09-07-2013, 04:18 PM
They have also closed down one branch at White Sands. Had received a flyer last month advertising an attractive 20% discount storewide.
09-07-2013, 04:18 PM
They have also closed down one branch at White Sands. Had received a flyer last month advertising an attractive 20% discount storewide.
09-07-2013, 04:49 PM
Closing down unprofitable branches is positive for the company.
(09-07-2013, 04:49 PM)Trader88 Wrote: Closing down unprofitable branches is positive for the company. it begs the following questions: 1. what were initial business plans for unprofitable branches, just proliferation? 2. how long did losses continued until branch closure 3. with economies of scale, were margins inadequate & merchandise incorrect? 4. are they overstocked, stocks too old, too much written off? 5. which department or category losses affected consolidated sales 6. did overseas subsidiaries failed to supply imports cheap enough 7. why an established retailer failed to negotiate better terms in all business aspects 8. why so many buybacks if publicly listed, is being public just half-hearted 9. Do they have appropriate management skills for modern & future retailing 10. have they dabbled too much outside their comfort zone I think stationery sales margin is OK since they have a shop in China to import, anyway stationery market can depend on regular consumers replenishing items: little ones at home always need new cute pencil case for school. Books are a different matter, margins are not great at all even with wholesalers, excess print-runs, sale or return etc. Savvy retailers always watch out for competition discounts as signs of distress. share dealers don't care about underlying signals though, unless you're Warren Buffet.
11-07-2013, 07:31 PM
(This post was last modified: 11-07-2013, 07:33 PM by Pursuitofknowledge.)
(11-07-2013, 05:15 PM)ashuro Wrote:(09-07-2013, 04:49 PM)Trader88 Wrote: Closing down unprofitable branches is positive for the company.
Answer 2: You cant close the book store immediately even if it does not break- even as you have duration of tenancy lease. Harris took some time for them to close even though I dont think it made any money. In addition things can change as we have seen strong rental increase in Singapore. Come to think of it retail & distribution division PBT margin are 5-6% : Rental increase of 20-50% can completely destroy the profitability. ( My guess is rental will be atleast 30-40% of cost ex cost of sales). Lastly if you are in Popular management : u will open a shop even if it may not make money as u dont want anybody else to come in the business. Hope it helps.
(11-07-2013, 08:31 PM)buddy Wrote: Answer 2: You cant close the book store immediately even if it does not break- even as you have duration of tenancy lease. Harris took some time for them to close even though I dont think it made any money. In addition things can change as we have seen strong rental increase in Singapore. Come to think of it retail & distribution division PBT margin are 5-6% : Rental increase of 20-50% can completely destroy the profitability. ( My guess is rental will be atleast 30-40% of cost ex cost of sales). Lastly if you are in Popular management : u will open a shop even if it may not make money as u dont want anybody else to come in the business. Hope it helps.
11-07-2013, 11:32 PM
The branch at White Sands is renewed for another term as they have negotiated for a win-win deal with the landlord.
Kudos to the management. Recently, there are a number of delistings. Popular could be considering delisting since it is profitable and trading below its BV.
12-07-2013, 12:31 AM
(11-07-2013, 11:32 PM)a74henry Wrote: The branch at White Sands is renewed for another term as they have negotiated for a win-win deal with the landlord. I must have missed the news / annc on the White Sands branch. Any links? What is this BV you are referring to? Different from latest NAV = 27.29ct? Last done Market Price = 28ct is above NAV...
Luck & Fortune Favours those who are Prepared & Decisive when Opportunity Knocks
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Hi trader88: thanks for the response
I was alluding to rental costs as one of the terms for better negotiated outcome. you also covered my hints about online retailers & the categories supplying the captive market: so despite their dominance in the textbooks & stationery market, they still posted a plunge in gross profit? let's use a generous rudimentary approach to their group annual account figures: first take a guess-timate for non-retail publishing & property business, take the remainder profit & split between 150 retail stores in all countries. profit per store is then split between all product categories, then per week or per day...not looking so great now. either some tems have razor thin unit margins, or just making losses supported by big margin items. without economies of scale & income from vertical integration, it'll be like Harris or borders for every store Hi Buddy, thanks for response terms of lease, yes indeed...so the underlying question was hinting at the duration of suffering losses before they could pull out of location. As to maintaining market presence against competition: competitors will always open shop if local consumer market is available, & we know that consumers are generally happy to travel just to shop for what-ever-it-is. Popular retail is not exactly a first choice business for most entrepreneurs, so just having a site regardless of profitability is having confidence but not having prudence.
12-07-2013, 06:56 PM
(This post was last modified: 13-07-2013, 10:45 AM by Pursuitofknowledge.)
(12-07-2013, 04:54 PM)ashuro Wrote: Hi trader88: thanks for the response Hi ashuro, I don't think retailer in Singapore command bargaining power in rental fee. As land is scarce in Singapore, those mall operator does't have to lower rental fee to attract those retailer into their mall. Popular has broken down their Distribution, Publishing and Property revenue in their Annual report. As for "first take a guess-timate for non-retail publishing & property business, take the remainder profit & split between 150 retail stores in all countries." Singapore POPULAR 26 Retail stores, 34 School outlets UrbanWrite 1 Retail store { prologue } 2 Retail stores (closing soon) Malaysia POPULAR & HARRIS 76 Outlets Hong Kong POPULAR 17 Retail stores Therefore I feel splitting the profit between 150 retail stores is not a good measurement as 34 popular bookstore are school outlets. I believe Popular has a very narrow moat which come from it's publishing department as teaching material is regulated by the government. Not everyone is able to come out with an assessment book without consent or being scrutinize. I do feel Popular has established a strong foothold in publishing of assessment book. However the publishing profit has been quite cyclical for the past 6 years, from their past annual report Mr Chou has mention assessment can last for 6 year after publishing before change of syllabus but I feel this is no longer true as the world is moving at a much faster pace thus education materials has to be revise or change at a faster rate. I think of the publishing business as a complement to the distribution business.
15-07-2013, 02:10 PM
(07-06-2013, 01:11 PM)KopiKat Wrote: Some info which need someone else to verify... Looks like agent info was quite accurate after all.... Must be delay in caveats lodged as it was not reflected in URA site when I checked from 17-Jun onwards. Latest from URA, [Image: zwxffb.jpg]
Luck & Fortune Favours those who are Prepared & Decisive when Opportunity Knocks
------------ 知己知彼 ,百战不殆 ;不知彼 ,不知己 ,每战必殆 ------------ |
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