Interim / Quarterly Report • Jan 26, 2020
Interim / Quarterly Report
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FINANCIAL HIGHLIGHTS
ANNUAL REPORT AND FINANCIAL STATEMENTS 2019 INTERIM REPORT 2020
J D WETHERSPOON PLC INTERIM REPORT 2020 1
Wetherspoon owns and operates pubs throughout the UK and Ireland. The company aims to provide customers with good-quality food and drinks, served by well-trained and friendly staff, at reasonable prices.
The pubs are individually designed, and the company aims to maintain them in excellent condition.
Year end 26 July 2020
Preliminary announcement for 2020 11 September 2020
Report and accounts for 2020 11 September 2020
Annual general meeting 19 November 2020
View this report online: jdwetherspoon.com/investors-home
| Like-for-like sales | |
|---|---|
| +5.0% |
Revenue £933.0m (2019: £889.6m) +4.9%
Free cash flow1 £49.0m (2019: £71.7m) -31.7%
Free cash flow1 per share 46.7p (2019: 67.9p) -31.2%
Half-year dividend Cancelled (2019: 4.0p)
Operating profit4 £76.6m (Post-IFRS 16: £80.8m) (2019: £63.5m) +20.6%
Contribution to the economy: taxes paid £402.8m (2019: £375.6m) +7.2%
Operating profit4 £76.6m (Post-IFRS 16: £80.8m) (2019: £63.5m) +20.6%
Profit before tax4 £57.9m (Post-IFRS 16: £51.6m) (2019: £50.3m) +15.2%
Profit before tax4 £42.0m (Post-IFRS 16: £35.7m) (2019: £48.6m) -13.7%
Earnings per share4 (including shares held in trust) 43.3p (Post-IFRS 16: 38.5p) (2019: 37.4p) +15.8%
Food hygiene rating3 4.96 out of 5 (2019: 4.97) -0.2%
Earnings per share4 (including shares held in trust) 29.8p (Post-IFRS 16: 25.0p) (2019: 36.0p) -17.2%
Pub manager length of service 12.5 years (2019: 12.1 years)
1 Free cash flow is defined in note 8 and in the company's accounting policies. The calculation of free cash flow can be found on the cash flow statement.
2 Exceptional items as disclosed in the notes to the annual report and financial statements, note 4.
3An average score of the pubs listed on the Food Standards Agency's website.
4Excluding impact of IFRS 16
Like-for-like bar sales increased by 4.2% (2019: 5.9%), food by 5.6% (2019: 7.1%) and fruit/slot machines by 20.3% (2019: 5.7%). Like-for-like hotel room sales decreased by 1.3% (2019: increased by 0.3%). Bar sales were 60.0% of total sales, food 36.1%, fruit/slot machines 2.8% and rooms 1.1%.
Pre-IFRS 16 operating profit increased by 20.6% to £76.6m (2019: £63.5m). The operating margin was 8.2% (2019: 7.1%). Profit before tax and exceptional items increased by 15.2% to £57.9m (2019: £50.3m). Higher sales, higher gross profit and lower property costs contributed to the increase, offsetting higher wages, repairs and taxes.
Earnings per share, including shares held in trust by the employee share scheme, and before exceptional items, increased by 15.8% to 43.3p (2019: 37.4p).
As illustrated in the table in the tax section below, the company paid taxes of £402.8m in the period under review (2019: £375.6m), which is 31.9% higher than five years ago.
Net interest was covered 4.1 times by profit before interest, tax and exceptional items (2019: 4.0 times). Total capital investment was £128.5m in the period (2019: £95.5m). £70.7m was spent on freehold reversions of properties where Wetherspoon was the tenant (2019: £55.7m), £34.1m on 'reinvestment' in existing pubs (2019: £24.9m) and £23.7m on new pub openings and pub extensions (2019: £14.8m).
Exceptional items totalled £15.9m (2019: £1.6m) and resulted in a cash inflow of £2m. £6.4m has been charged in respect of the disposal of 6 pubs in the period and in respect of a number of future disposals and aborted transactions. Following a review, an exceptional charge of £9.5m has been made, reflecting a revised view of the future value of IT projects.
Free cash flow, after capital investment of £34.5m in existing pubs (2019: £26.1m), £9.3m for share purchases for employees (2019: £9.0m) and payments of tax and interest, was £49.0m (2019: £71.7m). Free cash flow per share decreased by 31.2% to 46.7p (2019: 67.9p). The decrease was due mainly to the timing of supplier payments, an earlier payment of corporation tax and increased reinvestment.
In view of current uncertainty the board has decided to cancel the interim dividend (2019: £4.2m).
We expect the overall corporation tax charge for the financial year, including current and deferred taxation, to be approximately 21.6%, on a pre-IFRS 16 basis, before exceptional items (2019: 21.4%).
As in previous years, the company's tax rate is higher than the standard UK tax rate, owing mainly to depreciation which is not eligible for tax relief.
I believe the IFRS 16 is confusing and misleading. Common sense suggests that rent should be regarded as a cost in the income statement. Instead, a complex formula disregards actual rent paid and substitutes a notional asset (the 'right to occupy'), which attracts a depreciation charge, and a notional interest charge based on the total rental liability for the lease term, even though the great majority of the rental liability does not crystallise, in almost all cases, for many years.
Part of the purpose may be to equate rent with debt. However, for companies like Wetherspoon at least, rent bears almost no resemblance to debt.
Debt is invariably for a fixed term and the full amount is repayable at the end of the term. Debt therefore carries a refinancing risk.
In contrast, Wetherspoon leases, for example, carry no refinancing risk - there is just a liability to pay the rent when it falls due.
Of course leases carry a great risk- as so many restaurant companies and retailers have unfortunately demonstrated. However, it does not make sense to treat future liabilities in this way why not treat future business rates or VAT liabilities in this way, if it's appropriate for rent?
The most important criticism of IFRS 16 is that the complexity it creates means that it will only be understood by experts - in general, good for the experts, but bad for business efficiency, shareholders and the public.
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During the half year, 419,741 shares (0.40% of the share capital) were repurchased by the company for cancellation, at a cost of £6.5m, an average cost per share of 1,523p (2019: £Nil).
As at 26 January 2020, the company's net debt, including bank borrowings and finance leases, but excluding derivatives, was £804.5m, an increase of £67.5m, compared with that of the previous year end (2019: £737.0m).
The net-debt-to-EBITDA ratio was 3.54 times at the period end (28 July 2019: 3.36 times).
On 20 August 2019, the company entered into a new seven-year private placement agreement which extends its total facilities, excluding finance leases, from £895m to £993m.
As previously stated, it is intended that the company's net-debt-to-EBITDA ratio will be around 3.5 times for the foreseeable future. The ratio might rise for a temporary period, if there were, for example, a sudden deterioration in trading, in which instance the company would seek to reduce the level in a timely manner. Insofar as it is possible to generalise, the board believes that debt levels of between 0 and 2 times EBITDA are a sensible long – term benchmark. A higher level of debt may be justifiable – at times when interest rates are low and other factors are favourable.
During the period, we opened one new pub and disposed of six, bringing the number open at the period end to 874. The company is also redeveloping a number of successful pubs, usually adding extra interior customer space, a garden, staff rooms and, in some cases, hotel rooms. Recent examples include the Prior John in Bridlington, the Sirhowy in Blackwood and the Blue Bell in Scunthorpe.
Following a review of our estate, we placed around 130 pubs on the market in the last few years, most of which have now been sold.
