announce two changes, in line with our ongoing
strategic transformation.
We have welcomed Clare Empson as Director of Supply
Chain. Clare has an extensive range of experience across the retail
sector over the past 25 years and in leading global retail
operations. Clare was most recently Director of Operations at Ted
Baker, where she also held senior roles within its Retail and
Transformation areas during her time there.
Natalie Rogers has joined as our Chief People
Officer. Natalie brings with her more than 25 years of extensive
cross-sector experience - including digital, tech and financial
services - in a breadth of HR disciplines covering organisational
culture, employee relations, leadership development, reward and
organisational design.
FY25
Outlook
The strategic progress against our transformational
priorities during FY24 leaves us well placed to continue investment
in FY25, in support of our vision, mission and purpose. Having
delivered new mobile-first websites for two of our three strategic
brands, Simply Be and Jacamo, we plan to launch a new site for JD
Williams ahead of FY25 peak trading. In doing so, we will complete
our priority of new websites being in place for all of our
strategic brands. Investment will also continue into a new
technology platform for FS to enhance the ways customers can pay,
having begun the build of the new system in FY24. Alongside this,
and particularly given the digital nature of our business, we will
further upweight our focus on use cases for AI technologies.
We are assuming that macro-economic conditions felt
by consumers will still be a feature of our performance during FY25
but believe that conditions will continue to improve. Product
revenue during the start of FY25 has moderated against FY24's rate
of decline, with year-on-year product revenue for the 13 weeks
ended 1 June 2024 (Q1 FY25) declining by 6%. We currently
anticipate FY25 product revenue returning to a moderate level of
growth, with a weighting towards H2.
Management actions will help drive product revenue
growth through scaling the investment in marketing & production
by around £10m, funded by cost efficiencies, in order to improve
new customer recruitment and stimulate the existing base to trade
more frequently.
The FS customer loan book opened the year lower than
the prior year and the benefit from product revenue growth will
take longer to feed through to FS revenue performance. However, we
do expect FS revenue to decline at a slightly improved rate to that
seen in FY24.
We anticipate Adjusted gross profit margin to be
consistent with FY24. This reflects an expected further improvement
in product gross margin, including benefits from higher clothing
mix, commencing the year with a cleaner stock position and better
underlying factory gate pricing, offsetting a slightly lower FS
gross margin. We are well hedged against our US Dollar purchases
for FY25.
We expect a low single-digit £m increase in total
across depreciation and amortisation, and net finance costs. This
is reflective of capex levels and the expiry of the existing
interest rate hedge on the securitisation facility at the end of
2024 calendar year.
The business will increase investment in FY25,
aligned to the transformational priorities, which will continue to
be self-funded through carefully managed cash flows. At the end of
FY25, we expect Adjusted net debt to be similar to FY24's closing
position, and for strong levels of liquidity to be maintained. We
remain confident in our strategic direction and our digital
transformation as we focus on driving sustainable profitable
growth.
An update against
our five strategic pillars is provided below:
1. Build a
Differentiated Brand Portfolio
Strategic objective:
Build two multi brand and category platforms, one for women (JD
Williams) and one for men (Jacamo), as well as one inclusive
fashion brand for young women (Simply Be).
What we have
achieved in FY24
Our strategic brands (JD Williams, Simply Be,
and Jacamo) have each embarked on unique initiatives in the year to
enhance customer engagement and brand visibility:
JD Williams partnered with ITV and Global to
sponsor the TV show, My Mum Your Dad, which had over 33 million
views throughout the series. The partnership increased the
recognition of JD Williams, leading to a 36% increase in the
awareness of the brand.
Simply Be launched the 'Serious about Shape'
campaign, promoting inclusivity and body positivity in fashion,
aiming to resonate with a diverse customer base. This message was
further reaffirmed through the launch of a new podcast hosted by
the influential Fleur East.
Jacamo collaborated with LADbible, a community
within which our target audience spends their time. Our 'No Average
Jack' campaign received recognition at the Campaign Media Awards in
March 2024, winning in the Fashion and Beauty category. The first
year of the partnership achieved over 95 million views and a
significant increase in customer conversion rate from customers
directed to the website from the campaign.
What we will
focus on in FY25
We will invest more of our marketing budget
into raising brand awareness and consideration, to increase
acquisition through earned channels. We will support performance
via media efficiency programmes to ensure our spending is at the
optimum level and appropriately targeted. Customer acquisition
costs in performance media have risen significantly during FY24 and
so to mitigate over-exposure to these channels, we plan to build on
current initiatives and learnings, investing more in awareness to
foster brand recognition.
JD Williams has partnered with Sky and Channel
5, in a new campaign fronted by Gok Wan, Judi Love and Helen
Skelton. This exciting journey promises to bring our brand closer
to our customers, sparking conversations and fostering
relationships. JD Williams will continue to focus engagement with
midlife women, leveraging a new digital platform powered by the
launch of our new mobile-first website.
Simply Be is here for trend-led women aged
25-45 who prioritise great fit, but we have recognised that it's
helpful to be more specific about who within that broader target
we're particularly designing for. Simply Be will be re-positioned
to target a slightly older customer, in a less congested area of
the market. We will refine its proposition in the first half of the
year, before investing in brand awareness in the second
half.
Jacamo will be entering the second year of our
successful partnership with LADbible, where we will be focusing on
bigger moments in customers' lives, which we anticipate will be
more impactful with them. Our 'No Average Jack' campaign which
launched last year continues, moving beyond areas he is interested
in and leaning into 'style missions'; identifying moments coming up
where he wants to look and feel confident.
Within the heritage portfolio, the focus will
be on stabilising the customer base through a series of initiatives
agreed upon and launched via our agile operating model.
2. Elevate the
Fashion and Fintech Proposition
Strategic objective: Elevate the
fashion assortment, integrate the credit offer into the journey and
create a credit brand.
What we have
achieved in FY24
JD
Williams: Reflecting further progress within
our own brand proposition, we launched Anthology, a JD Williams own
premium line. The line is designed with an elevated approach to
dressing which offers versatile, quality fabrics. This move is part
of JD Williams' ongoing efforts to increase the prominence of its
own brand offering and enhance the product choice further with
third-party offerings.
Simply
Be: Simply Be continues to enrich its
third-party offering, elevating our fashion assortment, with great
success in the launch of TALA. Simply Be also continued to champion
accessibility and enhance its customer-first approach through
partnerships. Within partnerships, the launch of Simply Be on
Sainsbury's online clothing platform and selected stores has
performed strongly in its first year, as well as providing enhanced
exposure to different customer segments.
Jacamo: Jacamo has
enhanced its own brand offer, expanding the offer across key
categories like smart casual, denim, and footwear, while investing
more in sizes XL and below. The team has also worked closely with
key third-party brands such as Polo Ralph Lauren and BOSS,
increasing the depth of buy, improving availability and ensuring
the platform continues to provide its customers with access to the
brands they love in an inclusive range of sizes.
New FS
Platform: As outlined on page 4, our new
Financial Services platform has made good progress during
FY24.
Whilst we develop the new platform ahead of go
live, we implemented a fresh credit limit strategy to maintain
responsible lending to our customers, while also mitigating the
effects of write-offs and arrears on our business. Simultaneously,
our innovative new payment arrangement, which extends reduced
payment periods for those facing financial difficulties, has
improved customer retention effectively.
What we will
focus on in FY25
Strategic brands: We are committed to
enhancing our brand offerings across all our strategic brands.
Specifically, we recognise the potential to expand the presence of
premium products within JD Williams. Additionally, we aim to
diversify Jacamo by incorporating more men's fashion items whilst
rationalising the tech offering. Furthermore, we intend to increase
the proportion of own-designed products within Simply Be. Following
Simply Be's strong partnership performance with Sainsbury's, we
believe there is a strategic opportunity which partnerships can
have in our fashion proposition, particularly in raising the
awareness in broader customer segments of Simply Be. Our intent is
to grow partnerships as a distribution channel through existing and
potential new partners.
New FS Platform: We look forward to releasing
the new FS proposition to our colleagues once the minimum viable
product ('MVP') has been built. Upon successful testing with
colleagues, the external MVP rollout will commence in FY26,
providing a modern, market-standard credit proposition. Before
delivery of the new FS platform, we will ensure the current offer
is as competitive and visible as possible.
3. Transform
the Customer Experience
Strategic objective: Transform
the customer experience, pre and post purchase, and drive
conversion at checkout through a personalised
experience.
What we have
achieved in FY24
As outlined on page 4, we have continued to
roll out the new mobile-first websites to our strategic brands with
the new Jacamo website going live in FY24. The new websites remain
the cornerstone in transforming our customer experience and we have
seen a doubling of our Google Lighthouse scores (an open-source
measure of site performance and user experience).
Our new Product Information Management ('PIM')
system, as described on page 4 was launched on our first strategic
brand in Simply Be. Having a single place to collect, manage, and
enrich product data, will not only provide a better experience for
our customers on-site but will also create a more efficient process
for colleagues.
What we will
focus on in FY25
Significant progress has been made in rolling
out new mobile-first websites. The implementation of a new content
management system at the start of FY25 will enable the launch of
the new mobile-first website for JD Williams. Following this,
heritage brands will begin to be sequentially transitioned to the
new platform. We will continue to iterate on the website
capabilities, with feature releases planned throughout the year to
continue to enhance the customer journey.
Following the successful launch of the PIM
system on Simply Be, we plan to operationalise the technology onto
the remaining strategic brands in FY25. We believe that the PIM
system will also improve search engine optimisation (SEO), thereby
improving marketing efficiency.
We plan to improve the mobile app offering for
our strategic brands. This will provide a home for future
enhancement to our loyalty programme offering for both Retail and
Financial Services. This will then support activities that follow,
having greater insight into notification performance, and using
data from customers to improve personalisation, which will also
improve engagement with the app, and the overall customer
experience.
4. Win with our
Target Customer
Strategic objective: Grow our
customer base through our existing core customer, high value lapsed
customers and a new, younger generation.
What we have
achieved in FY24
To engage our target customers in an
ever-challenging consumer landscape, we continue to foster close
collaboration with strategic partners. Together with Meta, we have
implemented automated product promotion campaigns (ASC+). The
system uses machine learning to combine prospecting and existing
customer audiences and ensure that the campaign is targeted to
customers who have a high probability of purchase, further
streamlining our customer acquisition strategy.
We have diversified the way we engage our
customers. We have enhanced our Customer Relationship Management
('CRM') proposition, by launching SMS as a new channel. We have
also strengthened our loyalty programmes, engaging more of our
target customers, and optimising our contactable base. These
enhancements, dovetailed with data-driven messaging, have led to an
increase in customers enrolling in our loyalty programmes, with a
20% increase in the number of customers who opted into our loyalty
programme compared to FY23.
We have continued to make data-driven
decisions, conducting tests to determine the best way to
continuously identify opportunities for customer experience
enhancements. This includes offering more ways to pay, with the
launch of Apple Pay.
What we will
focus on in FY25
We plan to increase new customer acquisition
and ensure we maximise the value of our existing base, whilst
always being focused on our most active customers. We will be able
to reach more customers in a relevant, timely way thanks to
improvements in data usage and new channels to reach our
customers.
Our apps remain the highest converting
channel, reinforcing how integral the app channels are to
transforming the customer experience. Credit customers are some of
our longest-serving customers; their loyalty and continued
engagement contribute significantly to the longevity of our
customer base. Hence, we will prioritise targeting both credit and
app customers, as they show higher levels of engagement with our
brands than other customers.
The approach we will take when communicating
with opted-in loyalty members will be more engaging and
personalised to specific customer groups. We will reduce usage of
discount and promotional activity, instead focusing more on
brand-specific content which will fuel more desire for our
offer.
5. Establish
Data as an Asset to Win
Strategic
objective: Establish data as an asset to drive top line and margin
improvements.
What we have
achieved in FY24
We've harnessed data-driven insights from our
Customer Lifetime Value models to shape our predictive models for
customer behaviour. This ensures a more personalised marketing
approach and a consistent customer experience. These insights have
been used to deliver targeted onsite messaging to customers who
could benefit from our credit proposition.
We've broadened the use of PriceTagger, our
in-house tool that optimises product promotion using price
elasticity, which has seen adoption across 34% more of our
products. PriceTagger enables machine learning-driven pricing by
gauging how demand and supply of products respond to price changes.
We're continually refining our predictive models to account for
seasonal trends in customer behaviour and their impact on the rate
of sale, thereby enhancing our pricing agility in the market
space.
What we will
focus on in FY25
Data-driven decision-making will continue to
drive our strategy forward and there will be an increased focus on
marketing analysis to ensure optimal channel mix by brand, whilst
ensuring efficiencies in spend. We will continue to deliver data,
analytics and reporting, to help improve profitability, such as
planned enhancements to our Customer Lifetime Value
models.
We will begin transitioning to a cloud-native
Analytics Platform to consolidate data, accelerate analytics,
facilitate self-service use cases, and mitigate compliance risks.
This will require an upgrade to Google Analytics 4 for continued
data tracking on our sites. We will also transition from
third-party cookies to first-party data collection for compliance
with UK privacy law changes in 2024.
Key
Enablers
What we have
achieved in FY24
In FY24, the new Consumer Duty set higher and
clearer standards for consumer protection in financial services,
emphasising customer-centric practices. At N Brown, we adopted the
new Consumer Duty regulations on time and to a high standard,
highlighting our commitment to prioritising our customers. We
consistently assess our offerings, policies, and processes to
uphold this customer-focused strategy.
The company fosters an inclusive culture
through the EMBRACE Strategy and colleague-led communities. Our
commitment to colleague development and welfare is reflected in our
eNPS scores, which exceeded the UK retail benchmark by 16 points in
FY24. This is again a testament to our agile ways of working, which
have fostered our collaborative environment.
What we will
focus on in FY25
We will act to scale the marketing spend in
FY25 and fund this through cost efficiencies. This choice is needed
to help change the momentum in our active customer file.
We will roll out agile ways of working to the
remainder of employees at head office, leaving only our logistics
operation to finalise. The rollout of this transformation has
complemented the right-sizing of our cost base.
We will develop our transition plan in line
with the Climate-Related Financial Disclosures ('CRFD')
requirements and cultivate a culture that revolves around
sustainability throughout our organisation.
Key Performance Indications
('KPIs')1
As a digital retailer committed to
accelerating our strategy and navigating a post-pandemic
environment, we continue to report various digital customer
metrics, which provide operational measures of how our strategy is
progressing.
|
52 weeks
to
2 Mar 2024
|
52 weeks
to
25 Feb
2023
|
Change
|
Total website sessions2
|
183m
|
220m
|
(16.8)%
|
|
|
|
|
Conversion2
|
3.7%
|
3.7%
|
-
|
|
|
|
|
Total Orders
|
7.3m
|
8.7m
|
(16.1)%
|
|
|
|
|
AOV
|
£83.6
|
£79.2
|
5.6%
|
|
|
|
|
Items per order
|
2.8
|
2.8
|
-
|
|
|
|
|
AIV
|
£30.2
|
£28.3
|
6.7%
|
|
|
|
|
Total active customers
|
2.2m
|
2.6m
|
(15.4)%
|
|
|
|
|
FS arrears
|
10.6%
|
9.1%
|
1.5ppts
|
|
|
|
|
NPS
|
63
|
57
|
6
|
1 KPIs are
defined on page 25. KPIs shown above on a 52 week basis for FY23
other than Financial Services Arrears, which reflects a 2 March
2024 balance sheet date.
2 Sessions
and conversion for 52 weeks to 25 Feb 2023 restated for consistency
with definitions within 52 weeks to 2 Mar 2024 reporting. Note that
approach to reporting associated with "Google Consent Mode" going
forward is anticipated to lead to a restatement of sessions and
conversion for 52 weeks to 2 Mar 2024 within FY25
reporting.
Consistent with the broader
market, we have continued to see the impact of macro-economic
challenges and consumer behaviour, which has been accentuated for
online pureplay businesses.
This is reflected in the broad
trends in customers, sessions and ordering continuing from FY23.
The lower active customers trend includes our heritage portfolio of
brands where our focus is on stabilisation and value protection
rather than growth.
The reduction in orders has been
partially offset by an increase in Average Item Value ('AIV'). We
have seen a continuation of more intentional behaviour from
customers, which has included buying into more premium ranges, and
we have also implemented measured price increases supported by data
tools to offset an element of the inflationary impacts on our
product costs.
The Financial Services arrears
rate includes a higher level of insolvent accounts, reflecting debt
sale timings year-on-year. Excluding insolvent accounts, the
arrears rate was 9.0% (FY23: 8.7%) with the increase due to a
higher mix of payment arrangements held at year end, as a year end
debt sale did not occur at the end of FY24 unlike in prior years.
