Tuesday 22 May 2012

Australian news: Retail and Qantas


Retail in winter of discontent
THE fragility of Australia's retail sector, suffering from intense price competition, a strong dollar and consumers made increasingly skittish by the European financial crisis, has been highlighted by the collapse of yet another discretionary goods business.




22 May, 2012

co-operative that supplies a range of consumer electrical goods to more than 100 independently owned Retravision stores in Victoria, Tasmania and southern New South Wales.

It was placed in voluntary administration after piling up more than $30 million in debt.

It is the latest in a string of high-profile retail collapses over the past 18 months that has included once mighty retail brands such as Borders, Angus & Robertson and Colorado Group, while publicly listed businesses such as consumer electronics retailer JB Hi-Fi, surfwear group Billabong and furniture and electrical group Harvey Norman have issued profit warnings that have sent their share prices crashing.

According to Goldman Sachs, the retail carnage in 2011 included 19 bankruptcies and restructures of major retail brands. A total of 515 retail outlets closed in the 2011 calendar year, including Colorado, which shut nearly 30 per cent of its nationwide store network, and RedGroup (owner of Borders and Angus & Robertson), which closed nine out of 10 of its branches.

In addition, the failures of Sleep City, WOW Audio Visual Superstores and GAME in 2012 have meant the closure of 174 retailing sites.

Gerry Harvey, executive chairman of Harvey Norman, which earlier this month unveiled a 44 per cent profit slump for the third quarter, said that over the past 18 months trading conditions had got "progressively worse".

"The whole appliance and computer industry is under more stress now than it's been for a very long time,’’ he said.

And the news does not look like getting better soon. Coinciding with yesterday's collapse of Retravision Southern, it was reported that retail sales growth fell to its slowest pace in seven months in April as worries about the European crisis hit local spending.

Commonwealth Bank’s Business Sales Indicator rose 0.5 per cent in April, slowing from 0.6 per cent in March and 0.8 per cent in February. The April result was the weakest since October.

"While there has been positive momentum in spending, trend growth has eased over the past four months," said CommSec chief economist Craig James, who raised the possibility of slower growth to come.

"The ongoing challenges faced overseas continue to factor into local spending decisions and, whilst this uncertainty remains, it’s likely we will continue to see lower growth in the near to medium term," he said.

The retail sector is under strain on several fronts. The strong dollar has tempted many consumers to shop online on overseas websites. Its strength has also lowered the prices that local shops can charge on goods they import. And uncertainty about mortgage rates and the health of the economy has clobbered consumer confidence.

Bryan Webster, appointed as voluntary administrator to Retravision Southern, said yesterday the pull-back in consumer spending was a key aspect of the business’ financial problems and was reflected throughout the broader retail sector.

However, the resources boom is underpinning growth in a minority of regions around Australia, particularly the commodity-rich state of Western Australia, where the regional Retravision buying group had considered this month acquiring Retravision Southern and integrating the business into its much stronger operation.

Those plans could now be derailed by the collapse yesterday

The Situation in New Zealand


Retailer Harvey Norman says sales and operating earnings fell in New Zealand in the first half, reflecting natural disasters and the "challenging retail climate".


Sales fell 3.5 per cent and operating profit fell 0.4 per cent to $26.45m from $26.58m a year ago.





Qantas to cut another 500 maintenance jobs
Australia's top airline Qantas Airways (QAN.AX) said on Monday it is eliminating 500 jobs by merging maintenance facilities to save up to A$100 million ($98.4 million) annually, as high fuel costs and weak demand take a toll on airline profits.



20 May, 2012

Qantas, which is emerging from a costly industrial dispute, said in statement it will stop heavy maintenance in Tullamarine in Melbourne and concentrate on centers in Brisbane and Avalon, resulting in the job cuts. It had, in February, flagged another 500 job cuts for the group.

The latest move will save it A$70 million to A$100 million a year but will result in one-off costs of A$50 million, and takes estimated costs of an overhaul plan for the second half of fiscal 2012 to between A$250 million and A$260 million, it said.

The overhaul plan is a bid by Chief Executive Alan Joyce to protect profits and the investment-grade rating of Qantas.

Earlier this month, the airline said it would delay taking delivery of two new A380s to cut capital expenditure by a further A$400 million, raising capex cuts to A$900 million. It is also consolidating engineering, ground and maintenance operations and wants to sell some catering centers.

"Like the manufacturing industry, aviation maintenance is a labor and capital intensive sector," Chief Executive Alan Joyce said in a statement.

"Our cost base in heavy maintenance is 30 per cent higher than that of our competitors - we must close this gap to secure Qantas' future viability and success."

H1 PROFIT SLIDE

The review of heavy maintenance was announced in February when Qantas said its first-half profit halved and follows the introduction of newer aircraft such as the A380 super jumbo and plans for the new Boeing 787s.

"We cannot take advantage of this new generation of aircraft if we continue to do heavy maintenance in the same way we did 10 years ago," Joyce said.

More than 90 percent of Qantas's 30,000-plus employees are in Australia, and employee unions' fears that it will send jobs offshore helped spark last year's bruising industrial battle that led to the grounding of its entire fleet and prompted intervention by Australia's industrial umpire.

Qantas said the latest decision follows a two-month consultation with unions, employees and other stakeholders to discuss the challenges of having three sub-optimal heavy maintenance bases.

Qantas shares, which were marginally higher before the announcement, slipped 0.35 percent to A$1.425 at 0250 GMT. The broader market .AXJO was 0.2 percent higher. ($1 = 1.0138 Australian dollars)



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