10 years ago our freehold/leasehold split was 41.3/58.7%. As a result of investment in the last few years in 'freehold reversions' the split was 63.6/36.4% at the period end.
Pubs and restaurants pay proportionally far higher levels of UK tax than do supermarkets. The main disparity relates to VAT (value added tax), since supermarkets pay no VAT in respect of their food sales, whereas pubs pay 20%, enabling supermarkets to subsidise their alcoholic drinks prices. Pubs also pay approximately 18p per pint in respect of business rates, while supermarkets pay less than 2p per pint.
In addition, the government has, in recent years, introduced both a 'late-night levy' and additional fruit/slot machine taxes, further reducing the competitive position of pubs in relation to supermarkets.
The tax disparity with supermarkets is unfair. Pubs create significantly more jobs and more taxes per pint or per meal than do supermarkets and it does not make social or economic sense for the UK tax régime to favour supermarkets. We acknowledge the need for companies to pay a reasonable level of tax, but hope that legislators will make prompt progress in creating a level playing field for all businesses which sell similar products.
The taxes paid by Wetherspoon in the period under review were as follows:
| 2020 | 2019 | |
|---|---|---|
| £m | £m | |
| VAT | 182.5 | 175.5 |
| Alcohol duty | 89.4 | 86.2 |
| PAYE and NIC | 62.2 | 59.0 |
| Business rates | 29.0 | 28.7 |
| Corporation tax | 21.5 | 8.5 |
| Machine duty | 6.5 | 5.5 |
| Climate change levy | 5.1 | 5.2 |
| Stamp duty | 3.6 | 2.6 |
| Sugar tax | 1.4 | 1.5 |
| Fuel duty | 1.1 | 1.1 |
| Premise licence and TV licences | 0.4 | 0.4 |
| Carbon tax | – | 1.4 |
| TOTAL TAX | 402.7 | 375.6 |
| Tax per pub (£000) | 462.0 | 427.3 |
| Tax as % of sales | 43.2% | 42.2% |
| Pre-exceptional profit after tax | 45.4 | 39.5 |
| Profit after tax as % of sales | 4.9% | 4.4% |
As previously highlighted, the company's philosophy is to try continuously to upgrade as many areas of the business as possible.
The Food Standards Agency, in association with local authorities, regularly inspects licensed and other food businesses in the UK and awards marks from zero to five, according to the standards it finds.
Currently, 97.1% of our pubs have obtained the maximum five rating (2019: 97.6%), under the FSA scheme, with 99.1% of pubs receiving a rating of four or above (2019: 99.5%). This record reflects extremely hard work by our central catering, audit and operations team, as well as by the excellent teams in our pubs.
We have again been recognised, for the 17th year in a row, as a 'Top Employer UK' by the Top Employers Institute, in association with the Guardian newspaper.
A pub company is only as good as its employees – and Wetherspoon recognises this through its bonus and training schemes. We paid £23m in respect of bonuses and free shares to employees in the period (2019: £21m), of which 98% was paid to staff below board level and 88% was paid to staff working in our pubs.
In addition, the company runs a governmentapproved apprenticeship scheme and participates in a professional management diploma and degree course, in conjunction with Leeds Beckett University.
In our trading update of 22 January, I commented on corporate governance as follows:
In an important high court case involving Wetherspoon, the judge said that he would assume written statements by witnesses were true, unless contradicted by barristers in cross-examination.
This sensible principle of justice is also implicit in the 'comply or explain' provisions of corporate governance guidelines (the 'code').
Comply or explain must mean that the code envisaged flexibility and did not advocate a 'onetype-suits-all' approach.
If shareholders say nothing in response to company explanations, which have been made in order to comply with the code, it is reasonable to assume their assent.
However, in reality, detailed explanations are ignored by many fund managers and their corporate governance advisers - comply or explain has been corrupted to mean 'comply or be humiliated in public and voted off the board' - a risk which most NEDs are understandably reluctant to take.
A likely reason for ignoring explanations, in defiance of the code, is that it's simpler and cheaper to apply arbitrary standards such as the 'nine-year rule' rather than engaging with companies and considering their explanations.
Corporate governance adviser PIRC, for example, advertises for temporary staff for the company results' "season", and it appears to demand a blanket nine-year rule, almost irrespective of explanations.
In effect, PIRC purports to impose its own version of the code on companies, with no qualifications, or remit, for that approach.
In a further illustration of how the code operates in practise, Wetherspoon's largest shareholder, Columbia Threadneedle (CT), withdrew support for two of our long-serving NEDs for non-compliance with the 'nine-year rule', with no advance warning or discussion, shortly before our 2018 AGM.
CT unilaterally took this action, in spite of detailed explanations in the preceding years in our annual reports.
CT and fellow shareholder Blackrock's OWN boards however, very sensibly, do not observe the nineyear rule - both laud 'independent' NEDs with longer tenure than nine years.
In other words, one rule for CT and Blackrock - and another for UK PLC.
These issues were reviewed in some detail in our November 2019 trading statement (appendix 1). It would be beneficial if all shareholders could read this appendix. It is not boilerplate and the future of companies like Wetherspoon, and many others, is seriously undermined by the operation of the current code.
As in previous years, there has been no objection or critique whatsoever, in writing or in person, from any shareholder, individual or organisation, of the points raised in our November review.
It is an unfortunate reflection on complacency in the City and among unaccountable 'rule-makers' that institutions like Columbia Threadneedle, Blackrock and corporate governance adviser PIRC - have not felt the need to issue a proper or detailed response to the serious issues raised by Wetherspoon.
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The main consequence of the current governance system is short-termist and inexperienced boards, which have minimal representation from executives and the workforce - the people who are best placed to understand and run the business.
These factors are obviously damaging for customers, employees and the economy - as well as for shareholders.
The UK, of course, needs a sensible system of corporate governance. However, the current system is remote, counterproductive and inflexible, which are also the characteristics of many major shareholding institutions and their advisers.
As recently reported, in the six weeks to 8 March 2020, like-for-like sales increased by 3.2% and total sales by 2.9%. In the following week, to 15 March, sales declined by 4.5%. In the early part of the current week, following the Prime Minister's advice to avoid pubs, sales have declined at a significantly higher rate.
It is obviously very difficult to predict, in these circumstances, how events will unfold in future weeks and months, but we now anticipate profits being below market expectations, so long as the current health scare continues. As a result of this uncertainty, it is impossible to provide realistic guidance on our performance in the remainder of the financial year.
The company has decided to delay most capital projects and to reduce expenditure, where possible, including the cancellation of the interim dividend. As a result of these actions, combined with the Government's proposals on business rates relief and credit guarantee facilities, the company believes it has sufficient liquidity to maintain operations at a substantially lower level of sales.
As many companies and commentators have noted, the current health crisis places the hospitality industry, in particular, under great pressure. Wetherspoon, like our peers, will be working closely with all parties, including employees, banks, landlords and suppliers, in order to emerge from the situation in the best shape.
Tim Martin Chairman 19 March 2020 Appendix 1 – Corporate Governance (and guaranteed eventual destruction), Extract from JD Wetherspoon Q1 trading update, 13 November 2019
While acknowledging the need for a sensible system of corporate governance (CG), I have, for many years, expressed the urgent need for modification of the CG code, summarised in our 2019 annual report.
There can be little doubt that the current system has directly led to the failure or chronic underperformance of many businesses, including banks, supermarkets, and pubs.