The business continues to support and retain customers through
times of financial hardship.
Our Net Promoter Score ('NPS')
further improved in H2. Full year performance has been driven by a
number of operational improvements including better delivery
performance, an extension in order cut off time for next day
deliveries to 11pm, and website improvements.
We are pleased with the strategic
execution in the year and have a clear set of priorities looking
forward. Combining the strategic progress, scaling of marketing
spend described in the FY25 Outlook section and an anticipated
gradual improvement in macro-economic conditions, provides us with
confidence in unlocking progress across the KPIs.
Environment, Social and
Governance
We have continued to embed our
Environmental, Social and Governance strategy into the business.
Our sustainability plan, SUSTAIN, fully aligns our ethical policies
with our commercial activities and our commitment to Our People and
Our Planet.
Our near-term science-based
targets to reduce greenhouse gas ('GHG') emissions have been
approved by the Science Based Targets initiative ('SBTi'). The
Group has committed to reduce Scope 1, 2 and 3 emissions by 46% by
FY31 against an FY22 base year, with the SBTi ensuring that targets
are aligned with the latest climate science under the Paris Climate
Agreement. These targets are part of the Group's ambition to
achieve net zero emissions by 2040 under the British Retail
Consortium's ('BRC') Climate Action Roadmap.
A key commitment for the business
is responsibly sourcing own brand product. We have reached 47% of
own brand designed Clothing and Home textile ranges with
sustainable attributes (from 0% in 2019) as we target growing this
to 100% by FY30 in line with our Textiles 2030 commitment. We have
also reached 70% of cotton use being responsibly sourced (Better
cotton, organic or recycled) as we focus on transitioning to 100%
responsibly sourced cotton by FY26.
During the year we have driven
engagement with our colleague-led charity partners - the Retail
Trust and FareShare Greater Manchester. Through a variety of
fundraising activities we reached the fundraising milestone of
£50,000 just over one year into the partnership.
FY24
FINANCIAL PERFORMANCE
Financial
KPIs
Our non-financial KPIs are contained in the Chief
Executive Officer's statement. We also use a number of financial
KPIs to manage the business. These are shown below and will
continue to be reported going forwards.
|
52 weeks to 2 March
2024
|
52 weeks to 25 Feb
20231
|
Change
|
53 weeks to 4 March
20231
|
Product revenue
|
£381.2m
|
£426.6m
|
(10.6)%
|
£433.4m
|
Adjusted
EBITDA2
|
£47.6m
|
£54.4m
|
(12.5)%
|
£57.3m
|
Adjusted EBITDA
margin2
|
7.9%
|
8.2%
|
(0.3)ppts
|
8.5%
|
Adjusted operating costs to Group
revenue2
|
39.8%
|
38.1%
|
1.7ppts
|
37.7%
|
Cash and cash
equivalents3
|
£65.2m
|
N/A
|
N/A
|
£35.5m
|
Total Accessible
Liquidity2,3
|
£148.5m
|
N/A
|
N/A
|
£143.9m
|
Statutory profit before
tax
|
£5.3m
|
N/A
|
N/A
|
£(71.1)m
|
Adjusted
EPS2
|
1.65p
|
N/A
|
N/A
|
1.81p
|
1 FY23 was the 53 week period ended 4 March 2023. A
detailed comparison of the 53 week results to 4 March 2023 and 52
week results to 25 February 2023, for comparability with this
year's 52 week period, is set out on page 15.
2 A full glossary of Alternative Performance Measures and
their definitions is included on page 26.
3 FY23 Total Accessible Liquidity of £143.9m and cash and
cash equivalents of £35.5m are as at the balance sheet date, 4
March 2023. Subsequent to the balance sheet date, the Group
refinanced its borrowings and extended their maturities to December
2026. As at 6 May 2023 and following the refinancing and extended
maturity dates, Total Accessible Liquidity was
£112.0m.
Reconciliation of Statutory financial results
to adjusted results
The Annual Report and Accounts includes Alternative
Performance Measures ('APMs'), which are not defined or specified
under the requirements of IFRS. These APMs are consistent with how
we measure performance internally and are also used in assessing
performance under our incentive plans. Therefore, the Directors
believe that these APMs provide stakeholders with additional,
useful information on the Group's performance.
The adjusted figures are presented before the impact
of adjusting items. These are items of income and expenditure which
are one-off in nature, and material to the current financial year,
or represent true ups to items presented as adjusting in prior
periods. These are detailed in note 6.
A full glossary of Alternative Performance Measures
and their definitions is included on page 26.
Reconciliation of Income
Statement Measures
|
52 weeks to 2 Mar
2024
|
|
53 weeks to 4 March
2023
|
52 weeks to 25 Feb
2023
|
£m
|
Statutory
|
Adjusting
items
|
Adjusted
|
|
Statutory
|
Adjusting
items
|
Adjusted
|
53rd week
impact
|
52 weeks
Adjusted
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Group Revenue
|
600.9
|
|
600.9
|
|
677.5
|
|
677.5
|
(11.5)
|
666.0
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Cost of sales
|
(315.2)
|
0.8
|
(314.4)
|
|
(364.7)
|
|
(364.7)
|
6.7
|
(358.0)
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Gross Profit
|
285.7
|
0.8
|
286.5
|
|
312.8
|
|
312.8
|
(4.8)
|
308.0
|
Gross profit margin
|
47.5%
|
|
47.7%
|
|
46.2%
|
|
46.2%
|
|
46.2%
|
Operating costs
|
(242.3)
|
3.4
|
(238.9)
|
|
(290.0)
|
34.5
|
(255.5)
|
1.9
|
(253.6)
|
Adjusted operating costs to
Group revenue ratio
|
|
|
39.8%
|
|
|
|
37.7%
|
|
38.1%
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Adjusted EBITDA
|
|
|
47.6
|
|
|
|
57.3
|
(2.9)
|
54.4
|
Adjusted EBITDA margin
|
|
|
7.9%
|
|
|
|
8.5%
|
|
8.2%
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Depreciation &
amortisation
|
(20.7)
|
|
(20.7)
|
|
(35.7)
|
|
(35.7)
|
-
|
(35.7)
|
Impairment of non-financial
assets
|
(3.3)
|
3.3
|
-
|
|
(53.0)
|
53.0
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
Operating profit / (loss)
|
19.4
|
7.5
|
26.9
|
|
(65.9)
|
87.5
|
21.6
|
(2.9)
|
18.7
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Net finance costs
|
(13.6)
|
|
(13.6)
|
|
(14.1)
|
|
(14.1)
|
0.3
|
(13.8)
|
Profit / (loss) before taxation and fair value adjustments to
financial instruments
|
5.8
|
7.5
|
13.3
|
|
(80.0)
|
87.5
|
7.5
|
(2.6)
|
4.9
|
Fair value adjustments to
financial instruments
|
(0.5)
|
|
(0.5)
|
|
8.9
|
|
8.9
|
-
|
8.9
|
Profit / (loss) before taxation
|
5.3
|
7.5
|
12.8
|
|
(71.1)
|
87.5
|
16.4
|
(2.6)
|
13.8
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Taxation (charge) /
credit
|
(4.5)
|
(1.1)
|
(5.6)
|
|
19.7
|
(20.6)
|
(0.9)
|
-
|
(0.9)
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Profit / (loss) for the year
|
0.8
|
6.4
|
7.2
|
|
(51.4)
|
66.9
|
15.5
|
(2.6)
|
12.9
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Earnings / (loss) per share
|
0.17p
|
|
1.65p
|
|
(11.19)p
|
|
1.81p
|
|
N/A
|
Reconciliation of Cash and cash
equivalents and bank overdrafts to Unsecured Net Cash and Adjusted
Net Debt
£m
|
2 March
2024
|
4 March
2023
|
Cash and cash
equivalents
|
65.2
|
35.5
|
Unsecured debt and bank
overdrafts
|
-
|
-
|
Unsecured Net Cash
|
65.2
|
35.5
|
|
|
|
Secured debt facility linked to
eligible receivables
|
(301.5)
|
(332.9)
|
Adjusted Net Debt
|
(236.3)
|
(297.4)
|
Reconciliation of
Net movement in Cash and cash equivalents and bank overdrafts to
Net Cash generation / (outflow)
£m
|
52 weeks
to
2 March
2024
|
53 weeks
to
4 March
2023
|
Net increase / (decrease) in cash
and cash equivalents and bank overdraft
|
29.7
|
(7.6)
|
Voluntary flexible drawdown of
securitisation loan
|
-
|
(60.1)
|
Net cash generation / (outflow)
|
29.7
|
(67.7)
|
Overview
It is encouraging that this year's return to a
positive statutory profit before tax, the delivery of Adjusted
EBITDA above market expectations, and strong levels of cash
generation, have been achieved despite the challenging
macro-economic conditions.
The discussion of revenue, Adjusted gross margin,
Adjusted operating costs and Adjusted EBITDA which follows is
against last year's 52 week comparative, for comparability with
FY24's 52 week period.
We planned for the continued market softness which
has characterised FY24, albeit conditions have weighed on customer
behaviour for longer than we expected at the outset of the year.
These conditions drove product revenue down 10.6%. Financial
Services revenue reduced 8.2% as a result of the lower opening
debtor book and the impact from lower product revenue in the year,
with the Financial Services debtor book remaining well
controlled.
Adjusted EBITDA margin strengthened significantly in
H2, up 4ppts against H1, returning full year EBITDA margin broadly
to the level achieved in FY23. This reflects a strong focus on
areas which are in the business' direct control, consistent with
our plans and guidance set out in October at Interim results. The
H2 Adjusted gross profit margin improved by c.2ppts over H2 of
FY23, leading to full year 1.5ppts up on prior year. The H2
Adjusted operating costs to Group revenue ratio improved by c.4ppts
against H1, with some easing of inflationary impacts as H2
annualised against significant increases in the prior year, helping
to contain the full year ratio to under 40% despite further
operational deleverage in the year.
Adjusting items reduced to £7.5m, from £87.5m last
year. The prior year charge largely related to a non-cash
impairment of non-financial assets and settlement of the Allianz
litigation. Combined with lower depreciation and amortisation
following last year's impairment, statutory profit before tax
improved to a positive level of £5.3m.
A proactive moderation of intake and clearance of
older stock items has driven inventory £20m lower than prior year
and supported strong cash generation of nearly £30m after £23m of
self-funded capital investment into the transformation of the
business. The balance sheet remains strong with £148.5m of total
accessible liquidity, with £65.2m of unsecured net cash, and the
RCF and overdraft remaining undrawn with limits of £75m and £12.5m
respectively.
Revenue
£m
|
52 weeks
to
2 Mar 2024
|
52 weeks
to
25 Feb
20231
|
Change 52 weeks to 52
weeks
|
53 weeks
to
4 Mar
20231
|
Revenue
|
|
|
|
|
Strategic
brands2
|
282.5
|
306.8
|
(7.9)%
|
311.8
|
Heritage
brands3
|
98.7
|
119.8
|
(17.6)%
|
121.6
|
Total product revenue
|
381.2
|
426.6
|
(10.6)%
|
433.4
|
Financial services
revenue
|
219.7
|
239.4
|
(8.2)%
|
244.1
|
Group revenue
|
600.9
|
666.0
|
(9.8)%
|
677.5
|
1 FY23 was a
53 week period, ending 4 March 2023. Revenue has also been
presented on a 52 week basis, excluding the 53rd week for
comparability with FY24's 52 week period. A detailed comparison of
the 53 week results to 4 March 2023 and 52 week results to 25
February 2023, for comparability with this year's 52 week period,
is set out on page 15.
2 JD
Williams, Simply Be, Jacamo.
3 Ambrose
Wilson, Home Essentials, Fashion World, Marisota, Oxendales and
Premier Man.
Group revenue declined 9.8% to £600.9m reflecting a
10.6% decline in product revenue and a 8.2% decline in FS
revenue.
The product revenue decline seen in FY24 is broadly
a continuation of that seen in H2 of FY23 when there was a
softening in performance reflective of more challenging market
conditions and the impact of cost-of-living pressures evident in
customers' buying behaviour. FY24's performance is in the context
of a decline in the online pureplay market of 10%1, a
12% reduction in marketing spend, as well as unseasonable weather
conditions experienced at certain times during the year,
particularly for selling Summer ranges through Spring and July to
August. As explained within the non-financial KPI section, customer
behaviour has continued to be cautious in the year, reflected in
customer numbers, sessions and orders, but partially offset by
strength in average item values.
Against this market backdrop, our strategic brands
saw a decline of 7.9%. Our heritage brands, which are managed for
contribution as opposed to growth, saw product revenue down
17.6%.
The product revenue trend improved through Quarters
1 to 3 (Q1: -11.9%, Q2: -10.4%, Q3: -9.7%). In Q4, which is the
quietest period of the year, product revenue reduced by 11.2%,
reflecting a softening in the market after Christmas and a focus on
profitable trading.
The reduced level of product sales from this year
and prior years resulted in a smaller year end customer receivables
loan book of £517.0m (FY23: £555.2m), down 6.9%. This in turn drove
lower FS revenue, down 8.2%. The reduction in FS revenue is greater
than the reduction in book size due to a higher mix of non-interest
bearing payment arrangements.
Our responsible and flexible credit offering remains
an integral part of our customer proposition, particularly in the
current macro-economic environment.
1 For the 52 weeks ended 2 March 2024, the online pureplay
market according to IMRG declined by 10%.
Adjusted Gross
profit1
£m
|
52 weeks
to
2 Mar 2024
|
52 weeks
to
25 Feb
20232
|
Change 52 weeks to 52
weeks
|
53 weeks
to
4 Mar
20232
|
Product gross profit
|
173.8
|
189.6
|
(8.3)%
|
192.5
|
Product gross margin %
|
45.6%
|
44.4%
|
1.2ppts
|
44.4%
|
Financial services gross
profit
|
112.7
|
118.4
|
(4.8)%
|
120.3
|
Financial services gross margin %
|
51.3%
|
49.5%
|
1.8ppts
|
49.3%
|
Adjusted Group gross profit1
|
286.5
|
308.0
|
(7.0)%
|
312.8
|
Adjusted Group gross profit
margin1
|
47.7%
|
46.2%
|
1.5ppts
|
46.2%
|
1 A reconciliation of
statutory measures to adjusted measures is included on page 15. A
full glossary of Alternative Performance Measures and their
definitions is included on page 26.
2 FY23 was a 53 week
period, ended 4 March 2023. Adjusted gross profit has also been
presented on a 52 week basis, excluding the 53rd week for
comparability with FY24's 52 week period. A detailed comparison of
the 53 week results to 4 March 2023 and 52 week results to 25
February 2023, for comparability with this year's 52 week period,
is set out on page 15.
Adjusted gross profit margin increased 1.5ppts
year-on-year to 47.7%, driven by improvements across both product
and FS gross margin.
Product gross margin improved 1.2ppts to 45.6%,
reflecting better stock purchasing and realisation of margins.
c.0.5ppts of the improvement came from trading benefits, including
annualising against additional provisioning when year end stock was
higher than normal for the forward level of sales, which reduced
prior year margin rate by c.1ppt, partially offset by adverse
year-on-year impact of c.0.5ppts from product mixes. c.1ppts of the
improvement came from normalisation of freight rates, partially
offset by c.0.5ppts adverse impact from lower VAT bad debt relief
due to lower write-offs1.
FS gross margin increased 1.8ppts to 51.3%,
reflecting improvement in write-offs and a more active debt
management strategy adopted. This has had a more prominent benefit
in H2, yielding a higher gross margin compared to H1, as the
benefit is realised. The FX contracts used to hedge US dollar spend
are described in note 7 to the financial statements and we remain
well hedged throughout FY25, with the anticipated level of US
dollar spend fully hedged.
1 Included in product
gross margin as they are only recoverable due to being a combined
retail and financial services business, and they would not be
recoverable as a standalone credit business.
Adjusted operating
costs1
£m
|
52 weeks
to
2 Mar 2024
|
52 weeks
to
25 Feb
20232
|
Change 52 weeks to 52
weeks
|
53 weeks
to
4 Mar
20232
|
Warehouse & fulfilment
costs
|
(58.1)
|
(62.2)
|
6.6%
|
(63.2)
|
Marketing & production
costs3
|
(59.3)
|
(67.6)
|
12.3%
|
(68.2)
|
Admin & payroll
costs3
|
(121.5)
|
(123.8)
|
1.9%
|
(124.1)
|
Adjusted operating costs1
|
(238.9)
|
(253.6)
|
5.8%
|
(255.5)
|
Adjusted operating costs
to Group Revenue ratio1
|
39.8%
|
38.1%
|
1.7ppts
|
37.7%
|
1A reconciliation of
statutory measures to adjusted measures is included on page 15. A
full glossary of Alternative Performance Measures and their
definitions is included on page 26.
