Domino’s Pizza makes strong start to 2014 as profit edges higher

Pretax profits on sales including Ireland for 2013 rose 1.9% to £47.6 million

Domino’s has almost 800 UK stores and much smaller operations in Germany, Switzerland and Ireland. Photograph: Jason Alden/Bloomberg
Domino’s has almost 800 UK stores and much smaller operations in Germany, Switzerland and Ireland. Photograph: Jason Alden/Bloomberg

The UK’s biggest pizza delivery company, Domino’s Pizza, said it had made a strong start to 2014 as it posted an expected small rise in annual profit.

The company, which has almost 800 UK stores and much smaller operations in Germany, Switzerland and Ireland, today said 2013 pretax profit rose 1.9 per cent to £47.6 million (€58 million), as higher losses in its fledgling German arm offset gains in its home market.

Sales rose 14 per cent to £668.8 million, with like-for-like sales growth of 7.0 per cent in 670 UK mature stores.

Domino's expansion woes in Germany, which relate to higher than expected labour costs that have forced back its break even target to 2017, contributed to a rocky second half of 2013, when the group was also hit by surprise news its finance chief Lee Ginsberg and chief executive Lance Batchelor were both quitting.

READ SOME MORE

Domino’s booked pre-tax exceptional costs of £27.5 million of which £26.5 million related to impairments and other exceptional charges within the German business.

The group saidtoday sales momentum had continued, rising 14.6 per cent at its UK stores open over a year in the first seven weeks of its new fiscal year.

Last month Domino's named former Halfords boss David Wild as its interim chief executive following Batchelor's decision to leave for travel and insurance group Saga in March.

Shares in the firm, a master franchisee of US group Domino’s Pizza Inc, closed at 556.5 pence yesterday, up 7 per cent over the last year and valuing the business at £916 million.

Reuters