It has also led to the creation of long and almost unreadable annual reports, full of jargon, clichés and platitudes - which confuse more than they enlighten.
I believe by vesting so much power in non-executive directors (NEDs), the system is also disenfranchising executives and the workforce - the people who have real expertise and are the cornerstone of business success.
Another tectonic fault is that the institutions and advisers which oversee the code, as described below, do not themselves adhere to the rules they impose on others.
The vast gap between the technocrats who make the rules and commercial reality is illustrated by the 2016 CG code, which refers to shareholders 64 times, employees three times and customers not at all.
In contrast, commercial reality, which should be reflected in the code, is encapsulated in Sam Walton's Walmart mantra - "Who's number one? THE CUSTOMER!"
A core problem is that CG institutionalises shorttermism, inexperience and navel-gazing.
Independent' non-executive directors (NEDS), who work part time, are limited by the code to nine years' service and stay, on average, for just over four years.
It is also common practise for there to be only two executive directors, the most senior of whom, the CEO, averages only about five years' managements and workers are thus absurdly underrepresented.
A cursory glance at the board compositions of major UK PLCs underlines the issues.
Tesco, for example, which has 450,000 employees and is the UK's largest supermarket group, has only two executive directors, with total service of about nine years and 11 NEDs with total service of 38 years. The overall average, including NEDs and executives, is only 3.7 years.
This sort of corporate structure is mirrored in banks, retailers and pubs - where long-term performance, over recent decades, has usually veered between poor and catastrophic.
Adherence to a tick-box culture means, for example, that there are no NEDS on the boards of major UK banks (HSBC/RBS/Barclays/Lloyds) who have any personal experience of the last banking crisis at their company - when it is clear that inexperienced boards were a major factor in that crisis.
In contrast, non-compliant companies like Wetherspoon (average tenure 15 years), Fullers' (10 years), Dart Group (12 years) and Berkshire Hathaway (19 years) have often fared far better, with experienced boards, long-term shareholders and a long-term view.
Compliance with CG guidelines increases the risk of failure - companies like Northern Rock, HBOS, Carillion, Thomas Cook and Mothercare were compliant with the code, but had shockingly low levels of experience (around 4 years per director) and executive representation.
Stefano Bonini and others (Harvard Law School Forum, June 2017) highlighted this problem and correctly said that "long–tenured directors … decrease the likelihood of corporate scandals ... (and) ... accumulate information and knowledge."
A Noddy-in-Toyland aspect of the current farce, as indicated above, is that the 'comply or explain' principle, which underlies the code, is not observed, in practise, by many 'enforcers' – ie institutions or their corporate advisers.
Comply or explain' means that advisers and investors have an obligation to weigh up explanations for non-observance of the guidelines.
However, in reality, many never do - including, it seems, governance advisers such as PIRC.
For example, Wetherspoon's largest institutional shareholder, Columbia Threadneedle (CT), without any advance notice to the Company, did not support the re-election of two of our long-serving directors at last year's AGM - in spite of our repeated explanations in annual reports.
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As a result, three of our four NEDs felt compelled to offer their resignations - inevitably destabilising the company in the process.
Yet CT's owner is Ameriprise (a US company), two of whose independent NEDs have themselves exceeded the nine-year rule.
The Ameriprise chairman also breaches the nineyear rule - and combines the roles of chairman and CEO, a further breach of UK guidelines.
In this context, the fact that CT is a US company is irrelevant. It has decided that one rule applies to itself, but that another should apply to Wetherspoon.
In addition, US shareholder, Blackrock did not support Wetherspoon's long serving NEDs last year, but they also have directors who exceed the 9-year rule on their board.
Not all institutions behave like CT and Blackrock. Two of our largest shareholders strongly support Wetherspoon's approach as illustrated in letters written to the company. Common sense does exist, in small pockets, in the City.
Indeed, in thousands of meetings with shareholders in the last 27 years, I and my colleagues have almost never been asked about corporate governance - although the guidelines are clearly the predominating factors in PLC board composition and at AGMs.
The tick-box malaise, to which only strong-willed contrarians - and those with no financial interest in the perpetuation of the current system - are immune, is particularly rife at CG advisers.
For example, the CG adviser PIRC recommends its clients to vote against my own re-election as chairman of Wetherspoon on the basis, inter alia, that I have been chairman for more than nine years (a milestone I hit in 1992).
Amazingly, while advising Wetherspoon that it should have four or five 'independent' NEDS, the hypocritical PIRC has, itself, just one on its own board - someone whose only apparent employment experience has been at a local authority.
However, PIRC's own website misleadingly says that it adopted, in 1988, "a private company structure with…executive directors and a board of non-executives drawn from the founding pension funds and public figures" – a structure that clearly no longer applies today.
Furthermore, the founder of PIRC, Alan MacDougall who still sits on his own board after 33 years (but seems to believe I shouldn't be on mine), has no relevant PLC experience having, according to his LinkedIn profile, a "BA Sociaology (sic) 2:2 - Social policy and Soviet Studies" and work experience at the National Union of Mineworkers and the Greater London Council.
MacDougall has questionable personable judgement, referring to himself on his Twitter account as a "governance expert" and an "ex-Eurocommunist". In my opinion, many people equate communism with fascism, since millions of Europeans perished or were imprisoned under its yoke.
It is perhaps a concern that PIRC has a low rating of 2.6 on the employment website Glassdoor, and appears to rely on inexperienced and temporary workers to analyse complex company reports for corporate governance purposes.
In summary, my view is the UK CG system is up the spout - and is itself a threat to listed companies and therefore to the UK economy.
By institutionalising inexperience, the code guarantees the eventual destruction of the culture or 'DNA' of successful companies - and culture has 'strategy' (with which the code is obsessed) for breakfast, as respected management philosopher Peter Drucker has said.
Board structures should probably more closely resemble the successful Fullers - a chairman with 41 years' experience at the company, combined with directors with extensive executive experience and long-term loyalty.
In addition, genuine observance of 'comply or explain', rather than current lip service, should be mandatory. One-size-fits-all does not work in the real world.
Board composition à la Fullers can't guarantee future corporate success - but rigid compliance with current CG guidelines will almost certainly guarantee eventual mediocrity or failure.
City regulators and lawmakers should make haste. Even Wetherspoon, a medium-sized company, has 42,000 employees, 13,000 of whom are shareholders, and it contributes about one pound in every thousand of UK taxes (£764 million in 2019) it's not in anyone's interest to kill a golden goose.