2 FY23 was a 53 week
period, ended 4 March 2023. Adjusted operating costs have also been
presented on a 52 week basis, excluding the 53rd week for
comparability with FY24's 52 week period. A detailed comparison of
the 53 week results to 4 March 2023 and 52 week results to 25
February 2023, for comparability with this year's 52 week period,
is set out on page 15.
3 FY23 FS statement
costs re-presented from Marketing & production into Admin &
payroll costs, consistent with updated classification used in
FY24.
Total operating costs excluding adjusting items
reduced £14.7m to £238.9m through a real focus and discipline in
areas which the business can directly control. This included a
headwind of c.£12m cost inflation being more than offset by volume
savings and management initiatives. As previously highlighted, the
inflationary pressure had increased the cost base in H2 23, for
both supplier costs and internal pay awards, and this has flowed
through and annualised into FY24.
Adjusted operating costs as a percentage of Group
revenue increased 1.7ppts to 39.8% reflecting the negative
operational gearing on fixed costs. As guided to at Interim results
in October 2023, further management actions have been taken in H2
and which have moderated the H2 increase relative to that seen in
H1, with the H2 Adjusted operating costs ratio improving by c.4ppts
against H1.
Warehouse and fulfilment costs were £4.1m or 6.6%
lower than the prior year, benefiting from the flexible cost base,
with c.£11m of savings from lower core volumes. This was partially
offset by inflationary headwinds of c.£4m, and cost increases
totaling c.£3m including the impact of lower volumes on efficiency
levels, and a slightly higher returns rate.
Marketing and production costs were £8.3m or 12.3%
lower than prior year driven by the continued benefit from lower
performance marketing costs, reflecting lower website sessions, and
the decision to pull back spend given the softer conditions,
particularly in H2 (down 17%) as management has focused on
profitable sales in a subdued market. This more than offset cost
inflation of c.£2m. As explained within the FY25 Outlook section,
management has plans to scale marketing and production spend in
FY25 with a focus on returning to sustainable profitable
growth.
Admin and payroll costs reduced by £2.3m or 1.9%, as
management initiatives have more than offset inflationary
increases, totaling c. £6m, including utilities, technology
contracts and pay awards.
Statutory operating costs including adjusting items
decreased by 16.4% against last year's 53 week comparative due to
the movements discussed above and lower adjusting items (see below
section).
Depreciation and
amortisation
Depreciation and amortisation of £20.7m was down
£15.0m versus £35.7m in the prior year. This was driven by the
non-cash impairment of £53.0m against non-financial assets booked
in FY23, with the reduction consistent with guidance provided at
the time of FY23 full year results.
Finance
costs
Net finance costs of £13.6m were in line with the
£13.8m in the prior year on a 52 week basis, despite the increase
in external interest rates. The Group has limited its exposure to
interest rate movements through interest rate hedging which it
continues to have in place, as described in note 7, and an
increased level of interest has been earned this year on cash
balances, with the RCF and overdraft remaining undrawn.
Adjusting
items
During the year, the Group continued the multi-year
transformation of the business and the ongoing review of the
operating model. Specifically, a restructuring programme of the
Group's operational and head office headcount to reflect the lower
sales orders, was initiated in Q2 FY24 and continued throughout the
financial year. Total redundancy costs of £1.7m were incurred
in the period within the strategic change total below.
During the year, the Board also approved the
rationalisation of the Group's warehousing facilities following a
review of the overall warehouse portfolio capacity, utilisation and
associated operational cost base. This resulted in a charge of
approximately £2.4m including staff exits, onerous contracts and
terminal stock rationalisation included within the strategic change
total below. £3.3m of property impairment was also booked. Further
details can be found in note 6.
The prior year adjusting items include an accounting
impairment of £53.0m which was recorded against intangible and
plant and equipment assets and a charge of £26.1m representing the
additional amount required to cover the settlement and legal costs
to completion following the Group reaching full and final
settlement in respect of the legal dispute with Allianz Insurance
plc. Under the negotiated settlement, which was made without
admission of liability, the Group paid the sum of £49.5m.
£m
|
52 weeks
to
2 March
2024
|
53 weeks
to
4 March
2023
|
Strategic change
|
4.2
|
2.4
|
Impairment of non-financial
assets
|
3.3
|
53.0
|
Settlement of Allianz
litigation
|
(0.1)
|
26.1
|
Other
|
0.1
|
6.0
|
Items charged to profit before tax
|
7.5
|
87.5
|
Profit and earnings
per share
Driven by lower product and FS revenues, on a
comparable 52 week basis Adjusted EBITDA decreased by £6.8m to
£47.6m. The lower revenues were largely mitigated at an Adjusted
EBITDA margin level, which showed a relatively small decline of
0.3ppts, to 7.9%.
Statutory operating profit / (loss) improved by
£85.3m over prior year to a profit of £19.4m (FY23 £(65.9)m)
reflecting the lower level of adjusting items charged to operating
profit and reduction in depreciation and amortisation, partially
offset by the reduction in Adjusted EBITDA.
Statutory profit before tax was £5.3m, up £76.4m
year-on-year (FY23 statutory loss before tax: £(71.1)m), reflecting
the improvement in statutory operating profit, partially offset by
a loss of £0.5m on fair value adjustments to financial instruments.
This annualised against a gain of £8.9m in the prior year which
reflected foreign exchange and interest rate hedging mark to market
gains.
The taxation charge for the year is based on the
underlying estimated effective tax rate for the full year of 87%,
impacted by the low level of pre-tax profit in the year and the
value of tax adjustments made to derive taxable profits. Further
tax analysis is contained in note 8.
Statutory earnings per share improved to 0.17p
(FY23: loss of 11.19p). Adjusted earnings per share reduced to
1.65p (FY23: 1.81p).
Financial services
customer receivables and impairment charge on customer
receivables
Gross customer receivables at year end reduced by
6.9% to £517.0m (FY23: £555.2m), driven by the reduced level of
product sales despite an increase in credit penetration.
Arrears rates excluding insolvent accounts increased
to 9.0% (FY23: 8.7%), driven by a larger balance of accounts on
payment arrangements held at the year end (£53.2m v £48.6m in
FY23) as, unlike prior year, a year end debt sale did not occur at
the end of FY24. The business continues to support and retain
customers through times of financial hardship.
Macro-economic conditions have evolved in the year
from inflationary pressures at the start of the year moving towards
political uncertainty at the end of the year, with continued
pressure on customers from higher prices and higher interest rates,
which is being carefully monitored as we continue to support our
customers during this time.
Supporting customers on payment arrangements for
longer, a strategy adopted at the end of FY23, has resulted in a
marked year-on-year reduction of customer balances written-off,
improved collections and return to trade.
The expected credit loss ('ECL') provision ratio
increased to 14.2% (FY23: 13.4%). The 0.8ppts increase reflects a
c.1.1ppts year-on-year impact due to holding more insolvent
accounts (included within normal) at year end as a result of debt
sale timings year-on-year. Excluding this, the ECL provision ratio
would have reduced by 0.3ppts.
£m
|
2 March
2024
|
4 March
2023
|
Change
|
Gross customer
receivables
|
517.0
|
555.2
|
(6.9)%
|
ECL provision
|
(73.3)
|
(74.6)
|
(1.8)%
|
Normal account provisions1
|
(55.7)
|
(55.6)
|
(0.8)ppts
|
Payment arrangement provisions
|
(15.4)
|
(16.5)
|
0.0ppts
|
Inflationary impacts1
|
-
|
(2.5)
|
0.4ppts
|
Unemployment rate uncertainty
|
(2.2)
|
-
|
(0.4)ppts
|
ECL provision ratio
|
14.2%
|
13.4%
|
0.8ppts
|
Net customer receivables
|
443.7
|
480.6
|
(7.7)%
|
14 March 2023 categorisation
re-presented.
The profit and loss net impairment charge on
customer receivables for FY24 was £106.2m, £16.1m lower than the
prior year driven by reduced write-offs from a smaller customer
receivables loan book, improved credit decisioning and a more
active debt management strategy adopted.
£m
|
|
53 weeks to 4 Mar 2023 net impairment charge on
customer receivables
|
122.3
|
Lower write-offs due to smaller
book size
|
(7.6)
|
Lower write-offs due to improving
credit risk
|
(17.4)
|
Change in annual impairment
charge
|
(7.2)
|
Lower recoveries and timing of
sales
|
14.1
|
Week 53 in prior year
|
(2.3)
|
Other impacts, including nominal
interest
|
4.3
|
52 weeks to 2 March 2024 net impairment charge on customer
receivables
|
106.2
|
Funding and total
accessible liquidity ('TAL')
The Group has the following
arrangements in place:
·
A £400m securitisation facility (FY23: £400m)
with commitment extended during the year until December 2026,
drawings on which are linked to prevailing levels of eligible
receivables but with flexibility around the level which the Group
chooses to draw. The Group has previously chosen to proactively
reduce the lender commitment from £400m to £340m to reflect the
accessible funding level and reduce ongoing fees;
·
A RCF of £75m, and an overdraft facility of
£12.5m, both fully undrawn at 2 March 2024. As previously
disclosed, these facilities were refinanced following the FY23 year
end and are both committed to December 2026.
Throughout the year all covenants
have been complied with.
At 2 March 2024, the Group had TAL
of £148.5m, comprising cash of £65.2m including restricted cash of
£4.2m, the fully undrawn RCF of £75.0m and overdraft of £12.5m. At
the end of FY23 TAL was £143.9m and following the refinancing of
the RCF facility, at 6 May 2023, TAL was £112.0m.
Net Cash Generation
/ (Outflow)
£m
|
52 weeks
to
2 March
2024
|
53 weeks
to
4 March
2023
|
Adjusted EBITDA
|
47.6
|
57.3
|
Inventory working capital
movement
|
21.1
|
(6.7)
|
Other working capital, operating
cash flows and provision movement
|
(9.8)
|
(14.7)
|
Cash flow adjusted for working capital
|
58.9
|
35.9
|
Adjusting items
|
(3.0)
|
(55.4)
|
Capital investing
activities
|
(23.2)
|
(25.6)
|
Non-operating tax &
treasury
|
4.0
|
0.2
|
Interest paid
|
(13.8)
|
(15.0)
|
Non-operational cash outflows
|
(36.0)
|
(95.8)
|
Gross customer loan book
repayment
|
38.2
|
21.9
|
Decrease in securitisation debt in
line with customer loan book
|
(31.4)
|
(29.7)
|
Net cash inflow / (outflow) from the customer loan
book
|
6.8
|
(7.8)
|
Net cash generation / (outflow)
|
29.7
|
(67.7)
|
The business generated cash of £29.7m in the year, a
significant improvement from the £67.7m cash utilised in the prior
year. The inflow was driven by positive EBITDA generation and work
undertaken to right-size the stock balance. The year closed with
£65.2m of unsecured net cash.
Year end net inventory levels were down 21%, at
£73.9m (FY23: £94.1m), driving a net improvement in working
capital. As outlined at Interim results in October 2023, we have
been executing against our previously flagged plans to carefully
manage inventory intake and reduce older stock holdings, with units
at the end of the year 1.8m below FY23. This has allowed FY25 to be
entered with a cleaner stock position.
Adjusting items of £3.0m largely reflect cash
outflows from previously announced restructuring activity. These
annualise against adjusting items totaling £55.4m, including the
full and final settlement paid to Allianz.
Capital expenditure of £23.2m (FY23: £25.6m) has
continued to be self-funded as we invest in delivering the ongoing
digital transformation of the business. Capital investment was
higher in H2 than H1, as guided to in the Interim results in
October 2023. The lower full year spend than FY23 reflects timing
of certain expected investment now falling into FY25.
The net cash inflow from the customer loan book of
£6.8m reflects the reduction in the customer loan book in the year.
This annualises against an outflow of £7.8m in FY23, which
incorporated a £14.3m adverse impact from a partial deferral of the
debt sale.
Adjusted net
debt
Unsecured net cash / (debt), which is defined as the
amount drawn on the Group's unsecured borrowing facilities less
cash balances, closed the year in a positive position with
unsecured net cash of £65.2m (FY23: unsecured net cash £35.5m) with
the RCF and overdraft facilities remaining undrawn.
Adjusted net debt reduced by £61.1m in the year, to
£236.3m (FY23: £297.4m). This is the net amount of £65.2m of
unsecured net cash and £301.5m of debt drawn against the
securitisation funding facility, which is well covered by the gross
customer receivables book of £517.0m.
The reduction in net debt over the prior year
reflects the net cash generation described above and the lower
securitised borrowings.
Dividend and
capital allocation
As previously announced in the Group's FY23 results
and in light of the macro-economic environment, our clear set of
investment plans and the number of competing demands on our cash
resources, the Board decided not to re-introduce a dividend in FY23
or FY24. The Board continues to keep its dividend policy under
review and will evaluate the re-introduction of a dividend when
transformational priorities and business performance allows.
Pension
scheme
The Group's defined benefit pension scheme had a
surplus of £17.1m at the end of the year, slightly below the prior
year's position (FY23: £20.0m surplus) reflecting asset returns
over the period and an allowance for high levels of short term
inflation.
Financial risk
management and processes
Controls over financial reporting is an area of
continuous improvement and remains a key priority for the Group.
Due to the legacy systems and processes across the Group, we
continue to target improvements in documentation, clarity on key
controls, and overall process level controls to reduce reliance on
detective management controls. This feeds into the Audit and Risk
Committee focus on improving controls. Examples of improvements
deployed during the year include refinements to our inventory stock
count processes and further development of our IFRS 9 model and
policy documentation, including quarterly stress testing of
macro-economic updates. In preparation for potential UK SOx
attestation requirements, we also completed a review of all key
Retail and Financial Services processes and controls. We have an
ambition to cover all material areas in the next financial
year.
KPI
DEFINITIONS
Measure
|
Definition
|
Total website sessions
|
Total number of sessions across N Brown apps,
mobile and desktop websites in the 12 month period
|
Total active customers
|
Customers who placed an accepted order in the
12 month period to reporting date
|
Total orders
|
Total accepted orders placed in the 12 month
period. Includes online and offline orders.
|
AOV
|
Average order value based on accepted
demand1
|
AIV
|
Average item value based on accepted
demand1
|
Items per order
|
Average number of items per accepted
order
|
Orders per customer
|
Average number of orders placed per ordering
customer
|
Conversion
|
% of app/web sessions that result in an
accepted order
|
NPS
|
Customers asked to rate likelihood to
"recommend the brand to a friend or colleague" on a 0-10 scale (10
most likely). NPS is (% of 9-10) minus (% of 0-6). NPS is recorded
on JD Williams, Simply Be, Jacamo and Ambrose Wilson
|
FS Arrears
|
Arrears are stated including both customer
debts with two or more missed payments, or customer debts on a
payment hold
|
1Accepted demand is defined
as the value of Orders from customers (including VAT) that we
accept, i.e. after our credit assessment
processes.
APM
GLOSSARY
The Preliminary Results statement
includes alternative performance measures ('APMs'), which are not
defined or specified under the requirements of IFRS. These APMs are
consistent with how the Group measures performance internally and
are also used in assessing performance under the Group's incentive
plans. Therefore, the Directors believe that these APMs provide
stakeholders with additional, useful information on the Group's
performance.
Alternative Performance Measure
|
Definition
|
Adjusted gross profit
|
Gross profit excluding adjusting
items.
|
Adjusted gross profit
margin
|
Adjusted gross profit as a
percentage of Group Revenue.
|
Adjusted EBITDA
|
Operating profit, excluding
adjusting items, with depreciation and amortisation
added back.
|
Adjusted EBITDA
margin
|
Adjusted EBITDA as a percentage
of Group Revenue.
|
Adjusted profit before
tax
|
Profit before tax, excluding
adjusting items and fair value movement on financial
instruments.
|
Adjusted profit before tax
margin
|
Profit before tax, excluding
adjusting items and fair value movement on financial instruments
expressed as a percentage of Group Revenue.
|
Net Cash generation
|
Net cash generated from the
Group's underlying operating activities.
|
Adjusted Operating
costs
|
Operating costs less
depreciation, amortisation and adjusting items.
|
Adjusted Operating costs to Group
revenue ratio
|
Operating costs less
depreciation, amortisation and adjusting items as a percentage of
Group Revenue.
|
Adjusted Net debt
|
Total liabilities from financing
activities less cash, excluding lease liabilities.
|
Net debt
|
Total liabilities from financing
activities less cash.
|
Unsecured net cash /
(debt)
|
Amount drawn on the Group's
unsecured debt facilities less cash balances. This measure is used
to calculate the Group's leverage ratio, a key debt covenant
measure.
|
Total Accessible
Liquidity
|
Total cash and cash equivalents,
less restricted amounts, and available headroom on secured and
unsecured debt facilities.
|
Adjusted Earnings per
share
|
Adjusted Basic earnings per share
based on earnings before adjusting items and fair value
adjustments, which are those items that do not form part of the
recurring operational activities of the Group. These are calculated
in note 9.
|
The reconciliation of the
statutory measures to adjusted measures is included in the
Financial Performance section on page 15.
