For the food court business in Singapore, operators like BreadTalk and Food Junction are subject to the same risks - the key being merciless Reit-landlords trying hard to squeeze them for higher-and-higher rentals. With so many F&B outlets in most malls, competition is tough, even though most food courts remain well patronized during meal times, mainly because of their lower selling prices. However, it doesn't necessarily mean that all food courts are profitable - e.g. I will be very surprised if the expensive Food Opera (operated by BreadTalk) food court at the basement of Ion Orchard is able to make consistent profits at all! I guess this may be the main reason why Food Junction has chosen to have its new food courts at (a) NEX@Serangoon mall but on the 4th floor (lower rental), vs. BreadTalk opening Food Republic/Toast Box/Toast Box at the basement; and (b) Central@Orchard and NUS Yusof Ishak House, where both landlords are non-Reit.
We can simply take a look at the Q1-FY11 results of both BreadTalk and Food Junction to compare their relative profitability.....
http://info.sgx.com/webcoranncatth.nsf/V...F002F4443/$file/BTG_1Q2011_Results_Announcement.pdf?openelement [Breadtalk]
http://info.sgx.com/webcoranncatth.nsf/V...penelement [Food Junction]
My summary comparison -
BreadTalk - Latest market cap.: $170.2m (281.31m shares@$0.605); against revenue: $83.2m (majority from sales of Din Tai Fung restaurants, BreadTalk bakery/Toast Box coffee shop outlets), PBT: $1.9m, NP: $1.22m, NAV/share: $0.247; and FY10's dividend: $0.01/share. BreadTalk's share price has been trending downwards steadily from high of $0.72 recorded on 24Jan11.
Food Junction - Latest market cap.: $26.75m (127.39m shares@$0.21); against revenue: $13.27m (majority fees from food court operations), PBT: $1.17m, NP: $0.86m; NAV/share: $0.249; and FY10's 2 dividends: total $0.5/share. Since Jan11, Food Junction's share price has been well supported (partly by the company's buying back shares) within the $0.20 - $0.22 range since Jan11, with recent signs of increased activities.
Quite obviously, one counter appears over-priced, and the other grossly under-priced...