But, perhaps above all, no sensible business, looking to the long term and genuinely apprised of the reality of the CG system, would float on the London stock market today - who wants to guarantee eventual destruction, after all? "
CHAIRMAN'S STATEMENT
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| Notes | Unaudited 26 weeks ended 26 January 2020 Before exceptional items £000 |
Unaudited 26 weeks ended 26 January 2020 After exceptional items £000 |
Unaudited 26 weeks ended 27 January 2019 Before exceptional items £000 |
Unaudited 26 weeks ended 27 January 2019 After exceptional items £000 |
Audited 52 weeks ended 28 July 2019 Before exceptional items £000 |
Audited 52 weeks ended 28 July 2019 After exceptional items £000 |
|
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Revenue | 1 | 933,021 | 933,021 | 889,606 | 889,606 | 1,818,793 | 1,818,793 |
| Operating costs | (856,461) | (856,461) | (826,135) | (826,135) | (1,686,876) | (1,686,876) | |
| Operating profit | 2 | 76,560 | 76,560 | 63,471 | 63,471 | 131,917 | 131,917 |
| Property (losses)/gains | 3 | (172) | (172) | 3,772 | 3,772 | 5,599 | 5,599 |
| Property (losses) – exceptional | 3 | (15,948) | (1,651) | (7,040) | |||
| Profit before interest and tax | 76,388 | 60,440 | 67,243 | 65,592 | 137,516 | 130,476 | |
| Finance income | 6 | 41 | 41 | 26 | 26 | 41 | 41 |
| Finance costs | 6 | (18,508) | (18,508) | (16,993) | (16,993) | (35,098) | (35,098) |
| Profit before tax | 57,921 | 41,973 | 50,276 | 48,625 | 102,459 | 95,419 | |
| Income tax expense | 7 | (12,487) | (12,487) | (10,776) | (10,776) | (22,830) | (22,830) |
| Income tax expense – exceptional | 7 | 1,801 | 99 | 188 | |||
| Profit before IFRS 16 | 45,434 | 31,287 | 39,500 | 37,948 | 79,629 | 72,777 | |
| Earnings per ordinary share (p) | |||||||
| – Basic1 | 8 | 44.3 | 30.5 | 38.3 | 36.8 | 77.2 | 70.6 |
| – Diluted2 | 8 | 43.3 | 29.8 | 37.4 | 36.0 | 75.5 | 69.0 |
| Notes | Unaudited | Unaudited | Unaudited | Unaudited | Audited | Audited | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 26 weeks | 26 weeks | 26 weeks | 26 weeks | 52 weeks | 52 weeks | ||
| ended | ended | ended | ended | ended | ended | ||
| 26 January | 26 January | 27 January | 27 January | 28 July | 28 July | ||
| 2020 | 2020 | 2019 | 2019 | 2019 | 2019 | ||
| Before | After | Before | After | Before | After | ||
| exceptional | exceptional | exceptional | exceptional | exceptional | exceptional | ||
| items | items | items | items | items | items | ||
| £000 | £000 | £000 | £000 | £000 | £000 | ||
| Profit before IFRS 16 | 45,434 | 31,287 | 39,500 | 37,948 | 79,629 | 72,777 | |
| Operating costs | 28,443 | 28,443 | – | – | – | – | |
| Amortisation of right-of-use assets | 25 | (24,425) | (24,425) | – | – | – | – |
| Lease premium amortisation | 192 | 192 | – | – | – | – | |
| Disposal of leases | 3 | 347 | 347 | – | – | – | – |
| Finance costs | 6 | (11,078) | (11,078) | – | – | – | – |
| Finance income | 6 | 225 | 225 | – | – | – | – |
| Income tax expense | 7 | 1,189 | 1,189 | – | – | – | – |
| Profit for the period | 40,327 | 26,180 | 39,500 | 37,948 | 79,629 | 72,777 |
1 Calculated excluding shares held in trust.
2 Calculated using issued share capital which includes shares held in trust.
J D Wetherspoon plc, company number: 1709784
| Notes | Unaudited cash flow |
Unaudited free cash flow1 |
Unaudited cash flow |
Unaudited free cash flow1 |
Audited cash flow |
Audited free cash flow1 |
|
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 26 weeks ended |
26 weeks ended |
26 weeks ended |
26 weeks ended |
52 weeks ended |
52 weeks ended |
||
| 26 January 2020 |
26 January 2020 |
27 January 2019 |
27 January 2019 |
28 July 2019 |
28 July 2019 |
||
| £000 | £000 | £000 | £000 | £000 | £000 | ||
| Cash flows from operating activities | |||||||
| Cash generated from operations | 9 | 131,546 | 131,546 | 133,232 | 133,232 | 227,176 | 227,176 |
| Interest received | 40 | 40 | 20 | 20 | 33 | 33 | |
| Interest paid | (17,027) | (17,027) | (17,556) | (17,556) | (33,957) | (33,957) | |
| Corporation tax paid | (21,480) | (21,480) | (8,539) | (8,539) | (19,661) | (19,661) | |
| Net cash flow from operating activities | 93,079 | 93,079 | 107,157 | 107,157 | 173,591 | 173,591 | |
| Cash flows from investing activities | |||||||
| Purchase of property, plant and equipment | (32,764) | (32,764) | (22,672) | (22,672) | (47,398) | (47,398) | |
| Purchase of intangible assets | (1,768) | (1,768) | (3,413) | (3,413) | (6,923) | (6,923) | |
| Investment in new pubs and pub extensions | (34,773) | (15,214) | (26,778) | ||||
| Freehold reversions and investment properties | (70,633) | (51,902) | (77,207) | ||||
| Lease premiums paid | – | (93) | (451) | ||||
| Proceeds of sale of property, plant and equipment | 4,160 | 5,818 | 9,319 | ||||
| Net cash flow from investing activities | (135,778) | (34,532) | (87,476) | (26,085) | (149,438) | (54,321) | |
| Cash flows from financing activities | |||||||
| Equity dividends paid | 11 | (8,371) | (8,435) | (12,652) | |||
| Purchase of own shares for cancellation | 28 | (6,455) | – | (5,399) | |||
| Purchase of own shares for share-based payments | (9,260) | (9,260) | (8,960) | (8,960) | (16,004) | (16,004) | |
| Loan issue cost | 10 | (321) | (321) | (462) | (462) | (6,268) | (6,268) |
| Advances under private placement | 10 | 98,000 | – | – | |||
| Repayment of bank loans | 10 | (25,000) | (38,863) | (13,865) | |||
| Advances under finance lease | 10 | – | 12,000 | 12,000 | |||
| Finance lease principal payments | 10 | (1,431) | (698) | (2,106) | |||
| Net cash flow from financing activities | 47,162 | (9,581) | (45,418) | (9,422) | (44,294) | (22,272) | |
| Net change in cash and cash equivalents | 10 | 4,463 | (25,737) | (20,141) | |||
| Opening cash and cash equivalents | 19 | 42,950 | 63,091 | 63,091 | |||
| Closing cash and cash equivalents | 19 | 47,413 | 37,354 | 42,950 | |||
| Free cash flow | 8 | 48,966 | 71,650 | 96,998 | |||
| Free cash flow per ordinary share | 8 | 46.7p | 67.9p | 92.0p |
1Free cash flow is a measure not required by accounting standards; a definition is provided in our accounting policies.