Consolidated
income statement
for the 52 weeks
ended 2 March 2024
|
|
|
52
weeks ended 2 March 2024
|
53 weeks ended 4 March
2023
|
|
Note
|
Before adjusted items
£m
|
Adjusted items (note 6)
£m
|
Total £m
|
Before
adjusted items £m
|
Adjusted items (note 6)
£m
|
Total
£m
|
Revenue
|
|
400.6
|
-
|
400.6
|
455.7
|
-
|
455.7
|
Credit account interest
|
|
200.3
|
-
|
200.3
|
221.8
|
-
|
221.8
|
Group revenue
|
5
|
600.9
|
-
|
600.9
|
677.5
|
-
|
677.5
|
Cost of sales
|
5
|
(208.2)
|
(0.8)
|
(209.0)
|
(242.4)
|
-
|
(242.4)
|
Impairment losses on customer
receivables
|
|
(106.2)
|
-
|
(106.2)
|
(122.3)
|
-
|
(122.3)
|
Gross profit
|
5
|
286.5
|
(0.8)
|
285.7
|
312.8
|
-
|
312.8
|
Impairment of non-financial
assets
|
10
|
-
|
(3.3)
|
(3.3)
|
-
|
(53.0)
|
(53.0)
|
Operating profit/(loss)
|
|
26.9
|
(7.5)
|
19.4
|
21.6
|
(87.5)
|
(65.9)
|
Finance
income1
|
|
2.6
|
-
|
2.6
|
1.5
|
-
|
1.5
|
Finance
costs1,
|
|
(16.2)
|
-
|
(16.2)
|
(15.6)
|
-
|
(15.6)
|
Profit/(loss) before taxation and
fair value adjustments to financial instruments
|
|
13.3
|
(7.5)
|
5.8
|
7.5
|
(87.5)
|
(80.0)
|
Fair value adjustments to
financial instruments
|
7
|
(0.5)
|
-
|
(0.5)
|
8.9
|
-
|
8.9
|
Profit/(loss) before
taxation
|
|
12.8
|
(7.5)
|
5.3
|
16.4
|
(87.5)
|
(71.1)
|
Taxation
|
8
|
(5.6)
|
1.1
|
(4.5)
|
(0.9)
|
20.6
|
19.7
|
Profit/(loss) for the
period
|
|
7.2
|
(6.4)
|
0.8
|
15.5
|
(66.9)
|
(51.4)
|
Earnings/(loss) per share from
continuing operations
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Basic
|
9
|
|
|
0.17
|
|
|
(11.19)
|
Diluted
|
9
|
|
|
0.17
|
|
|
N/A
|
1FY23 has been re-presented
to separately disclose finance income and finance
costs
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Consolidated
statement of comprehensive
income
for the 52 weeks
ended 2 March 2024
|
|
52 weeks
ended
2 March
2024
|
53 weeks
ended
4 March
2023
|
|
Note
|
£m
|
£m
|
Profit/(loss) for the
period
|
|
0.8
|
(51.4)
|
Items that will not be
reclassified subsequently to profit or loss
|
|
|
|
Actuarial losses on defined
benefit pension schemes
|
|
(4.6)
|
(19.4)
|
Tax relating to items not
reclassified
|
8
|
1.6
|
6.7
|
Net other comprehensive loss that
will not be reclassified to profit and loss
|
|
(3.0)
|
(12.7)
|
Items that may be reclassified
subsequently to profit or loss
|
|
|
|
Exchange differences on
translation of foreign operations
|
|
(0.6)
|
0.8
|
Fair value movements of cash flow
hedges
|
|
(1.0)
|
30.5
|
Amounts reclassified from other
comprehensive income to profit and loss
|
|
(10.1)
|
(6.6)
|
Tax relating to these
items
|
|
2.8
|
(6.0)
|
Net other comprehensive
(loss)/income that may be reclassified subsequently to profit and
loss
|
|
(8.9)
|
18.7
|
Other comprehensive (loss)/income
for the period
|
|
(11.9)
|
6.0
|
Total comprehensive loss for the
period attributable to equity holders of the parent
|
|
(11.1)
|
(45.4)
|
Consolidated
balance sheet
As at 2 March
2024
|
Note
|
As at
2 March
2024
£m
|
As
at
4 March
2023
£m
(Restated)2
|
Non-current assets
|
|
|
|
Property, plant and
equipment
|
11
|
47.0
|
50.9
|
Intangible assets
|
10
|
60.9
|
58.3
|
Right-of-use assets
|
|
6.3
|
0.5
|
Retirement benefit
surplus
|
|
17.1
|
20.0
|
Derivative financial
instruments
|
7
|
0.1
|
7.6
|
Deferred tax
assets2
|
8
|
15.9
|
16.0
|
|
|
147.3
|
153.3
|
Current assets
|
|
|
|
Inventories
|
|
73.9
|
94.1
|
Trade and other
receivables
|
12
|
468.6
|
504.7
|
Derivative financial
instruments
|
7
|
8.8
|
19.1
|
Current tax asset
|
8
|
0.2
|
0.1
|
Cash and cash
equivalents
|
14
|
65.2
|
35.5
|
|
|
616.7
|
653.5
|
Total assets
|
|
764.0
|
806.8
|
|
|
|
|
Current liabilities
|
|
|
|
Trade and other
payables
|
13
|
(65.0)
|
(72.5)
|
Lease liability
|
|
(1.1)
|
(0.3)
|
Provisions
|
18
|
(4.9)
|
(10.1)
|
Derivative financial
instruments
|
7
|
(0.7)
|
(0.1)
|
Current tax liability
|
|
-
|
-
|
|
|
(71.7)
|
(83.0)
|
Net current assets1
|
|
545.0
|
570.5
|
|
|
|
|
Non-current liabilities
|
|
|
|
Bank loans
|
15
|
(301.5)
|
(332.9)
|
Trade and other
payables
|
13
|
(0.2)
|
-
|
Lease liability
|
|
(4.8)
|
(0.2)
|
Provisions
|
18
|
(6.6)
|
-
|
Derivative financial
instruments
|
7
|
(0.1)
|
-
|
|
|
(313.2)
|
(333.1)
|
Total liabilities
|
|
(384.9)
|
(416.1)
|
Net assets
|
|
379.1
|
390.7
|
Equity attributable to equity holders of the
parent
|
|
|
|
Share capital
|
17
|
51.2
|
50.9
|
Share premium account
|
|
85.7
|
85.7
|
Own shares
|
|
(0.1)
|
(0.2)
|
Cash flow hedge reserve
|
|
5.4
|
15.7
|
Foreign currency translation
reserve
|
|
1.2
|
1.8
|
Retained earnings
|
|
235.7
|
236.8
|
Total equity
|
|
379.1
|
390.7
|
1 FY23 net current assets has
been re-totalled in comparison to the figure reported in the FY23
Annual Report
2 FY23 deferred tax assets
and deferred tax liabilities have been restated to present on a net
basis (see note 19)
|
Consolidated
cash flow statement
For the 52 weeks
ended 2 March 2024
|
|
Note
|
For the 52
weeks
ended
2 March
2024
£m
|
For
the 53
weeks ended
4 March
2023
£m
|
Net cash inflow from operating activities
|
|
|
92.2
|
6.3
|
Investing activities
|
|
|
|
|
Purchases of property, plant and
equipment
|
|
|
(2.9)
|
(5.8)
|
Purchases of intangible
assets
|
|
|
(19.8)
|
(19.8)
|
Initial direct costs of
right-of-use additions
|
|
|
(0.5)
|
-
|
Net cash used in investing activities
|
|
|
(23.2)
|
(25.6)
|
Financing activities
|
|
|
|
|
Interest paid1,
2
|
|
|
(15.4)
|
(15.5)
|
(Repayments)/proceeds from bank
loans
|
|
|
(31.4)
|
30.4
|
Principal elements of lease
payments
|
|
|
(0.7)
|
(1.0)
|
Foreign exchange forward
contracts
|
|
|
7.7
|
(1.2)
|
Proceeds on issue of share
capital
|
|
|
0.3
|
-
|
Purchase of shares by
ESOT
|
|
|
(0.3)
|
-
|
Net cash (outflow)/inflow from financing
activities
|
|
|
(39.8)
|
12.7
|
Net foreign exchange difference
|
|
|
0.5
|
(1.0)
|
Net increase / (decrease) in cash
and cash equivalents and bank overdraft
|
|
|
29.7
|
(7.6)
|
Cash and cash equivalents and bank overdraft at beginning of
period
|
|
|
35.5
|
43.1
|
Cash and cash equivalents and bank overdraft at end of
period
|
|
14
|
65.2
|
35.5
|
1 Included within Interest paid is £14.0m (FY23: £13.0m)
relating to interest incurred on the Group's securitisation
facility, drawings on which are linked to prevailing levels of
eligible receivables
2 FY23 has been re-presented
to separately disclose interest received and interest
paid
Reconciliation of
profit/(loss) to net cash flow from operating activities
|
For the 52
weeks
ended
2 March
2024
£m
|
For the
53
weeks ended
4 March
2023
£m
|
Profit/(loss) for the period
|
0.8
|
(51.4)
|
Adjustments for:
|
|
|
Taxation
charge/(credit)
|
4.5
|
(19.7)
|
Fair value adjustments to
financial instruments
|
0.5
|
(8.9)
|
Net foreign exchange
gain
|
(0.5)
|
1.0
|
Finance income
|
(2.6)
|
(1.5)
|
Finance costs
|
16.2
|
15.6
|
Depreciation of
right-of-use assets
|
0.8
|
0.8
|
Depreciation of property,
plant and equipment
|
2.6
|
4.3
|
Loss on disposal of
intangible assets
|
0.1
|
0.8
|
Impairment of non-financial
assets
|
3.3
|
53.0
|
Amortisation of intangible
assets
|
17.3
|
30.6
|
Share option
charge
|
1.5
|
1.5
|
Operating cash flows before
movements in working capital
|
44.5
|
26.1
|
Decrease/(increase) in
inventories
|
21.2
|
(6.7)
|
Decrease in trade and other
receivables
|
35.6
|
28.3
|
Decrease in trade and other
payables
|
(8.3)
|
(22.3)
|
Increase/(decrease) in
provisions
|
1.5
|
(20.9)
|
Pension obligation
adjustment
|
(0.8)
|
(1.0)
|
Cash generated by
operations
|
93.7
|
3.5
|
Taxation
(paid)/received
|
(3.1)
|
2.3
|
Interest
received1
|
1.6
|
0.5
|
Net cash inflow from operating
activities
|
92.2
|
6.3
|
1 FY23 has been re-presented
to separately disclose interest received and interest
paid
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Changes in
liabilities from financing activities
|
52 weeks
to
2 March
2024
|
53 weeks
to
4 March
2023
|
|
£m
|
£m
|
Loans and borrowings
|
|
|
Opening balance at 4 March 2023
(26 February 2022)
|
333.4
|
303.8
|
Changes from financing cash flows
|
|
|
Net (repayment)/proceeds from
loans and borrowings1
|
(31.1)
|
27.9
|
Lease principal payments in the
period
|
(0.7)
|
(0.8)
|
Lease disposals in the
period
|
6.1
|
-
|
(Decrease)/increase in loans and
borrowings due to changes in interest rates
|
(0.3)
|
2.5
|
(Decrease)/increase in loans and borrowings
|
(26.0)
|
29.6
|
Closing balance at 2 March 2024 (4 March 2023)
|
307.4
|
333.4
|
1 Repayments relating
to the Group's Securitisation facility are re-presented net of cash
receipts in respect of the customer book collections. The Directors
consider that the net representation more accurately reflects the
way the securitisation cash flows are managed.
Consolidated
statement of changes in equity
for the 52 weeks
ended 2 March 2024
|
Share
capital
(note
17)
£m
|
Share
premium
£m
|
Own
Shares
£m
|
Cash
flow hedge
Reserve
(note 7)
£m
|
Foreign
currency translation reserve
(note
7)
£m
|
Retained
earnings
£m
|
Total
£m
|
Balance at 26 February
2022
|
50.9
|
85.0
|
(0.2)
|
5.5
|
1.0
|
300.1
|
442.3
|
Comprehensive income for the period
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Loss for the period
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
(51.4)
|
(51.4)
|
Other items of comprehensive
income/(loss) for the period
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
17.9
|
0.8
|
(12.7)
|
6.0
|
Total comprehensive income/(loss) for the
period
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
17.9
|
0.8
|
(64.1)
|
(45.4)
|
Hedging gains & losses
transferred to the cost of inventory purchased in the
year
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
(7.7)
|
-
|
-
|
(7.7)
|
Transactions with owners recorded directly in
equity
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Issue of own shares by
ESOT
|
-
|
-
|
0.3
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
0.3
|
Adjustment to equity for share
payments
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
(0.3)
|
(0.3)
|
Historic adjustment to equity for
share payments
|
-
|
0.7
|
(0.3)
|
-
|
-
|
(0.4)
|
-
|
Share option charges
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
1.5
|
1.5
|
Total contributions by and distributions to
owners
|
-
|
0.7
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
0.8
|
1.5
|
Balance at 4 March 2023
|
50.9
|
85.7
|
(0.2)
|
15.7
|
1.8
|
236.8
|
390.7
|
Comprehensive income for the period
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Profit for the period
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
0.8
|
0.8
|
Other items of comprehensive loss
for the period
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
(8.3)
|
(0.6)
|
(3.0)
|
(11.9)
|
Total comprehensive loss for the period
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
(8.3)
|
(0.6)
|
(2.2)
|
(11.1)
|
Hedging gains and losses
transferred to the cost of inventory purchased in the
year
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
(2.0)
|
-
|
-
|
(2.0)
|
Transactions with owners recorded directly in
equity
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Issue of shares
|
0.3
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
0.3
|
Purchase of own shares
|
-
|
-
|
(0.3)
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
(0.3)
|
Issue of own shares by
ESOT
|
-
|
-
|
0.4
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
0.4
|
Adjustment to equity for share
payments
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
(0.4)
|
(0.4)
|
Share option charge
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
1.5
|
1.5
|
Total contributions by and distributions to
owners
|
0.3
|
-
|
0.1
|
-
|
-
|
1.1
|
1.5
|
Balance at 2 March 2024
|
51.2
|
85.7
|
(0.1)
|
5.4
|
1.2
|
235.7
|
379.1
|
Notes to the
consolidated financial statements
For the 52 weeks
ended 2 March 2024
1. Basis of
preparation
The Group's financial statements for the 52 weeks
ended 2 March 2024 will be prepared in accordance with
international accounting standards in conformity with the
requirements of the Companies Act 2006. Whilst the financial
information included in this preliminary announcement has been
prepared in accordance with IFRS, this announcement does not itself
contain sufficient information to comply with IFRS. As such, these
financial statements do not constitute the Group's statutory
accounts and the Group expects to publish full financial statements
that comply with IFRS in June 2024.
The financial information set out in this document
does not constitute the Group's statutory accounts for the 52 weeks
ended 2 March 2024 or the 53 weeks ended 4 March 2023. Statutory
accounts for the period of 53 weeks ended 4 March 2023 have been
delivered to the registrar of companies, and those for the period
of 52 weeks ended 2 March 2024 will be delivered in due course.
The comparative figures for the year ended 4 March
2023 are extracted from the Group's statutory accounts for that
financial year. Those accounts have been reported on by the Group's
auditor and their report of the auditor was (i) unqualified, (ii)
did not include a reference to any matters to which the auditor
drew attention by way of emphasis without qualifying their report,
and (iii) did not contain a statement under section 498 (2) or (3)
of the Companies Act 2006.
After making appropriate enquiries, the directors
have a reasonable expectation that the Group has adequate resources
to continue in operational existence for the foreseeable future.
Accordingly, they continue to adopt the going concern basis in the
preparation of these financial statements. This is explained in
further detail in note 4.
The accounting policies and presentation adopted in
the preparation of these consolidated financial statements are
consistent with those disclosed in the published annual report
& accounts for the 53 weeks ended 4 March 2023.