J D Wetherspoon plc, company number: 1709784
| Notes | Unaudited | Unaudited | Audited |
|---|---|---|---|
| 26 January 2020 |
27 January 2019 |
28 July 2019 |
|
| £000 | £000 | £000 | |
| Non-current assets | |||
| Property, plant and equipment 13 |
1,458,531 | 1,356,259 | 1,384,971 |
| Intangible assets 12 |
12,378 | 23,313 | 23,070 |
| Investment property 14 |
11,572 | 7,467 | 5,531 |
| Other non-current assets | 7,696 | 7,849 | 7,888 |
| Derivative financial instruments 23 |
– | 11,420 | 321 |
| Deferred tax assets 7 |
9,706 | 4,088 | 8,342 |
| Total non-current assets | 1,499,883 | 1,410,396 | 1,430,123 |
| Current assets | |||
| Assets held for sale 18 |
350 | 3,383 | 3,146 |
| Inventories 16 |
23,453 | 22,769 | 23,717 |
| Receivables | 27,544 | 24,335 | 21,903 |
| Cash and cash equivalents 19 |
47,413 | 37,354 | 42,950 |
| Total current assets | 98,760 | 87,841 | 91,716 |
| Total assets | 1,598,643 | 1,498,237 | 1,521,839 |
| Current liabilities | |||
| Borrowings 21 |
(3,286) | (3,207) | (3,287) |
| Trade and other payables | (314,831) | (320,501) | (308,326) |
| Current income tax liabilities | (1,275) | (11,164) | (10,986) |
| Provisions | (3,116) | (5,499) | (4,072) |
| Total current liabilities | (322,508) | (340,371) | (326,671) |
| Non-current liabilities | |||
| Borrowings 21 |
(848,654) | (758,112) | (776,683) |
| Derivative financial instruments 23 |
(57,096) | (35,465) | (49,393) |
| Deferred tax liabilities 7 |
(38,212) | (38,506) | (39,416) |
| Provisions | (1,659) | (2,453) | (1,934) |
| Other liabilities | (10,607) | (11,235) | (10,930) |
| Total non-current liabilities | (956,228) | (845,771) | (878,356) |
| Net assets | 319,907 | 312,095 | 316,812 |
| Shareholders' equity | |||
| Share capital 28 |
2,094 | 2,110 | 2,102 |
| Share premium account | 143,294 | 143,294 | 143,294 |
| Capital redemption reserve | 2,337 | 2,321 | 2,329 |
| Hedging reserve | (47,390) | (19,957) | (40,730) |
| Currency translation reserve | 1,603 | 3,697 | 5,370 |
| Retained earnings | 217,969 | 180,630 | 204,447 |
| Total shareholders' equity | 319,907 | 312,095 | 316,812 |
| Notes | Unaudited 26 weeks ended 26 January 2020 Before exceptional items £000 |
Unaudited 26 weeks ended 26 January 2020 After exceptional items £000 |
Unaudited 26 weeks ended 27 January 2019 Before exceptional items £000 |
Unaudited 26 weeks ended 27 January 2019 After exceptional items £000 |
Audited 52 weeks ended 28 July 2019 Before exceptional items £000 |
Audited 52 weeks ended 28 July 2019 After exceptional items £000 |
|
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Revenue | 1 | 933,021 | 933,021 | 889,606 | 889,606 | 1,818,793 | 1,818,793 |
| Operating costs | (852,251) | (852,251) | (826,135) | (826,135) | (1,686,876) | (1,686,876) | |
| Operating profit | 2 | 80,770 | 80,770 | 63,471 | 63,471 | 131,917 | 131,917 |
| Property gains | 3 | 175 | 175 | 3,772 | 3,772 | 5,599 | 5,599 |
| Property losses – exceptional | 3 | (15,948) | (1,651) | (7,040) | |||
| Profit before interest and tax | 80,945 | 64,997 | 67,243 | 65,592 | 137,516 | 130,476 | |
| Finance income | 6 | 266 | 266 | 26 | 26 | 41 | 41 |
| Finance costs | 6 | (29,586) | (29,586) | (16,993) | (16,993) | (35,098) | (35,098) |
| Profit before tax | 51,625 | 35,677 | 50,276 | 48,625 | 102,459 | 95,419 | |
| Income tax expense | 7 | (11,298) | (11,298) | (10,776) | (10,776) | (22,830) | (22,830) |
| Income tax expense – exceptional | 7 | 1,801 | 99 | 188 | |||
| Profit for the period | 40,327 | 26,180 | 39,500 | 37,948 | 79,629 | 72,777 | |
| Earnings per ordinary share (p) | |||||||
| – Basic1 | 8 | 39.3 | 25.5 | 38.3 | 36.8 | 77.2 | 70.6 |
| – Diluted2 | 8 | 38.5 | 25.0 | 37.4 | 36.0 | 75.5 | 69.0 |
| Notes | Unaudited 26 weeks ended 26 January |
Unaudited 26 weeks ended 27 January |
Audited 52 weeks ended 28 July |
|
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2020 £000 |
2019 £000 |
2019 £000 |
||
| Items which will be reclassified subsequently to profit or loss: | ||||
| Interest-rate swaps: gain taken to other comprehensive income | 23 | (8,024) | 64 | (24,963) |
| Tax on items taken directly to other comprehensive income | 7 | 1,364 | (11) | 4,243 |
| Currency translation differences | (3,109) | (1,122) | 181 | |
| Net gain recognised directly in other comprehensive income | (9,769) | (1,069) | (20,539) | |
| Profit for the period | 26,180 | 37,948 | 72,777 | |
| Total comprehensive income for the period | 16,411 | 36,879 | 52,238 |
1 Calculated excluding shares held in trust.
2 Calculated using issued share capital which includes shares held in trust.
| Notes | Unaudited cash flow |
Unaudited free cash |
Unaudited cash flow |
Unaudited free cash |
Audited cash flow |
Audited free cash |
|
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 26 weeks | flow1 26 weeks |
26 weeks | flow1 26 weeks |
52 weeks | flow1 52 weeks |
||
| ended | ended | ended | ended | ended | ended | ||
| 26 January 2020 |
26 January 2020 |
27 January 2019 |
27 January 2019 |
28 July 2019 |
28 July 2019 |
||
| Cash flows from operating activities | £000 | £000 | £000 | £000 | £000 | £000 | |
| Cash generated from operations | 9 | 160,036 | 160,036 | 133,232 | 133,232 | 227,176 | 227,176 |
| Interest received | 40 | 40 | 20 | 20 | 33 | 33 | |
| Interest paid | (17,027) | (17,027) | (17,556) | (17,556) | (33,957) | (33,957) | |
| Corporation tax paid | (21,480) | (21,480) | (8,539) | (8,539) | (19,661) | (19,661) | |
| Lease interest | (9,134) | (9,134) | – | – | – | – | |
| Net cash flow from operating activities | 112,435 | 112,435 | 107,157 | 107,157 | 173,591 | 173,591 | |
| Cash flows from investing activities | |||||||
| Purchase of property, plant and equipment | (32,764) | (32,764) | (22,672) | (22,672) | (47,398) | (47,398) | |
| Purchase of intangible assets2 | (1,768) | (1,768) | (3,413) | (3,413) | (6,923) | (6,923) | |
| Investment in new pubs and pub extensions | (34,773) | (15,214) | (26,778) | ||||
| Freehold reversions and investment properties | (70,633) | (51,902) | (77,207) | ||||
| Lease premiums paid | – | (93) | (451) | ||||
| Proceeds of sale of property, plant and equipment | 4,160 | 5,818 | 9,319 | ||||
| Net cash flow from investing activities | (135,778) | (34,532) | (87,476) | (26,085) | (149,438) | (54,321) | |
| Cash flows from financing activities | |||||||
| Equity dividends paid | 11 | (8,371) | (8,435) | (12,652) | |||
| Purchase of own shares for cancellation | 28 | (6,455) | – | (5,399) | |||
| Purchase of own shares for share-based payments | (9,260) | (9,260) | (8,960) | (8,960) | (16,004) | (16,004) | |
| Loan issue cost | 10 | (321) | (321) | (462) | (462) | (6,268) | (6,268) |
| Advances under private placement | 10 | 98,000 | – | – | |||
| Repayment of bank loans | 10 | (25,000) | (38,863) | (13,865) | |||
| Advances under finance lease | 10 | – | 12,000 | 12,000 | |||
| Lease principal payments | 25 | (19,912) | (19,912) | – | – | – | – |
| Lease principal receipts | 25 | 556 | 556 | – | – | – | – |
| Finance lease principal payments | 10 | (1,431) | (698) | (2,106) | |||
| Net cash flow from financing activities | 27,806 | (28,937) | (45,418) | (9,422) | (44,294) | (22,272) | |
| Net change in cash and cash equivalents | 10 | 4,463 | (25,737) | (20,141) | |||
| Opening cash and cash equivalents | 19 | 42,950 | 63,091 | 63,091 | |||
| Closing cash and cash equivalents | 19 | 47,413 | 37,354 | 42,950 | |||
| Free cash flow | 8 | 48,966 | 71,650 | 96,998 | |||
| Free cash flow per ordinary share | 8 | 46.7p | 67.9p | 92.0p |
1 Free cash flow is a measure not required by accounting standards; a definition is provided in our accounting policies.
2 Within reinvestment in business and IT projects, £733,000 were intangible assets (2019: £1,952,000), with the remaining balance being related equipment.
| Notes | Unaudited | Unaudited | Audited | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 26 January 2020 |
27 January 2019 |
28 July 2019 |
||
| £000 | £000 | £000 | ||
| Non-current assets | ||||
| Property, plant and equipment | 13 | 1,458,531 | 1,356,259 | 1,384,971 |
| Intangible assets | 12 | 12,378 | 23,313 | 23,070 |
| Investment property | 14 | 11,572 | 7,467 | 5,531 |
| Other non-current assets | 15 | – | 7,849 | 7,888 |
| Right-of-use assets | 25 | 579,175 | – | – |
| Derivative financial instruments | 23 | – | 11,420 | 321 |
| Deferred tax assets | 7 | 9,706 | 4,088 | 8,342 |
| Lease assets | 25 | 11,319 | – | – |
| Total non-current assets | 2,082,681 | 1,410,396 | 1,430,123 | |
| Current assets | ||||
| Lease assets | 25 | 1,561 | – | – |
| Assets held for sale | 18 | 350 | 3,383 | 3,146 |
| Inventories | 16 | 23,453 | 22,769 | 23,717 |
| Receivables | 17 | 22,391 | 24,335 | 21,903 |
| Cash and cash equivalents | 19 | 47,413 | 37,354 | 42,950 |
| Total current assets | 95,168 | 87,841 | 91,716 | |
| Total assets | 2,177,849 | 1,498,237 | 1,521,839 | |
| Current liabilities | ||||
| Borrowings | 21 | (3,286) | (3,207) | (3,287) |
| Trade and other payables | 20 | (315,773) | (320,501) | (308,326) |
| Current income tax liabilities | (86) | (11,164) | (10,986) | |
| Provisions | 22 | (3,116) | (5,499) | (4,072) |
| Lease liabilities | 25 | (59,328) | – | – |
| Total current liabilities | (381,589) | (340,371) | (326,671) | |
| Non-current liabilities | ||||
| Borrowings | 21 | (848,654) | (758,112) | (776,683) |
| Derivative financial instruments | 23 | (57,096) | (35,465) | (49,393) |
| Deferred tax liabilities | 7 | (38,212) | (38,506) | (39,416) |
| Provisions | 22 | – | (2,453) | (1,934) |
| Other liabilities | 24 | – | (11,235) | (10,930) |
| Lease liabilities | 25 | (537,498) | – | – |
| Total non-current liabilities | (1,481,460) | (845,771) | (878,356) | |
| Net assets | 314,800 | 312,095 | 316,812 | |
| Shareholders' equity | ||||
| Share capital | 28 | 2,094 | 2,110 | 2,102 |
| Share premium account | 143,294 | 143,294 | 143,294 | |
| Capital redemption reserve | 2,337 | 2,321 | 2,329 | |
| Hedging reserve | (47,390) | (19,957) | (40,730) | |
| Currency translation reserve | 1,603 | 3,697 | 5,370 | |
| Retained earnings | 212,862 | 180,630 | 204,447 | |
| Total shareholders' equity | 314,800 | 312,095 | 316,812 |
The financial statements, on pages 10 to 50, approved by the board of directors and authorised for issue on 19 March 2020, are signed on its behalf by:
| John Hutson Director Director |
Ben Whitley |
|---|---|
| Notes | Share capital |
Share premium account |
Capital redemption reserve |
Hedging reserve |
Currency translation reserve |
Retained earnings |
Total | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| £000 | £000 | £000 | £000 | £000 | £000 | £000 | |||
| At 29 July 2018 | 2,110 | 143,294 | 2,321 | (20,010) | 4,767 | 154,080 | 286,562 | ||
| Total comprehensive income | 53 | (1,070) | 37,896 | 36,879 | |||||
| Profit for the period | 37,948 | 37,948 | |||||||
| Interest-rate swaps: cash flow hedges | 23 | 64 | 64 | ||||||
| Tax on items taken directly to comprehensive income | 7 | (11) | (11) | ||||||
| Currency translation differences | (1,070) | (52) | (1,122) | ||||||
| Share-based payment charges | 5,651 | 5,651 | |||||||
| Tax on share-based payment | 7 | 398 | 398 | ||||||
| Purchase of own shares for share-based payments | (8,960) | (8,960) | |||||||
| Dividends | 11 | (8,435) | (8,435) | ||||||
| At 27 January 2019 | 2,110 | 143,294 | 2,321 | (19,957) | 3,697 | 180,630 | 312,095 | ||
| Total comprehensive income | (20,773) | 1,673 | 34,459 | 15,359 | |||||
| Profit for the period | 34,829 | 34,829 | |||||||
| Interest-rate swaps: cash flow hedges | 23 | (25,027) | (25,027) | ||||||
| Tax on items taken directly to comprehensive income | 7 | 4,254 | 4,254 | ||||||
| Currency translation differences | 1,673 | (370) | 1,303 | ||||||
| Purchase of own shares for cancellation | (8) | 8 | (5,399) | (5,399) | |||||
| Share-based payment charges | 5,907 | 5,907 | |||||||
| Tax on share-based payment | 7 | 111 | 111 | ||||||
| Purchase of own shares for share-based payments | (7,044) | (7,044) | |||||||
| Dividends | 11 | (4,217) | (4,217) | ||||||
| At 28 July 2019 | 2,102 | 143,294 | 2,329 | (40,730) | 5,370 | 204,447 | 316,812 | ||
| Total comprehensive income | (6,660) | (3,767) | 26,838 | 16,411 | |||||
| Profit for the period | 26,180 | 26,180 | |||||||
| Interest-rate swaps: cash flow hedges | 23 | (8,024) | (8,024) | ||||||
| Tax on items taken directly to comprehensive income | 7 | 1,364 | 1,364 | ||||||
| Currency translation differences | (3,767) | 658 | (3,109) | ||||||
| Purchase of own shares for cancellation | (8) | 8 | (6,455) | (6,455) | |||||
| Share-based payment charges | 5,543 | 5,543 | |||||||
| Tax on share-based payment | 7 | 120 | 120 | ||||||
| Purchase of own shares for share-based payments Dividends |
11 | (9,260) (8,371) |
(9,260) (8,371) |
||||||
| At 26 January 2020 | 2,094 | 143,294 | 2,337 | (47,390) | 1,603 | 212,862 | 314,800 |
The currency translation reserve contains the accumulated currency gains and losses on the long-term financing and balance sheet translation of the overseas branch. The currency translation difference reported in retained earnings is the restatement of the opening reserves in the overseas branch at the current period end's currency exchange rate.