2. Critical
Judgements and key sources of estimation uncertainty
The significant judgements made by management in
applying the Group's accounting policies and the key sources of
estimation uncertainty in these financial statements, which
together are deemed critical to the Group's results and financial
position, are as follows:
Impairment of
customer receivables
Critical Judgement
and Estimation Uncertainty
The allowance for expected credit losses ('ECL') for
trade receivables involves several areas of judgement, including
estimating forward-looking modelled parameters (Probability of
default ('PD'), Loss given default ('LGD') and Exposure at default
('EAD')), developing a range of unbiased future economic scenarios,
estimating expected lives and assessing significant increases in
credit risk, based on the Group's experience of managing credit
risk.
Key judgements involved in the determination of
expected credit loss are:
- Determining which
receivables have suffered from a significant increase in credit
risk;
- Determining the
appropriate PD to apply to the receivables;
- Determining the
recovery price of any receivables sold to third parties; and
- Determining the
impact of forward looking macroeconomic uncertainties on ECL
including cost of living increases.
Where these key judgements result in a post model
adjustment, these are disclosed in note 12.
The change in behavioural risk score for which the
significant increase in credit risk ('SICR') threshold is set is
based on applicable back tested data that reflects the current risk
to our credit customers. Where the change in risk score since
origination exceeds the threshold, the asset will be deemed to have
experienced a significant increase in credit risk.
Once collection strategies are no longer appropriate
or effective, management typically sell customer receivables to
third parties. Therefore the estimated sales price for these
balances is a key judgement. The expected recovery through debt
sales built into the year end ECL reflects expectations of
achievable prices which includes latest sale history over the last
year, recent bids, and existing sale contracts depending on the
type of debt sale.
The ECL incorporates forward looking information
including macro-economic variables on unemployment, Bank of England
Base Rate, and average weekly earnings. Book performance in FY24
improved, with reduced write offs year on year. When adjusted for
impacts of debt sale timings, arrears were maintained at FY23
levels despite inflation continuing to put pressure on
affordability. Macro-economic and cost of living pressures continue
to impact on the customer base, but customers continue to be
resilient. Post model adjustments are held at the end of FY24 to
cover both model risk and further expected impacts from these
macro-economic pressures.
Sensitivity analysis is disclosed and further
explained in note 12.
Impairment of
non-financial assets
Critical Judgement
and estimation uncertainty
Impairment exists when the carrying value of an
asset or cash generating unit ('CGU') exceeds its recoverable
amount, which is the higher of its fair value less costs of
disposal or its value in use. The value in use calculation is based
on a discounted cash flow model. The cash flows are derived from
the Group's five-year forecasts, taken into perpetuity, and are
adjusted to exclude restructuring activities that the Group is not
yet committed to or significant future investments that will
enhance the performance of the assets of the CGU being tested.
The recoverable amount is sensitive to the discount
rate used as well as the expected future cash flows, including
capital expenditure, and the long-term growth rate used in
perpetuity. The key assumptions used to determine the
recoverable amount for the Group's non-financial assets, including
a sensitivity analysis, are disclosed
and further explained in note 10.
Within the current financial year, warehouse
buildings which are no longer part of the cash generating unit
being assessed through the value in use have been tested separately
for impairment with reference to the expected fair value less cost
to sell given these assets have no continuing value in use to the
Group.
Software and
Development costs
Critical Judgement
Included within intangible assets are significant
software and development project costs in respect of the Group's
technological development programme. Included in the year are
development costs for the production of new or substantially
improved processes or systems; development of the new website and
other internal development of software and technology
infrastructure.
Initial capitalisation of costs is based on
management's judgement that technological feasibility is confirmed,
the project will be successfully completed and that future economic
benefits are expected to be generated by the project. If these
criteria are not subsequently met, the asset would be subject to a
future impairment charge which would impact the Group's
results.
Significant judgement is required in determining
whether the Group has control over the software, and if not whether
any spend incurred in the implementation of the software results in
the creation of an asset in its own right which the Group controls
and satisfies the criteria of IAS 38.
Estimation uncertainty
The estimated useful lives and residual values are
based on management's best estimate of the period the asset will be
able to generate economic benefits for the Group and are reviewed
at the end of each reporting period, with the effect of any changes
in estimate accounted for on a prospective basis from the date at
which a change in life is determined to be triggered. Sensitivity
of the estimation uncertainty is disclosed in note 10.
Other
Litigation
Critical Judgement
and estimation uncertainty
Provisions are recognised at the value of
management's best estimate of the expenditure required to settle
the obligation (legal or constructive) at the reporting date.
Litigation provisions involve significant levels of estimation and
judgement.
The provision recognised at the balance sheet date
in respect of legacy customer claims, represents the best estimate
of the committed incremental external legal costs and associated
redress costs related to the settlement of the legal obligation
existent at the balance sheet date and based on information
available at signing date, taking into account factors including
risk and uncertainty. Sensitivities performed on key assumptions
are disclosed in note 18.
Deferred Tax
Asset for Tax Losses
Estimation
uncertainty
A deferred tax asset for tax losses is
recognised only to the extent that it is probable that sufficient
trading profits will arise in future trading periods to support the
fact that the tax losses will be utilised. The recognition of
a deferred tax asset for losses is based on management's best
assessment at the end of each reporting period as to the future
trading profits as aligned to the forecasts used for the Group's 5
year plan which are prepared using various assumptions on future
economic conditions and growth. The following sensitivity
analysis has been performed:
· A
5% decrease in the profit before tax across all years included in
the 5 year plan would result in a £0.9m timing impact on the
recognition of deferred tax assets recognised at FY24 year end,
with the £0.9m being recognised in the subsequent year.
Defined Benefit
plan
Estimation
Uncertainty
The cost of the defined benefit pension plan and the
present value of the pension obligation are determined using
actuarial valuations. An actuarial valuation involves making
various assumptions that may differ from actual developments in the
future. These include the determination of the discount rate,
future salary increases, mortality rates and future pension
increases. Due to the complexities involved in the valuation and
its long-term nature, a defined benefit obligation is highly
sensitive to changes in these assumptions. All assumptions
are reviewed at each reporting date.
The following sensitivities have been performed on
the key assumptions:
- A reduction of 0.50%
in the discount rate used would decrease the defined benefit
obligation by £6.6m (2023: £6.3m);
- An increase of 0.50%
in the inflation assumption would increase the defined benefit
obligation by £3.7m (2023: £3.5m);
- An increase of one
year in the life expectancy assumption would increase the defined
benefit obligation by £2.2m (2023: £2.1m).
3. Key risks and
uncertainties
The Group continues to invest and improve its risk
management capabilities. As part of the ongoing refinement of the
Risk Management Framework ('RMF') the Group has further
consolidated the Principal Risk Categories, including Financial
Crime risk within the Legal and Regulatory category.
Principal risks with the potential to impact on
performance and the delivery of our strategic objectives in year or
through the planning cycle are defined as:
1. Strategic and Change
2. Information, Technology and
Cybersecurity
3. Conduct and Customer
4. Business Resilience
5. Financial
6. Legal and Regulatory
7. Credit
8. People
9. Supplier and Outsourcing
The Board of Directors maintains a continuous
process for identifying, evaluating, and managing risk as part of
its overall responsibility for maintaining internal controls and
the RMF. This process is intended to provide reasonable assurance
regarding compliance with laws and regulations as well as
commercial and operational risks.
Specific review and identification of existing and
emerging risks is facilitated by routine Board-level risk
assessment cycles completed during the year, as informed by a
routine of regular risk assessments at business unit level. Outputs
are reported to the Audit and Risk Committee.
The Board considers Environmental, Social and
Governance ('ESG') factors, drivers and impacts on the health and
sustainability of the business when setting the strategy.
Furthermore, in general terms the strategy is designed to deliver
long term sustainable business success. The RMF has been
established to provide a comprehensive overview of risks and as
such incorporates assessments of risks that have the potential to
create ESG exposures; these are reported through the governance
framework and managed accordingly.
The Group recognises that no system of controls can
provide absolute assurance against material misstatement, loss or
failure to meet its business objectives.
The Macro-economic
Environment, and other key areas of focus
The current operating and economic environment
remains challenging. Whilst there are signs of improvement, there
is still significant pressure on household budgets and consumer
confidence is low by historical standards, impacting spending on
non-essential items.
The cost pressures noted above may create
affordability challenges for our credit customers. Leading
indicators are tracked to enable the Group to react to changes in
the lending market. We also ensure that appropriate forbearance
options are in place to ensure good customer outcomes for those
impacted by these issues.
The Group actively manages currency and interest
rate fluctuations through hedging in the near term. Currency
arrangements expire on a rolling basis. We continue to monitor
rates to identify the most appropriate hedging strategy going
forward.
The Group continues to focus on Regulatory
enhancements. ESG processes continue to be integrated and
strengthened through a programme of work integrated into business
activities. The Group successfully implemented the FCA Consumer
Duty and continues to actively embed it. In preparation for
potential UK Sox attestation requirements, we also completed a
review of all key Retail and Financial revenue processes and
controls and have an ambition to cover all other material areas in
the next financial year.
4. Going
Concern
In determining the appropriate basis of preparation
of the financial statements for the period ending 2 March 2024, the
Directors are required to consider whether the Group and Parent
Company can continue in operational existence for the foreseeable
future, being a period of at least 12 months from the date of
approval of the financial statements.
The Board has set a going concern period to 30 June
2025. The Group is delivering on a multi-year transformation
programme that will create a platform to deliver sustainable
medium-term growth in financial performance. The Board has
reflected on this plan and the headwinds from the economic
challenges that have led to the cost-of-living crises and how they
impact N Brown's input costs and customer base.
To support the going concern assumption, Management
prepared a robust analysis for the Board to consider, stress
testing the forecasts for several assumptions that are set out
below. The output confirmed the resilience of the Group with
no liquidity concerns or non-compliance with the Group's debt
covenants, in a severe but plausible downside scenario, over the
going concern period.
The Company renewed its Securitisation facility in
December 2023 and extended to the end of December 2026 and also
renewed its revolving credit facility ('RCF') in April 2023 at £75m
and extended to the end of December 2026, together with a committed
overdraft facility of £12.5m Both the RCF and Overdraft
facilities were undrawn at the year end and the Group also had
available cash / cash equivalents of £65.2m at the balance sheet
date.
The severe but plausible downside scenario model
prepared by Management provided a robust assessment, which the
Audit & Risk Committee reviewed in support of the Board's
evaluation. The scenario prepared by Management is
challenging and considers the cumulative impact of various
downsides and additional stress sensitivities on the Group's
forecasts. The severe but plausible downside scenario
modelled is more severe than the sensitivities assumed for the
impairment test, purposely to allow the Board to assess the
resilience of the Group.
Reflecting the Board's confidence in the
transformation programme together with the understanding of the
ongoing economic challenges, the Directors concluded that the Group
will continue to have adequate financial resources to discharge its
liabilities as they fall due over the going concern assessment
period. In preparing their assessment, the Directors have
considered the potential impacts of climate and other ESG related
risks, as set out in the Approach to Environmental, Social and
Governance section of the Group's annual report.
In arriving at their conclusion, the Directors
considered the following:
a) the Group's cash flow forecasts
and revenue projections for the 12 months from the date of signing
the accounts (the "Base Case"), reflecting, amongst other things
the following assumptions:
- The business
continues to be fully operational;
- Progress against the
strategic growth programme with product revenue returning to a
moderate level of growth;
- Product gross margin
improvement is achieved through planned price increases, a
reduction of low margin stock clearance activity and moderate
changes to product mix;
- Continued cautious
customer behaviour until the UK cost-of-living crisis eases will
continue to drive a highly promotional retail
market;
- Financial Services
revenue reduces in the short term as the average size of the loan
book is smaller as a function of FY24 lower product
sales;
- Operating costs
reflecting inflationary and macro-economic cost base
pressures.
The Base Case has material total accessible
liquidity headroom over the next twelve months and all bank
covenant conditions are met. Adjusted EBITDA would have to
reduce by more than 66% against the Base Case low point in FY26 to
breach covenants.
b) the impact on trading
performance of severe but plausible downside scenarios (the
"Downside Case"), including:
- Further adverse
macro-economic conditions impacting customer sentiment, customer
behaviour, bad debt write-offs and customer account payment
collection rates;
- Business
interruptions reducing product revenue, for example from a denial
of service caused by a cyber-attack as well as delivery delays
caused by warehouse interruption and supply chain shipping
challenges;
- Additional
sensitivities to product revenue, product margin rate and opex cost
base.
The severe but plausible downside assumes a reduced
level of revenue growth and the compounded cumulative impact of all
scenarios with the sensitivities layered on top. Material total
accessible liquidity headroom exists throughout the severe but
plausible downside assessment and all bank covenant conditions are
met. Adjusted EBITDA would have to reduce by more than 22% against
the Downside low point in P3 of FY26 to breach covenants.
In the very remote event of the further reduction to
the severe but plausible downside low point occurring, management
has identified tactical and structural mitigating actions they
could apply including the reduction of uncommitted opex spend.
c) the committed facilities
available to the Group and the covenants thereon. Details of the
Group's committed facilities are set out in note 15, the main
components of which are:
- A £400m
securitisation facility, with maximum lenders commitment of £340m,
until December 2026 (£301.5m drawn against the maximum of eligible
customer receivable which varies based on the customer
loanbook);
- An RCF of £75m
committed until December 2026, fully undrawn; and
- An overdraft
facility of £12.5m which is committed until December 2026 (undrawn
at the date of signing the accounts).
d) the Group's robust policy
towards liquidity and cash flow management. As at 4 May 2024, the
Group had cash of £32.4m, including restricted cash of £3.7m. In
addition, the Group had £32.1m of accessible secured facilities and
£87.5m of unsecured facilities that were not drawn. This gives rise
to total accessible liquidity ("TAL") of £148.3m (6 May 2023:
£112.0m).
e) the Group management's ability
to successfully manage the principal risks and uncertainties
outlined on pages 37 to 38 during periods of uncertain economic
outlook and challenging macroeconomic conditions.
5. Business
Segment
The Group has identified two operating segments in
accordance with IFRS 8 - Operating segments, Product Revenue and
Financial Services ('FS'). The Board, who is considered to be the
Chief Operating Decision Maker, receives regular financial
information at this level and uses this information to monitor the
performance of the Group, allocate resources and make operational
decisions. Internal reporting focuses and tracks revenue, cost of
sales and gross margin performance across these two segments
separately, however operating costs or any other income statement
items are reviewed and tracked at a group level.
Revenues and costs associated with the product
segment relate to the sale of goods through various brands. The
product cost of sales is inclusive of VAT bad debt relief claimed
of £17.7m (2023: £19.4m) as a consequence of customer debt write
off, with the write off presented in FS cost of sales. The revenue
and costs associated with the FS segment relate to the income from
provision of credit terms for customer purchases, and the costs to
the business of providing such funding. To increase transparency,
the Group has included additional voluntary disclosure analysing
product revenue within the relevant operating segment, by strategic
and other brand categorisation.
Analysis of revenue
|
|
52 weeks
to
2 March
2024
|
53 weeks
to
4 March
2023
|
|
|
£m
|
£m
|
Analysis of revenue:
|
|
|
|
Sale of goods
|
|
362.9
|
412.4
|
Postage and packaging
|
|
18.3
|
21.0
|
Product - total revenue
|
|
381.2
|
433.4
|
Other financial services
revenue
|
|
19.4
|
22.3
|
Credit account income
|
|
200.3
|
221.8
|
Financial Services - total revenue
|
|
219.7
|
244.1
|
Total Group Revenue
|
|
600.9
|
677.5
|
Analysis of cost of sales:
|
|
|
|
Product - total cost of sales
|
|
(207.4)
|
(240.9)
|
Impairment losses on customer
receivables
|
|
(106.2)
|
(122.3)
|
Other financial services cost of
sales
|
|
(0.8)
|
(1.5)
|
Financial Services - total cost of sales
|
|
(107.0)
|
(123.8)
|
Cost of sales
|
|
(314.4)
|
(364.7)
|
Adjusted Gross profit
|
|
286.5
|
312.8
|
Adjusted Gross profit
margin
|
|
47.7%
|
46.2%
|
Adjusted Gross margin -
Product
|
|
45.6%
|
44.4%
|
Adjusted Gross margin - Financial
Services
|
|
51.3%
|
49.3%
|
|
|
|
|
Warehouse and
fulfilment
|
|
(58.1)
|
(63.2)
|
Marketing and
production1
|
|
(59.3)
|
(68.2)
|
Other administration and
payroll1
|
|
(121.5)
|
(124.1)
|
Adjusted operating costs before adjusted
items
|
|
(238.9)
|
(255.5)
|
Adjusted EBITDA
|
|
47.6
|
57.3
|
Adjusted EBITDA margin
|
|
7.9%
|
8.5%
|
Depreciation and
amortisation
|
|
(20.7)
|
(35.7)
|
Impairment of non-financial assets
(note 10)
Adjusted items charged to
operating profit/(loss)
|
|
(3.3)
(4.2)
|
(53.0)
(34.5)
|
Operating profit / (loss)
|
|
19.4
|
(65.9)
|
Finance costs
|
|
(13.6)
|
(14.1)
|
Fair value adjustments to
financial instruments
|
|
(0.5)
|
8.9
|
Profit/(loss) before taxation
|
|
5.3
|
(71.1)
|
1 Financial Services statement costs have been re-presented
from marketing and production into other admin and payroll for both
periods
|
|
|
52 weeks to
2 March
2024
|
53 weeks
to
4 March
2023
|
|
|
£m
|
£m
|
Analysis of Product revenue:
|
|
|
|
Strategic
brands1
|
|
282.5
|
311.8
|
Heritage
brands2
|
|
98.7
|
121.6
|
Total Product revenue
|
|
381.2
|
433.4
|
Financial Services revenue
|
|
219.7
|
244.1
|
Group revenue
|
|
600.9
|
677.5
|
1. Strategic brands include JD
Williams, Simply Be and Jacamo.
2. Heritage brands include Ambrose
Wilson, Home Essentials, Fashion World, Marisota, Oxendales and
Premier Man.
|
The Group has one significant geographical segment,
which is the United Kingdom. Revenue derived from the Republic of
Ireland amounted to £15.5m (2023: £18.5m), with operating profit
amounting to £1.4m (2023: £1.8m).
All segment assets are located in the UK and
Ireland. All non-current assets are located in the UK.
For the purposes of monitoring segment performance,
assets and liabilities are not measured separately for the two
reportable segments of the Group and therefore are disclosed
together below. Impairments of tangible and intangible assets in
the current period were £3.3m (2023: £53.0).
6. Adjusted
items
|
52 weeks
to
2 March
2024
|
53 weeks
to
4 March
2023
|
|
£m
|
£m
|
Allianz litigation
|
(0.1)
|
26.1
|
Marketing supplier
rebate
|
(1.7)
|
-
|
Other litigation
|
1.8
|
6.0
|
Strategic change
|
4.2
|
2.4
|
Impairment of non-financial
assets
|
3.3
|
53.0
|
Total adjusted items
|
7.5
|
87.5
|
Cash outflows in the current period relating to
adjusted items amounted to £3.0m in the period (FY23: £55.4m). The
tax impact on the total adjusted items amount to a credit of £1.1m
(FY23: £20.6m).
ALLIANZ
LITIGATION
As previously reported, the Group was involved in a
legal dispute with Allianz Insurance Plc ('Allianz'). The matter
related to a claim issued against JD Williams & Company Limited
('JDW'), a subsidiary of the Group, by the Insurer in January 2020
(claim number CL-2020-000004) and JDW's counterclaims in that
litigation (the 'Dispute'). The Dispute related to significant
amounts of redress previously paid to customers by JDW and the
Insurer in respect of certain historic insurance products,
including payment protection insurance.
In January 2023 the Board agreed to the Settlement,
which has brought the Dispute to an end. Under the Settlement,
which is a negotiated settlement and made without admission of
liability, JDW paid the Insurer a sum of £49.5m in full and final
settlement of the Dispute, below the sums claimed by the Insurer
(which exceeded £70m inclusive of interest and costs).
The provision outstanding at 2 March 2024 was £0.2m,
relating to amounts payable to Allianz following closure of the
joint redress account. The release of £0.1m in the period relates
to amounts previously provided for in respect of legal costs that
are no longer required.
MARKETING SUPPLIER
REBATE
During the current year, an audit of an historical
supplier arrangement in relation to marketing services provided
between 2019 and 2021 determined that a number of contractual terms
had not been adhered to. As a result a one off refund relating to
the historical services of £1.7m was received by the Group in the
current year.
OTHER
LITIGATION
During the prior year the Group made a provision of
£5.5m, as an estimate of the Group's potential litigation costs in
relation to legacy customer claims alleging unfair relationships
resulting from undisclosed PPI commission brought under s140A of
the Consumer Credit Act 1974. This is not a new exposure and in
prior years the Group has settled such claims on a case by case
basis, and the external legal costs incurred have not been
material. The provision is principally in relation to committed
incremental external legal costs resulting from the change in
strategic approach. The Group changed its strategy in 2023 to
robustly defend such claims and put claimants to proof; and engaged
external counsel which is reflected in the provision recorded. The
Board supports the strategy to robustly defend and put to proof any
past and future claims. The expected timeline of resolution of the
outstanding claims is now expected to be more than 12 months. The
provision, which has continued to be included as an adjusting item
for consistency with prior year, has been increased by £1.8m in the
current year reflecting the additional legal costs expected to be
incurred as a result of the emergence of "group litigation" as an
alternative process for resolving s140A PPI claims. The provision
outstanding at 2 March 2024 was £7.1m.
STRATEGIC
CHANGE
During the current year, the Group continued the
multi-year transformation of the business and the ongoing review of
the operating model initiated at the end of FY23. Specifically, an
additional restructuring program of the Group's operational and
head office headcount to reflect the lower sales orders, was
initiated in Q2 FY24 and continued throughout the financial year.
Total redundancy costs of £1.7m were incurred in the period (FY23:
£2.4m). A provision of £0.4m was outstanding at 2 March 2024
relating to payments made in the months following the year end
(FY23: £1.9m).
During the period, the Board also approved the
rationalisation of the Group's warehousing facilities following a
review of the overall warehouse portfolio capacity, utilisation and
associated operational cost base. Accordingly a provision was
booked for incremental costs associated with staff exits and
onerous contracts of £1.4m, as well as £1.0m of incremental stock
provision arising from the rationalisation of terminal stock due to
reduced storage capacity across the warehouse portfolios. At 2
March 2024, £0.8m of the provision for inventory was utilised with
the remaining £0.2m released as better than expected realisation
was achieved. A further £0.1m accelerated depreciation was
also charged in the year.
IMPAIRMENT OF
NON-FINANCIAL ASSETS
During the prior year, the Group recorded a non-cash
impairment of £53m against its intangible and tangible assets, to
reduce the balance sheet asset value to match the lower value in
use forecasts driven by the ongoing macro-economic conditions. This
arose primarily from the impact of the market and macroeconomic
conditions significantly reducing near term Group Adjusted EBITDA
levels and a slower recovery through the five year forecast period.
No further impairment or reversal of the previous impairment has
been recognised in the current year.
Following the exit of owned warehouse property
discussed in FY24 Financial Performance above, once no longer in
operational use, the Group plans to market the property for sale.
At year-end the Group had commenced discussions with external
parties to assess the expected achievable selling price. As a
result, an impairment of the property of £3.3m has been recognised
to reduce the net book value to its estimated fair value less costs
to sell. A programme to actively market the property and locate a
buyer had not started at the year end.
7. Derivative
financial instruments
At the balance sheet date, details of outstanding
derivative contracts that the Group has committed to are as
follows:
|
52 weeks
to
2 March
2024
|
53 weeks
to
4 March
2023
|
|
£m
|
£m
|
Notional amount - sterling
contract value (designated cash flow hedges - Interest rate
swap)
|
250.0
|
250.0
|
Notional amount - sterling
contract value (designated cash flow hedges - Foreign exchange
forwards)
|
74.2
|
85.1
|
Notional amount - sterling
contract value (FVPL)
|
153.0
|
279.3
|
Total notional amount
|
477.2
|
614.4
|
|
|
|
The Group hold the following derivative financial
instruments at fair value:
|
52 weeks
to
2 March
2024
|
53 weeks
to
4 March
2023
|
Current Assets
|
£m
|
£m
|
Foreign currency forwards - cash
flow hedges
|
0.4
|
6.1
|
Foreign currency forwards -
non-designated instruments at FVPL
|
0.1
|
0.8
|
Interest rate swaps - cash flow
hedges
|
8.0
|
9.2
|
Interest rate caps -
non-designated instruments at FVPL
|
0.3
|
3.0
|
Total notional amount
|
8.8
|
19.1
|
|
|
|
|
52 weeks
to
2 March
2024
|
53 weeks
to
4 March
2023
|
Non-current Assets:
|
£m
|
£m
|
Foreign currency forwards - cash
flow hedges
|
0.1
|
0.8
|
Interest rate swaps - cash flow
hedges
|
-
|
6.2
|
Interest rate caps -
non-designated instruments at FVPL
|
-
|
0.6
|
Total notional amount
|
0.1
|
7.6
|
|
|
|
|
52 weeks
to
2 March
2024
|
53 weeks
to
4 March
2023
|
Current liabilities:
|
£m
|
£m
|
Foreign currency forwards - cash
flow hedges
|
(0.7)
|
-
|
Foreign currency forwards - non
designated instruments at FVPL
|
-
|
(0.1)
|
Total notional amount
|
(0.7)
|
(0.1)
|
|
|
|
Non current liabilities:
|
£m
|
£m
|
Foreign currency forwards - cash
flow hedges
|
(0.1)
|
-
|
Foreign currency forwards - non
designated instruments at FVPL
|
-
|
-
|
Total notional amount
|
(0.1)
|
-
|
The fair value of foreign currency and interest rate
derivative contracts is the market value of the instruments as at
the balance sheet date. Market values are calculated with reference
to the duration of the derivative instrument together with the
observable market data such as spot and forward interest rates,
foreign exchange rates and market volatility at the balance sheet
date.
Changes in the fair value of derivatives not
designated for hedge accounting amounted to a fair value loss of
£0.6m (2023: gain of £5.1m), recognised through the income
statement in the period.
Changes in the fair value of derivatives designated
for hedging purposes amounted to a loss of £1.0m (2023: gain of
£30.5m) recognised through the cash flow hedge reserve.
Fair value movements previously held within the
hedge reserve were released as the hedged future cash flows were no
longer expected to occur. This resulted in one off fair value gains
of £0.1m (2023: gain of £3.8m) recognised in the income statement
within the fair value adjustments to financial instruments line and
also included within amounts reclassified from other comprehensive
income to profit and loss line in the statement of other
comprehensive income.
There are no balances remaining within the closing
hedge reserve balance in respect of previous hedge relationships
where hedge accounting is no longer applied. There were no amounts
recognised in the income statement in the period (2023: £nil) for
hedge ineffectiveness on either foreign exchange or interest rate
hedges.
Financial instruments that are measured subsequent
to initial recognition at fair value are all grouped into Level 2
(2023: Level 2).
Level 2 fair value measurements are those derived
from inputs other than quoted prices included within Level 1 that
are observable for the asset or liability, either directly (i.e. as
prices) or indirectly (i.e. derived from prices).
There were no transfers between Level 1 and Level 2
during the current or prior period.
Hedge accounting was adopted from the 29 August
2021, and from this point fair value movements on the designated
financial instruments were taken to a cash flow hedge reserve. The
Group's hedge reserve relates to the following hedging instruments
and movements:
|
FX
forwards
|
Cost of
hedging
|
Interest
rate swaps
|
Total
|
|
£m
|
£m
|
£m
|
£m
|
Balance at 26 February
2022
|
2.0
|
(0.3)
|
3.8
|
5.5
|
Changes in fair value of hedging
instruments recognised in OCI
|
18.1
|
(0.8)
|
13.2
|
30.5
|
Reclassified to cost of inventory
(not included in OCI)
|
(10.4)
|
0.1
|
-
|
(10.3)
|
Hedge (gains)/losses released to
P&L for hedges de-designated in the period
|
(4.1)
|
0.3
|
-
|
(3.8)
|
Recycled from OCI to profit and
loss
|
-
|
-
|
(2.8)
|
(2.8)
|
Deferred tax
|
(0.9)
|
0.1
|
(2.6)
|
(3.4)
|
Balance at 4 March 2023
|
4.7
|
(0.6)
|
11.6
|
15.7
|
Changes in fair value of hedging
instruments recognised in OCI
|
(4.1)
|
0.6
|
2.5
|
(1.0)
|
Reclassified to cost of inventory
(not included in OCI)
|
(2.8)
|
0.1
|
-
|
(2.6)
|
Hedge (gains)/losses released to
P&L for hedges de-designated in the period
|
(0.1)
|
-
|
-
|
(0.1)
|
Recycled from OCI to profit and
loss
|
-
|
-
|
(10.0)
|
(10.0)
|
Deferred tax
|
1.7
|
(0.2)
|
1.9
|
3.4
|
Closing balance at 2 March 2024
|
(0.5)
|
(0.1)
|
6.0
|
5.4
|
8. Tax
|
|
52 weeks
to
2 March
2024
|
53 weeks
to
4 March
2023
|
Tax recognised in the Income
statement
|
|
£m
|
£m
|
Current tax
|
|
|
|
Charge for the period
|
|
0.3
|
1.3
|
Adjustments in respect of previous
periods
|
|
(0.8)
|
0.7
|
|
|
(0.5)
|
2.0
|
Deferred tax
|
|
|
|
Origination and reversal of
temporary timing differences
|
|
2.5
|
(21.4)
|
Adjustments in respect of previous
periods
|
|
2.5
|
(0.3)
|
|
|
5.0
|
(21.7)
|
Total tax (credit) / expense
|
|
4.5
|
(19.7)
|
UK Corporation tax is calculated at 25% (2023: 19%)
of the estimated assessable profit for the period. Taxation for
other jurisdictions is calculated at the rates prevailing in the
respective jurisdictions.
In the Spring Budget on 15 March 2023, it was
confirmed that the UK tax rate would increase from 19% to 25% from
1 April 2023 which was enacted in Finance Act (No.2) 2023 on 11
July 2023. Accordingly, the UK deferred tax asset and
liability as at 2 March 2024 has been calculated based on the
enacted rate as at the balance sheet date of 25%, with the
exception of the retirement benefit scheme where deferred tax has
been provided at the rate of 35%. The effective tax rate of 87.0%
is higher than the statutory UK tax rate of 25% due to the impact
of: adjusting costs treated as capital expenditure for tax purposes
and disallowed in the period and prior year finalised super
deduction claims and current year 100% capital expensing claims
which have created deferred tax liabilities at 25%, partially
offset by deferred tax assets from an increase in prior year tax
losses. The Autumn Statement on 22 November 2023 announced an
intention to reduce the Pension surplus payments charge from 35% to
25%, this was enacted on 11 March 2024. If the reduction in tax
rate had been in place at the balance sheet date the Pension
related deferred tax liability would be £1.6m lower in the period
and would be split between other comprehensive income and income
statement elements based on backward tracing principles.
The charge for the period can be reconciled to the
(loss) / profit per the income statement as follows:
|
52 weeks
to
2 March
2024
|
53 weeks
to
4 March
2023
|
|
£m
|
£m
|
Profit/(loss) before
tax
|
5.3
|
(71.1)
|
Tax charge/(credit) at the UK
Corporation tax rate of 25% (2023: 19%)
|
1.3
|
(13.5)
|
Effect of change in deferred tax
rate
|
0.2
|
(7.2)
|
Tax effect of expenses that are
not deductible in determining taxable profit
|
1.4
|
0.5
|
Effect of different tax rates of
subsidiaries operating in other jurisdictions
|
(0.1)
|
0.1
|
Tax effect of adjustments in
respect of previous periods
|
1.7
|
0.4
|
Tax expense/(credit) for the period
|
4.5
|
(19.7)
|
In addition to the amount charged to the income
statement, tax movements recognised directly through equity were as
follows:
|
|
52 weeks
to
2 March
2024
|
53 weeks
to
4 March
2023
|
Tax recognised directly through
equity
|
|
£m
|
£m
|
Deferred tax - remeasurement of
retirement benefit obligations
|
|
(1.6)
|
(6.7)
|
Deferred tax - hedging related
items recognised in other comprehensive income
|
|
(2.8)
|
6.0
|
Deferred tax - fair value
movements transferred to the value of inventory recognised directly
in equity
|
|
(0.6)
|
(2.7)
|
Deferred tax - share based
payments recognised directly in equity
|
|
0.1
|
-
|
Tax (credit) /charge in equity
|
|
(4.9)
|
(3.4)
|
In respect of Corporation tax, as at 2 March 2024
the Group has no provision (2023: £0.7m) for potential future tax
charges. During the period, the Group settled the historical tax
liabilities relating to Ambrose Wilson Limited and Oxendales &
Company Limited of £0.7m, together with related interest of £0.2m
both provided in the previous year. The Group is not aware of
any further outstanding historic tax issues.
The Group is aware that reporting requirements for
BEPS Pillar II may apply in FY25. The Group is currently
undertaking a risk assessment with its external advisors to
establish whether the Group meets threshold criteria or can apply
Safe Harbour rules for one or more jurisdictions. Following the
outcome of this work the Group will seek to understand its
potential risk exposure. However, based on current trading
expectations and the bias towards UK trade taxed at 25%, the Group
currently considers the risk that additional top up taxes will be
payable as low.