As at 26 January 2020, the company had distributable reserves of £167.1m.
| Revenue disclosed in the income statement is analysed as follows: | Unaudited | Unaudited | Audited |
|---|---|---|---|
| 26 weeks | 26 weeks | 52 weeks | |
| ended | ended | ended | |
| 26 January | 27 January | 28 July | |
| 2020 | 2019 | 2019 | |
| £000 | £000 | £000 | |
| Bar | 559,426 | 538,082 | 1,094,001 |
| Food | 337,241 | 319,015 | 656,955 |
| Slot/fruit machines | 26,080 | 21,981 | 46,404 |
| Hotel | 9,468 | 9,596 | 19,699 |
| Other | 806 | 932 | 1,734 |
| 933,021 | 889,606 | 1,818,793 |
| This is stated after charging/(crediting): | Unaudited 26 weeks ended 26 January 2020 £000 |
Unaudited 26 weeks ended 27 January 2019 £000 |
Audited 52 weeks ended 28 July 2019 £000 |
|---|---|---|---|
| Concession rental payments | – | 14,737 | 32,086 |
| Minimum operating lease payments | – | 20,271 | 38,241 |
| Variable concession rental payments | 4,293 | – | – |
| Short leases | 108 | – | – |
| Repairs and maintenance | 46,112 | 35,937 | 76,879 |
| Net rent receivable | (841) | (678) | (1,545) |
| Share-based payments (note 5) | 5,543 | 5,651 | 11,558 |
| Depreciation of property, plant and equipment (note 13) | 37,718 | 36,825 | 73,779 |
| Amortisation of intangible assets (note 12) | 1,925 | 3,847 | 7,634 |
| Depreciation of investment properties (note 14) | 34 | 27 | 55 |
| Amortisation of right-of-use assets (note 25) | 24,425 | – | – |
| Amortisation of other non-current assets (note 15) | – | 169 | 343 |
| Analysis of continuing operations | Unaudited | Unaudited | Audited |
|---|---|---|---|
| 26 weeks | 26 weeks | 52 weeks | |
| ended | ended | ended | |
| 26 January | 27 January | 28 July | |
| 2020 | 2019 | 2019 | |
| £000 | £000 | £000 | |
| Revenue | 933,021 | 889,606 | 1,818,793 |
| Cost of sales | (828,189) | (802,911) | (1,639,378) |
| Gross profit | 104,832 | 86,695 | 179,415 |
| Administration costs | (24,062) | (23,224) | (47,498) |
| Operating profit after exceptional items | 80,770 | 63,471 | 131,917 |
Included within cost of sales is £325.9m (2019: £315.3m) relating to cost of inventory recognised as expense.
| Unaudited 26 weeks ended 26 January 2020 £000 |
Unaudited 26 weeks ended 27 January 2019 £000 |
Audited 52 weeks ended 28 July 2019 £000 |
|
|---|---|---|---|
| Non-exceptional property (gains)/losses | |||
| Disposal of fixed assets | (90) | (3,634) | (4,650) |
| Additional costs of disposal | 217 | 196 | 230 |
| Disposal of leases | (347) | – | – |
| Other property gains | 45 | (334) | (1,179) |
| (175) | (3,772) | (5,599) | |
| Exceptional property losses (note 4) | |||
| Disposal of fixed assets | 3,003 | 16 | 1,015 |
| Additional costs of disposal | 619 | 306 | 568 |
| Impairment of property, plant and equipment | 2,786 | 806 | 3,550 |
| Impairment of intangible assets | 9,540 | – | – |
| Impairment of other non-current assets | – | – | 145 |
| Onerous lease provision | – | 523 | 1,762 |
| 15,948 | 1,651 | 7,040 | |
| Total property losses | 15,773 | (2,121) | 1,441 |
The gain of £347,000 relates to the purchase of the freeholds of former leasehold sites. As a result, the right-of-use asset and lease liability are derecognised. Under IFRS 16, the purchasing of freehold results in a gain, as the income statement is charged in advance of the cash payments. Without this gain, a non-exceptional loss of £172,000 would have been reported.
fdfdfds
| Unaudited 26 weeks ended 26 January 2020 £000 |
Unaudited 26 weeks ended 27 January 2019 £000 |
Audited 52 weeks ended 28 July 2019 £000 |
|
|---|---|---|---|
| Exceptional property losses | |||
| Disposal programme | |||
| Loss on disposal of pubs | 3,622 | 322 | 1,583 |
| Impairment of property plant and equipment | 1,496 | 806 | 1,298 |
| Impairment of other non-current assets | – | – | 93 |
| Onerous lease provision | – | 158 | 1,134 |
| 5,118 | 1,286 | 4,108 | |
| Other property losses | |||
| Impairment of property, plant and equipment | 1,290 | – | 2,252 |
| Impairment of intangible assets | 9,540 | – | – |
| Impairment of other non-current assets | – | – | 52 |
| Onerous lease provision | – | 365 | 628 |
| 10,830 | 365 | 2,932 | |
| Total exceptional property losses | 15,948 | 1,651 | 7,040 |
| Exceptional tax | |||
| Tax effect on exceptional items (note 7) | (1,801) | (99) | (188) |
| (1,801) | (99) | (188) | |
| Total exceptional items | 14,147 | 1,552 | 6,852 |
The company has offered several of its sites for sale. During the half year, a further six (2019: two) sites had been disposed of and one (2019: two) was classified as held for sale. In the table above, the costs classified as loss on disposal are the losses on sold sites and associated costs to sale.
The company has reviewed its approach to capitalising costs in the early stages of a pub's development. In future, some initial costs will be expensed to the income statement. The property impairment charge of £1,290,000 relates to similar costs held on the balance sheet at the start of the year.
During the period, the company reviewed its accounting for the development and implementation of information systems. As a result of this review, it is the company's assessment that it will not achieve the future economic benefit from some of these assets which it had previously anticipated. The impairment charge of £9,540,000 reduces the useful economic life of these assets to reflect the company's view of future economic benefits which will be achieved.
The exceptional items listed above have generated a net cash inflow of £2,041,000 (2019: outflow of £694,000).
| Unaudited | Unaudited | Audited | |
|---|---|---|---|
| 26 weeks | 26 weeks | 52 weeks | |
| ended | ended | ended | |
| 26 January | 27 January | 28 July | |
| 2020 | 2019 | 2019 | |
| £000 | £000 | £000 | |
| Wages and salaries | 299,199 | 275,829 | 568,758 |
| Social Security costs | 18,077 | 17,280 | 35,783 |
| Other pension costs | 4,324 | 3,001 | 6,912 |
| Share-based payments | 5,543 | 5,651 | 11,558 |
| 327,143 | 301,761 | 623,011 |
The totals below relate to the monthly average number of employees during the period, not the total number of employees at the end of the year (including directors on a service contract).
| Unaudited | Unaudited | Audited | |
|---|---|---|---|
| 26 January | 27 January | 28 July | |
| 2020 | 2019 | 2019 | |
| Number | Number | Number | |
| Full-time equivalents | |||
| Managerial/administration | 4,594 | 4,419 | 4,442 |
| Hourly paid staff | 21,647 | 20,825 | 21,035 |
| 26,241 | 25,244 | 25,477 | |
| 26 January | 27 January | 28 July | |
| 2020 | 2019 | 2019 | |
| Number | Number | Number | |
| Total employees | |||
| Managerial/administration | 4,687 | 4,518 | 4,541 |
| Hourly paid staff | 38,517 | 36,863 | 37,358 |
The shares awarded as part of the share schemes are based on the cash value of the bonuses at the date of the awards. These awards vest over three years – with their cost spread over their three-year life. The share-based payment charge above represents the annual cost of bonuses awarded over the past three years. All awards are settled in equity.