9. Earnings/(Loss)
per share
The calculation of basic earnings per ordinary share
is based on earnings after tax and the weighted average number of
ordinary shares in issue during the period.
The adjusted earnings per share figures are
calculated based on adjusted earnings, after adjusting for those
items of income and expenditure which are one off in nature and
material to the current financial year, and for which the Directors
believe that they require separate disclosure to avoid distortion
of underlying performance (see note 6), and fair value adjustments
to derivative instruments. These have been calculated to
allow the shareholders to gain an understanding of the underlying
trading performance of the Group. For diluted earnings per share,
the weighted average number of ordinary shares in issue is adjusted
to assume conversion of dilutive potential ordinary shares.
Earnings per share for the prior year have not been diluted
following the loss after tax in FY23.
The calculations of the basic and diluted earnings
per share is based on the following data:
|
52 weeks
to
2 March
2024
|
53 weeks
to
4 March
2023
|
Earnings/(loss)
|
£m
|
£m
|
Earnings/(loss) for the purpose of
basic and diluted earnings per share being net profit/(loss) after
tax attributable to equity holders
|
0.8
|
(51.4)
|
|
|
|
|
52 weeks
to
2 March
2024
|
53 weeks
to
4 March
2023
|
Number of shares ('000s)
|
Number
|
Number
|
Weighted average number of
ordinary shares for the purposes of basic earnings per
share
|
461,158
|
459,468
|
Effect of dilutive potential
ordinary shares:
|
|
|
Share options
|
9,203
|
4,879
|
Weighted average number of
ordinary shares for the purposes of diluted earnings per
share
|
470,361
|
464,347
|
|
|
|
|
52 weeks
to
2 March
2024
|
53 weeks
to
4 March
2023
|
Earnings/(loss) from continuing operations
|
£m
|
£m
|
Total net profit/(loss)
attributable to equity holders of the parent for the purposes of
basic earnings per share
|
0.8
|
(51.4)
|
Fair value adjustment to financial
instruments (net of tax)
|
0.4
|
(7.2)
|
Adjusted items (net of
tax)
|
6.4
|
66.9
|
Adjusted earnings for the purposes
of adjusted earnings per share
|
7.6
|
8.3
|
|
|
|
The denominators used are the same
as those detailed above for basic and diluted earnings per
share
|
|
|
52 weeks
to
2 March
2024
|
53 weeks
to
4 March
2023
|
Adjusted earnings per share
|
Pence
|
Pence
|
Basic
|
1.65
|
1.81
|
Diluted
|
1.62
|
N/A
|
|
|
|
|
52 weeks
to
2 March
2024
|
53 weeks
to
4 March
2023
|
(Loss) / Earnings per share
|
Pence
|
Pence
|
Basic
|
0.17
|
(11.19)
|
Diluted
|
0.17
|
N/A
|
|
|
|
|
There have been no other transactions involving
ordinary shares or potential ordinary shares between the reporting
date and the date of authorisation of these financial
statements.
10. Intangible
assets
|
Brands
|
Software
|
Customer
Database
|
Total
|
|
£m
|
£m
|
£m
|
£m
|
Cost
|
|
|
|
|
At 26 February 2022
|
16.9
|
373.3
|
1.9
|
392.1
|
Additions
|
-
|
20.1
|
-
|
20.1
|
Disposals
|
-
|
(0.9)
|
-
|
(0.9)
|
At 4 March 2023
|
16.9
|
392.5
|
1.9
|
411.3
|
Additions
|
-
|
20.0
|
-
|
20.0
|
Disposals
|
-
|
(5.0)
|
-
|
(5.0)
|
At 2 March 2024
|
16.9
|
407.5
|
1.9
|
426.3
|
Accumulated amortisation and
impairment
|
|
|
|
|
At 26 February 2022
|
16.9
|
260.3
|
1.9
|
279.1
|
Charge for the period
|
-
|
30.6
|
-
|
30.6
|
Disposals
|
-
|
(0.1)
|
-
|
(0.1)
|
Impairment Charge
|
-
|
43.4
|
-
|
43.4
|
At 4 March 2023
|
16.9
|
334.2
|
1.9
|
353.0
|
Charge for the period
|
-
|
17.3
|
-
|
17.3
|
Disposals
|
-
|
(4.9)
|
-
|
(4.9)
|
At 2 March 2024
|
16.9
|
346.6
|
1.9
|
365.4
|
Carrying amount
|
|
|
|
|
At 2 March 2024
|
-
|
60.9
|
-
|
60.9
|
At 4 March 2023
|
-
|
58.3
|
-
|
58.3
|
At 26 February 2022
|
-
|
113.0
|
-
|
113.0
|
Assets in the course of development included in
intangible assets at the year end total £14.6m (2023: £10.5m). No
amortisation is charged on these assets. Borrowing costs of £nil
(2023: £nil) have been capitalised in the period.
Additions in the year of £15.4m relate to internal
development costs (2023: £15.0m). These are costs that are
incremental and reflect unavoidable costs which qualify for
capitalisation.
As at 2 March 2024, the Group had entered into
contractual commitments for the further development of intangible
assets of £3.9m (2023: £3.0m) of which £3.9m (2023: £2.9m) is due
to be paid within one year.
Research costs of £nil were incurred in the year
(2023: £0.8m).
Disposals during the year related to assets under
construction which have been discontinued.
IMPAIRMENT TESTING
OF NON-FINANCIAL ASSETS
During the prior year a non-cash impairment charge
of £53.0m was recognised. The Group has no goodwill reported on the
balance sheet and in accordance with IAS 36 the impairment charge
was allocated pro rata against the Group's other tangible and
intangible assets. This does not imply that the assets impaired
have no remaining value as they continue to support the strategic
plan and operations adding significant value to the business and
delivering on the Group's transformation plan. Applying IAS 36 the
intangible assets were reduced from £101.7m to £58.3m, and tangible
assets were reduced from £60.5m to £50.9m as at 4 March
2023.
As detailed in the strategic report the benefits of
the transformation programme underpin the long-term growth for the
Group, with execution of the plan underway.
In applying the IAS 36 impairment indicators, the
Board has considered the relationship between the Company's market
capitalisation and the carrying amount of the Group's net
assets.
The traded volume of shares is limited given the
shareholder structure and value has yet to be reflected in the
share price for the execution of the strategic plan, which combined
contributes to a gap between the market capitalisation and net
asset valuations, which, in accordance with IAS 36, continues to
indicate that an impairment of the Group's net assets may exist at
the year-end and a value in use assessment has been performed by
management as detailed below.
Management prepared a value in use ('VIU') model to
assess the discounted cash flows and used an appropriate discount
rate to reflect the combined retail and consumer credit business
model. There is no listed set peer group of a similar size and
business model to use as a benchmark and the VIU model is similar
to an income-based assessment. The pre-tax discount rate was
calculated using the Capital Asset Pricing Model and observable
market inputs, to which specific company and market-related premium
adjustments were applied. The pre-tax discount rate is an equity
only rate to reflect the treatment of the securitisation loan which
is in substance a working capital facility. This treatment as a
working capital input to the VIU model aligns with the consumer
credit model operated by the Group.
The securitisation loan agreement of £400m,
with a maximum £340m lenders commitment, supports the credit
offered to our customers. The loan allows the Group to draw down
cash, based on set criteria linked to eligible receivables which
move flexibly in line with business volumes (see note 15).
Accordingly, the net cash flows including interest costs are
included in the value in use model, with the corresponding customer
debtor book included in the carrying value of the cash generating
unit ('CGU').
The VIU calculations used the Board approved
forecasts covering a five-year period to FY29 which are adjusted to
remove any costs or benefits associated with future capex projects
not yet commenced. The Board reflected on the current
cost-of-living crisis and challenges in consumer confidence, and
continue to apply caution to near term outlooks as a slow recovery
to the economy and trading conditions is expected to materialise.
There are a number of assumptions which are taken in determining
the forecasts for cashflow purposes, including product revenue
growth, financial services revenue growth, arrears performance and
gross profit margin which all influence the overall forecasted
EBITDA considered to be a key assumption for the value in use
calculation.
The Board are confident in the longer-term benefits
that the transformation plan will deliver, and the value creation
from the investments in the Group's digital assets.
The Board concluded that there is only one CGU,
reflecting the single group of assets that generate the Group's
independent cash flows. The product and financial services
offerings are intertwined and the Board monitor the Group's
performance based on the combined results.
The forecasts applied have regard to historical
performance and knowledge of the current market, together with
management's views on the future growth opportunities and the
benefits the strategic developments are delivering. After the first
five-year cash flows, as required by the accounting standard, a
terminal value was included based upon the long-term growth rate
and a pre-tax discount rate applied with additional risk factors
built in for company size and forecasting risk equivalent to
approximately 5% underperformance on the forecast cashflows
incorporated into the discount rate.
The long-term growth rate of 2% was determined with
reference to external long-term UK growth forecasts which
management believe is a reasonable indicator of the expected long
term-growth rate for the Group, available at 2 March 2024. The
long-term growth rate used is purely for the impairment testing of
intangible assets under IAS 36 "Impairment of Assets" and does not
reflect long-term planning assumptions used by the Group for
investment proposals or for any other assessments. In developing
the impairment assessment, management has considered the potential
impacts of climate and other ESG related risks, as set out in the
Approach to Environmental, Social and Governance section of
the Group's annual report.
The impairment review performed over the Group's CGU
has indicated that the impairment recognised in FY23 over the
assets of the Group, continues to be appropriate. The value in use
calculation has demonstrated some headroom to the carrying value of
the Group's net assets, net of the impairment recognised in
previous year, however the value remains sensitive to the
assumptions used and management's best estimate at FY24 year end is
that there is insufficient evidence that either a further
impairment or a reversal of the previous impairment exists.
Considering the sensitivity of the value in use calculation to the
assumptions and judgements taken within, a plausible change in the
assumptions could lead to a further impairment or a reversal of the
impairment previously recognised. Sensitivity to key assumptions is
disclosed further below.
THE KEY ASSUMPTIONS
ARE AS FOLLOWS:
Years 1-5 to FY29 are based on the EBITDA forecasts
per the Board approved business plan adjusted for the removal of
costs or benefits associated with future capex projects not yet
commenced. This reflects the current cost-of-living crisis and
other economic challenges with growth thereafter assumed once the
economy stabilises and importantly driven by the benefits that the
transformation plan is anticipated to deliver;
Replacement capital expenditure of £17m per year in
years 1-5 and £15.7m in the terminal year, inclusive of the
replacement of leased assets. The current high levels of investment
in the strategic digital platforms completes within the five-year
business plan horizon, and subsequently the Group is assuming a
steady state level of maintenance and replacement expenditure;
Pre-tax discount rate: 18.9% (2023: 17.7%). The
discount rate includes an allowance for risks specific to the
Group, including a size premium and a forecasting risk associated
with the transformation plan; and
Long term growth rate: 2.0% (2023: 2.2%). Management
has sourced external benchmarks and applied a long-term growth rate
specific to the UK.
GROUP IMPAIRMENT
SENSITIVITY ANALYSIS:
The Board recognises that there is a high degree of
estimation uncertainty and the VIU and resulting impairment is
sensitive to movements in the key assumptions. In response
sensitivity analysis has been applied to the key assumptions to
demonstrate the variability of changes in these assumptions which
could result in increases or reversals to the level of impairment
currently booked:
• A 1% increase or decrease
to the discount rate results in a £25m decrease or £29m increase to
the value in use respectively;
• A 5% increase or decrease
to the EBITDA across all years including terminal year results in a
£27m increase or decrease to value in use respectively;
• A 1% increase or decrease
to the long term growth rate results in a £19m increase or £16m
decrease to the value in use respectively;
• An increase in replacement
terminal capex to £20m reduces the value in use by £14m, a decrease
in replacement terminal capex to £10m increases value in use by
£19m.
USEFUL ECONOMIC LIVES
SENSITIVITY ANALYSIS
Whilst management consider the useful economic lives
to represent the best estimate at the reporting date, to indicate
the level of sensitivity in relation to the estimation of the
useful economic lives, we have assessed the impact of reducing or
increasing the UELs of all assets by 12 months:
· A
reduction in the revised UEL of all assets by 12 months would
increase the expected amortisation charge for the following
financial year by £6.0m;
· An
increase in the UEL of all assets of a further 12 months would
decrease the expected amortisation charge for the following
financial year by £4.4m.
11. Property, plant
and equipment
|
|
|
|
|
|
Land and
buildings
|
Fixtures and
Fittings
|
Plant and
Machinery
|
Total
|
|
£m
|
£m
|
£m
|
£m
|
Cost
|
|
|
|
|
At 26 February 2022
|
59.1
|
24.6
|
53.8
|
137.5
|
Additions
|
-
|
5.6
|
0.7
|
6.3
|
At 4 March 2023
|
59.1
|
30.2
|
54.5
|
143.8
|
Additions
|
-
|
2.4
|
0.6
|
3.0
|
Reclass to inventories
|
-
|
-
|
(1.0)
|
(1.0)
|
Disposals
|
-
|
-
|
(2.9)
|
(2.9)
|
At 2 March 2024
|
59.1
|
32.6
|
51.2
|
142.9
|
Accumulated depreciation and
impairment
|
|
|
|
|
At 26 February 2022
|
19.9
|
21.0
|
38.1
|
79.0
|
Charge for the period
|
1.2
|
0.7
|
2.4
|
4.3
|
Impairment charge
|
-
|
-
|
9.6
|
9.6
|
At 4 March 2023
|
21.1
|
21.7
|
50.1
|
92.9
|
Charge for the period
|
1.2
|
0.8
|
0.6
|
2.6
|
Impairment charge
|
3.3
|
-
|
-
|
3.3
|
Disposals
|
-
|
-
|
(2.9)
|
(2.9)
|
At 2 March 2024
|
25.6
|
22.5
|
47.8
|
95.9
|
Carrying amount
At 2 March 2024
|
33.5
|
10.1
|
3.4
|
47.0
|
At 4 March 2023
|
38.0
|
8.5
|
4.4
|
50.9
|
At 26 February 2022
|
39.2
|
3.6
|
15.7
|
58.5
|
The impairment charge in FY23 relates to the
pro-rata allocation of impairment of the Group's net assets to
value in use as set out in note 10. A further separate impairment
of £3.3m has been recognised in the current financial year relating
to the estimated sale proceeds less costs to sell of warehouse
facilities owned by the Group, now assessed separately due to the
planned closure of the site in line with the warehouse
rationalisation program disclosed further in note 6. The property
has not been reclassified to assets held for sale at the reporting
date, as a programme to actively market the property and locate a
buyer had not yet commenced at the period end, as required under
IFRS 5 to meet the classification as a non-current asset held for
sale.
Assets in the course of development included in
fixtures and fittings and plant and machinery at 2 March 2024 total
£2.2m (2023: £2.5m), and in land and buildings total £nil (2023:
£nil). No depreciation has been charged on these assets. No
borrowing costs have been capitalised in the period (2023:
£nil).
At 2 March 2024, the Group had entered into
contractual commitments of £1.3m for the acquisition of property,
plant and equipment (2023: £1.0m).
Reclassification movement in the year relates to
replacement parts and spares for plant and machinery which have
been reclassified to be held as inventory.
12. Trade and other
receivables
|
52 weeks
to
2 March
2024
|
53 weeks
to
4 March
2023
|
|
£m
|
£m
|
Amount receivable for the sale of
goods and services
|
517.0
|
555.2
|
Allowance for expected credit
losses
|
(73.3)
|
(74.6)
|
Net trade receivables
|
443.7
|
480.6
|
Other debtors and
prepayments
|
24.9
|
24.1
|
Trade and other receivables
|
468.6
|
504.7
|
Amounts receivable for the sale of goods and
services of £517.0m includes £1.9m (2023: £(3.0)m) of balances not
subject to expected credit loss provisioning, this includes a
provision for outstanding gross customer returns of £5.1m (2023:
£6.3m).
Other debtors include a balance of £0.8m (2023:
£1.3m) relating to amounts due from wholesale partners.
The weighted average Annual Percentage Rate ('APR')
across the trade receivables portfolio is 60.1% (2023: 58.2%). For
customers who find themselves in financial difficulties, the Group
may offer revised payment terms (payment arrangements) to support
customer rehabilitation. These revised terms may also include
suspension of interest for a period of time.
The gross trade receivables whose terms have been
renegotiated (payment arrangements) but would otherwise be past
due, totalled £40.7m as at 2 March 2024 (2023: £36.4m). Interest
income recognised on trade receivables which were credit impaired
as at 2 March 2024 was £18.8m (2023: £21.4m).
The amounts written off in the period of £120.7m
(2023: £131.2m) include the sale of impaired assets with a net book
value of £65.9m (2023: £55.0m). The proceeds from derecognised
portfolio sales exceeded the net book value by £nil (2023:
£0.1m).
During the year there were £23.7m of proceeds
recognised in respect of accounts that had previously been
written-off or derecognised (2023: £21.0m).
The following table provides information about the
exposure to credit risk and ECLs for trade receivables as at 2
March 2024.
|
52 weeks to 2
March 2024
|
53
weeks to 4 March 2023
|
Ageing of trade
receivables
|
Trade receivables
|
Trade receivables on payment arrangements
|
Total trade receivables
|
Trade receivables
|
Trade receivables on payment
arrangements
|
Total trade receivables
|
Current - not past due
|
400.2
|
40.7
|
440.9
|
443.3
|
36.4
|
479.7
|
28 days - past due
|
17.6
|
3.6
|
21.2
|
20.1
|
5.0
|
25.1
|
56 days - past due
|
9.9
|
2.1
|
12.0
|
10.8
|
2.6
|
13.4
|
84 days - past due
|
7.6
|
1.9
|
9.5
|
9.5
|
2.2
|
11.7
|
112 days - past due
|
5.8
|
1.3
|
7.1
|
6.8
|
1.2
|
8.0
|
Over 112 days - past
due
|
22.7
|
3.6
|
26.3
|
16.1
|
1.2
|
17.3
|
Gross trade receivables
|
463.8
|
53.2
|
517.0
|
506.6
|
48.6
|
555.2
|
Allowance for expected credit
losses
|
(57.9)
|
(15.4)
|
(73.3)
|
(58.1)
|
(16.5)
|
(74.6)
|
Net trade receivables
|
405.9
|
37.8
|
443.7
|
448.5
|
32.1
|
480.6
|
|
|
|
|
52 weeks
to
2 March
2024
|
53 weeks
to
4 March
2023
|
|
|
|
|
£m
|
£m
|
Provision
movements1
|
|
|
|
(1.4)
|
5.9
|
Gross write -offs
|
|
|
|
120.7
|
131.2
|
Recoveries
|
|
|
|
(23.7)
|
(21.0)
|
Notional interest
|
|
|
|
10.6
|
6.2
|
Net Impairment charge
|
|
|
|
106.2
|
122.3
|
1 Provision movement is the closing allowance for expected
credit losses less the opening allowance for expected credit
losses
SENSITIVITY OF
ESTIMATION UNCERTAINTY
To indicate the level of estimation uncertainty, the
impact on the ECL of applying different model parameters are shown
below:
· A 10%
increase or decrease in PDs would lead to a £3.2m (2023: £3.4m)
increase or £3.2m (2023: £3.6m) decrease in the ECL;
· Our ECL
is probability weighted between a base case, downside and upside
scenario which includes economic forecast variables of
unemployment, BoE base rate, and average earnings. Adjusting
the weighting to 100% impacts the ECL by the following:
· 100%
downside - an increase in the ECL of £0.9m
· 100%
upside -a decrease in the ECL of £0.7m
· 100%
base case - a decrease in the ECL of £0.1m
13. Trade and other
payables
|
52 weeks
to
2 March
2024
|
53 weeks
to
4 March
2023
|
|
£m
|
£m
|
Trade payables
|
30.1
|
40.2
|
Other payables
|
7.3
|
3.6
|
Accruals and deferred
income
|
27.8
|
28.7
|
Trade and other payables
|
65.2
|
72.5
|
Trade payables and accruals principally comprise
amounts outstanding for trade purchases and ongoing costs. Included
in the accruals and deferred income total of £27.8m is an amount of
£0.2m (2023: £nil) classified as non-current liabilities. The
average credit period taken for trade purchases, based on invoice
date is 46 days (2023: 50 days).
The Group has financial risk management policies in
place to ensure that all payables are paid within agreed credit
terms.
The Group continues to have a supplier financing
arrangement which is facilitated by HSBC. The principal purpose of
this arrangement is to enable the supplier, if it so wishes, to
sell its receivables due from the Group to a third party bank prior
to their due date, thus providing earlier access to liquidity. From
the Group's perspective, the invoice payment due date remains
unaltered and the payment terms of suppliers participating in the
programme are similar to those suppliers that are not
participating.
The maximum facility limit as at 2 March 2024 was
£15m (2023: £15m). At 2 March 2024, total of £6.0m (2023: £7.9m)
had been funded under the programme. The scheme is based around the
principle of reverse factoring whereby the bank purchases from the
suppliers approved trade debts owed by the Group. Access to the
supplier finance scheme is by mutual agreement between the bank and
supplier, where the supplier wishes to be paid faster than standard
Group payment terms; the Group is not party to this contract. The
scheme has no cost to the Group as the fees are paid by the
supplier directly to the bank. The bank have no special seniority
of claim to the Group upon liquidation and would be treated the
same as any other trade payable. As the scheme does not change the
characteristics of the trade payable, and the Group's obligation is
not legally extinguished until the bank is repaid, the Group
continues to recognise these liabilities within trade payables and
all cash flows associated with the arrangements are included within
operating cash flow as they continue to be part of the normal
operating cycle of the Group. There is no fixed expiry date on this
facility.
14. Cash and cash
equivalents
Cash and cash equivalents (which are presented as a
single class of assets on the face of the balance sheet) comprise
cash at bank and other short-term, highly liquid investments with a
maturity of three months or less, from point of acquisition.
Included in the amount below is £1.0m (2023: £1.0m) of restricted
cash which is held in the Group's joint bank account with Allianz
Insurance plc in respect of outstanding customer redress payments
(further detail in note 6) and £3.2m (2023: £3.1m) in respect of
the Group's securitisation reserve account. This cash is available
to access by the Group for restricted purposes.
In addition £28.2m (2023: £10.7m) was held at the
balance sheet date in relation to amounts to be repaid against the
Group's securitisation facility.
A breakdown of significant cash and cash equivalent
balances by currency is as follows:
|
52 weeks
to
2 March
2024
|
53 weeks
to
4 March
2023
|
|
£m
|
£m
|
Sterling
|
49.6
|
24.9
|
Euro
|
2.7
|
2.9
|
US dollar
|
12.9
|
7.7
|
Net cash and cash equivalents and
bank overdrafts
|
65.2
|
35.5
|
Made up of:
|
|
|
Cash and cash
equivalents
|
65.2
|
35.5
|
Bank overdrafts
|
-
|
-
|
The Group operates a notional pooling and net
overdraft facility whereby cash and overdraft balances held with
the same bank have a legal right of offset. In line with
requirements of IAS 32, gross balance sheet presentation is
required where there is no intention to settle any amounts net. The
balance has therefore been separated between overdrafts and cash
balances.
15. Bank
borrowings
|
2024
|
2023
|
|
£m
|
£m
|
Bank loans
|
(301.5)
|
(332.9)
|
Net overdraft facility
|
-
|
-
|
The borrowings are repayable as
follows:
|
|
|
Within one year
|
-
|
-
|
In the second year
|
-
|
(332.9)
|
In the third to fifth
year
|
(301.5)
|
-
|
Amounts due for settlement after
12 months
|
(301.5)
|
(332.9)
|
|
|
|
|
2024
%
|
2023
%
|
The weighted average interest
rates paid were as follows:
|
|
|
Net overdraft facility
|
6.4
|
3.5
|
Bank loans
|
3.4
|
3.6
|
All borrowings are held in sterling.
The principal features of the Group's borrowings are
as follows:
The Group operates a notional pooling and net
overdraft facility whereby cash and overdraft balances held with
the same bank have a legal right of offset. The net overdraft
facility limit at 2 March 2024 was £12.5m (2023: £12.5m), of which
the Group had a net position of £nil drawn down at 2 March 2024
(2023: £nil).
The Group has a bank loan of £301.5m (2023: £332.9m)
secured by a charge over certain "eligible" customer receivables
(current and 0-28 days past due) of the Group and is without
recourse to any of the Group's other assets. The facility limit at
2 March 2024 was at £400m (2023: £400m). The maturity of the
facility was extended during the current period to December 2026.
In February 2023, whilst not reducing the £400m facility limit, the
Group pro-actively reduced the lenders' commitment to £340m from
£400m to reflect the smaller customer receivables book and
subsequent reduction in the accessible funding level, so optimising
funding costs by reducing non-utilisation costs. This has not
changed the Group's total accessible funding levels. The
securitisation facility allows the Group to draw down cash, based
on set criteria linked to eligible customer receivables which move
flexibly in line with business volumes. Accordingly, the net
cashflows of the facility are treated within working capital rather
than financing cashflows.
Management has considered whether the extension to
the facility noted above constitutes a substantial modification
under IFRS 9 and concluded that a substantial modification has not
occurred and therefore the extension has been accounted for as a
modification rather than de-recognition. Unamortised fees relating
to this facility of £1.1m (2023: £2.0m) are offset against the
carrying amount of the loan.
The key covenants applicable to the Securitisation
facility include three-month average default, return and collection
ratios, and a net interest margin ratio on the total and eligible
pool. Throughout the reporting period all covenants have been
complied with.
On 14 April 2023, the Group completed the
refinancing of its unsecured and undrawn Revolving Credit Facility
('RCF'). The new RCF facility has a maximum limit of £75m and an
overdraft facility of £12.5m both respectively committed to
December 2026, of which £nil (2023: £nil) was drawn down at 2 March
2024.
All borrowings are arranged at floating rates, thus
exposing the Group to cash flow interest rate risk. The Group's
interest rate risk management activities are detailed in note 19 of
the Group's Annual Report.
There is no material difference between the fair
value and carrying amount of the Group's borrowings.
16.
Dividends
No dividends were paid or proposed in either the
current year or prior year.
17. Share
Capital
|
2024
Number
|
2023
Number
|
2024
£m
|
2023
£m
|
Allotted, called-up and fully paid
ordinary shares of 11 1/19p each
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Opening as at 4 March 2023 (26
February 2022)
|
460,483,231
|
460,483,231
|
50.9
|
50.9
|
Issued in the year
|
2,841,787
|
-
|
0.3
|
-
|
At 2 March 2024 (4 March
2023)
|
463,325,018
|
460,483,231
|
51.2
|
50.9
|
The Company has one class of ordinary shares which
carry no right to fixed income. The holders of ordinary shares are
entitled to receive dividends as declared and are entitled to one
vote per share at meetings of the Company.
18.
Provisions
|
Other
Litigation
|
Strategic
Change
|
Allianz
Litigation
|
Other
|
Total
|
|
£m
|
£m
|
£m
|
£m
|
£m
|
Balance as at 4 March
2023
|
6.9
|
2.2
|
0.3
|
0.7
|
10.1
|
Provisions made during the
period
|
2.5
|
4.1
|
-
|
0.3
|
6.9
|
Unused provisions reversed during
the period
|
-
|
(0.5)
|
(0.1)
|
(0.2)
|
(0.8)
|
Provisions used during the
period
|
(0.2)
|
(4.0)
|
-
|
(0.5)
|
(4.7)
|
Balance as at 2 March 2024
|
9.2
|
1.8
|
0.2
|
0.3
|
11.5
|
Non-current
|
6.3
|
-
|
-
|
1.3
|
6.6
|
Current
|
2.9
|
1.8
|
0.2
|
-
|
4.9
|
Balance as at 2 March 2024
|
9.2
|
1.8
|
0.2
|
0.3
|
11.5
|
ALLIANZ
LITIGATION
During the prior year, the Group reached full and
final settlement in respect of the legal dispute with Allianz
Insurance plc. Further detail provided in note 6 and in the FY23
Annual Report and accounts. The provision outstanding at 2 March
2024 was £0.2m, relating to amounts payable to Allianz following
closure of the joint redress account. The release of £0.1m in the
period relates to amounts previously provided in respect of legal
costs that are no longer required.
OTHER
LITIGATION
In FY23 the Group made a provision of £5.5m, as an
estimate of the litigation costs in relation to legacy customer
claims alleging unfair relationships resulting from undisclosed PPI
commission brought under s140A of the Consumer Credit Act 1974.
This is not a new exposure and in prior years the Group has handled
such claims on a case by case basis, and the external legal costs
incurred have not been material. The provision is principally in
relation to committed incremental external legal costs resulting
from the change in strategic approach. The Group changed its
strategy in 2023 to robustly defend such claims and put claimants
to proof; and engaged external counsel which is reflected in the
provision recorded. The Board supports the strategy to robustly
defend and put to proof any past and future claims. The expected
timeline of resolution of the outstanding claims is now expected to
be more than 12 months. The provision has been increased by £1.8m
in the current year reflecting the additional legal costs expected
to be incurred as a result of the emergence of "group litigation"
as an alternative process for resolving s140A PPI claims. The
provision outstanding at 2 March 2024 was £7.1m.
The provision outstanding at 2 March 2024 of £9.2m
also includes a provision of £1.4m recognised in prior periods in
relation to certain PPI related customer redress complaints, and an
amount of £0.7m booked in the year in relation to irresponsible
lending claims, both of which are expected to be paid in the next
12 months.
SENSITIVITY OF ESTIMATION UNCERTAINTY
To indicate the level of estimation uncertainty, the
following sensitivities have been performed:
- Key assumptions
underpinning the provision include estimates as to the proportion
of threatened claims that will actually result in court
proceedings, the process that the court adopts for determining the
cases, the proportion of cases which will be abandoned by claimants
before trial, the Group's win rate at trial and the court's likely
assessment of quantum where the Group is required to pay
redress;
- A 10% combined
stress in these assumptions would lead to an increase in the
provision of £1.2m;
- A 10% combined
improvement in these assumptions would lead to a reduction in the
provision of £1.0m;
Given the level of judgement and estimation involved
in assessing the Company's success in defending such claims and the
associated costs including legal fees, it is reasonably possible
that outcomes within the next financial year may be different from
management's assumptions.
STRATEGIC
CHANGE
During the current year, the Group continued the
multi-year transformation of the business and the ongoing review of
the operating model initiated at the end of FY23. Specifically, an
additional restructuring program of the Group's operational and
head office headcount to reflect the lower sales orders, was
initiated in Q2 FY24 and continued through the financial year.
Total redundancy costs of £1.7m were incurred in the period. A
provision of £0.4m was outstanding at 2 March 2024 relating to
payments to be made in the months following the period end (FY23:
£1.9m).
During the period, the Board also approved the
rationalisation of the Group's warehousing facilities following a
review of the overall warehouse portfolio capacity, utilisation and
associated operational cost base. Accordingly a provision was
booked for incremental costs associated with staff exits and
onerous contracts of £1.4m, as well as £1.0m of incremental stock
provision arising from the rationalisation of terminal stock due to
reduced storage capacity across the warehouse portfolios. At 2
March 2024, £0.8m of the provision for inventory was utilised with
the remaining £0.2m released as better than expected realisation
was achieved.
OTHER
The provision held at 4 March 2023 of £0.7m related
to costs and interest in relation to matters under discussion with
HMRC relating to prior years and a legal claim made against the
Group. Both matters have been settled in the period representing
total utilisation of £0.5m, comprising an agreement with HMRC of
£0.2m and a settlement of the legal claim of £0.3m. The remaining
provision balance of £0.2m was not required and therefore released
in the period.
A provision has been recognised in the year of £0.3m
for estimated future costs to restore leased warehouse premises as
required by the lease agreement, and capitalised to the value of
the right-of-use asset at recognition in line with IFRS 16.
19. Prior year
adjustment
During the year, the Group has restated the
presentation of deferred tax assets and liabilities to correctly
present these balances on a net basis, as they had been previously
presented on a gross basis in FY23. This is to reflect the legal
right and intention to offset within the jurisdiction of the UK, in
line with IAS 12 Income taxes. This restatement impacts the
Consolidated balance sheet only and no other primary statements
within the financial statements.
Consolidated balance sheet (extract)
|
2023
£m
|
Adjustment
£m
|
2023
£m
(Restated)
|
Non-current
assets
|
|
|
|
Deferred tax assets
|
29.2
|
(13.2)
|
16.0
|
|
|
|
|
Non-current
liabilities
|
|
|
|
Deferred tax liabilities
|
(13.2)
|
13.2
|
0.0
|
20. Post balance
sheet events
RECLASSIFICATION OF OWNED WAREHOUSE FACILITIES AS
HELD FOR SALE
On 28 March 2024 warehouse facilities which are
being exited as part of the rationalisation of the Group's
warehousing described in note 6 have been actively marketed for
sale and met the criteria to be classified as an asset held for
sale under IFRS 5. There has been no change to the assessment of
the fair value at the point of reclassification from the impairment
assessment made at the reporting date. A sale is expected to
complete within 12 months of the reclassification to held for
sale.
This report was approved by the Board of Directors
on 5 June 2024.