The company operates two share-based compensation plans. In both schemes, the fair values of the shares granted are determined by reference to the share price at the date of the award. The shares vest at a £Nil exercise price – and there are no market-based conditions to the shares which affect their ability to vest.
| Share-based payments | Unaudited | Unaudited | Audited |
|---|---|---|---|
| 26 weeks | 26 weeks | 52 weeks | |
| ended | ended | ended | |
| 26 January | 27 January | 28 July | |
| 2020 | 2019 | 2019 | |
| Shares awarded during the year (shares) | 568,821 | 802,069 | 1,390,290 |
| Average price of shares awarded (pence) | 1,542 | 1,303 | 1,313 |
| Market value of shares vested during the year (£000) | 9,774 | 14,199 | 17,173 |
fdfdfds
| Unaudited 26 weeks ended 26 January 2020 £000 |
Unaudited 26 weeks ended 27 January 2019 £000 |
Audited 52 weeks ended 28 July 2019 £000 |
|
|---|---|---|---|
| Finance costs | |||
| Interest payable on bank loans and overdrafts | 9,738 | 10,504 | 21,089 |
| Amortisation of bank loan issue costs (note 10) | 722 | 58 | 925 |
| Interest payable on swaps | 6,561 | 6,287 | 12,705 |
| Interest payable on obligations under finance leases | 207 | 144 | 379 |
| Interest payable on private placement | 1,280 | – | – |
| Finance costs excluding lease interest | 18,508 | 16,993 | 35,098 |
| Interest payable on leases | 11,078 | – | – |
| Total finance costs | 29,586 | 16,993 | 35,098 |
| Bank interest receivable | (41) | (26) | (41) |
| Lease interest receivable | (225) | – | – |
| Total finance income | (266) | (26) | (41) |
The finance costs in the income statement were covered 2.8 times by earnings before interest, tax and exceptional items. On a pre-IFRS 16 basis, the finance costs in the income statement were covered 4.1 times (2019: 4.0 times) by earnings before interest, tax and exceptional items.
At the balance sheet date, the standard rate of corporation tax in the UK was scheduled to change from 19.0% to 17.0%, with effect from 1 April 2020. Accordingly, the company's profits for this accounting period are taxed at the weighted average rate of 18.33% (2019: 19.00%).
On 11 March 2020, the chancellor presented the UK budget announcement and confirmed that the rate of corporation tax would remain at 19% from 1 April 2020. This is expected to be substantively enacted by the year-end balance sheet date.
As a result of this post balance sheet announcement, the prevailing tax rate used to calculate the income and deferred tax liabilities for the year ended 26 July 2020 will be 19%, instead of 18.33% used in the half-year results. Furthermore, the deferred tax balances will be recalculated at the year end to 19%; it is anticipated that this will result in a rate-change adjustment of approximately £3.4m.
| Unaudited | Unaudited | Audited | |
|---|---|---|---|
| 26 weeks ended |
26 weeks ended |
52 weeks ended |
|
| 26 January | 27 January | 28 July | |
| 2020 | 2019 | 2019 | |
| Income tax before exceptional items | £000 | £000 | £000 |
| Current income tax: | |||
| Current income tax charge | 13,556 | 11,802 | 23,406 |
| Current income tax – impact of IFRS 16 | (1,189) | – | – |
| Previous period adjustment | (18) | (415) | (922) |
| Total current income tax | 12,349 | 11,387 | 22,484 |
| Deferred tax: | |||
| Temporary differences | (1,051) | (452) | 2,174 |
| Previous period adjustment | – | (159) | (1,828) |
| Total deferred tax | (1,051) | (611) | 346 |
| Total tax expense before exceptional items | 11,298 | 10,776 | 22,830 |
| Exceptional income tax | |||
| Current income tax: | |||
| Current income tax charge | (1,509) | (99) | (273) |
| Total current income tax | (1,509) | (99) | (273) |
| Deferred tax: | |||
| Temporary differences | (292) | – | 85 |
| Total deferred tax | (292) | – | 85 |
| Total exceptional income tax | (1,801) | (99) | (188) |
| Tax charge in the income statement | 9,497 | 10,677 | 22,642 |
| Unaudited | Unaudited | Audited | |
| 26 weeks | 26 weeks | 52 weeks | |
| ended | ended | ended | |
| 26 January 2020 |
27 January 2019 |
28 July 2019 |
|
| Taken through equity | £000 | £000 | £000 |
| Current tax on share-based payment | (259) | (536) | (514) |
| Deferred tax on share-based payment | 139 | 138 | 5 |
| Tax credit | (120) | (398) | (509) |
| Unaudited 26 weeks |
Unaudited 26 weeks |
Audited 52 weeks |
|
| ended | ended | ended | |
| 26 January | 27 January | 28 July | |
| Taken through comprehensive income | 2020 £000 |
2019 £000 |
2019 £000 |
| Deferred tax on swaps | (1,364) | 11 | (4,243) |
The impact on the tax charge of the introduction of IFRS 16 is shown in the table above. There was no impact on deferred tax, as all amounts resulting for the adoption of IFRS 16 charged to the income statement were fully allowable.
fdfdfds
The taxation charge for the 26 weeks ended 26 January 2020 is based on the pre-exceptional profit before tax of £51.6m and the estimated effective tax rate before exceptional items for the 26 weeks ended 26 January 2020 of 21.9% (2019: 21.4%). This comprises a pre-exceptional current tax rate of 23.9% (2019: 22.6%) and a pre-exceptional deferred tax credit of 2.0% (2019: 1.2%).
The UK standard weighted average tax rate for the period is 18.33% (2019: 19.00%). The current tax rate is higher than the UK standard weighted average tax rate owing mainly to depreciation which is not eligible for tax relief.
| Unaudited 26 weeks |
Unaudited 26 weeks |
Audited 52 weeks |
|
|---|---|---|---|
| ended | ended | ended | |
| 26 January | 27 January | 28 July | |
| 2020 £000 |
2019 £000 |
2019 £000 |
|
| Profit before income tax | 51,625 | 50,276 | 102,459 |
| Profit multiplied by the UK standard rate of | 9,463 | 9,552 | 19,467 |
| corporation tax of 18.33% (2019: 19.00%) | |||
| Abortive acquisition costs and disposals | 95 | 77 | 85 |
| Other disallowables | (357) | 167 | 384 |
| Other allowable deductions | (33) | (24) | (111) |
| Capital gains – effects of reliefs | 150 | 695 | (380) |
| Non-qualifying depreciation | 1,442 | 731 | 2,487 |
| Deduction for shares and SIPs | 41 | 43 | (449) |
| Remeasurement of other balance sheet items | (23) | (47) | (71) |
| Unrecognised losses in overseas companies | 539 | 155 | 557 |
| Unrecognised losses capital losses | – | – | 3,611 |
| Previous year adjustment – current tax | (19) | (414) | (922) |
| Previous year adjustment – deferred tax | – | (159) | (1,828) |
| Total tax expense before exceptional items | 11,298 | 10,776 | 22,830 |
| Exceptional profit before income tax | (15,948) | (1,651) | (7,040) |
| Profit multiplied by the UK standard rate of | (2,923) | (314) | (1,337) |
| corporation tax of 18.33% (2019: 19.00%) | |||
| Other disallowables | 555 | 61 | 183 |
| Capital gains – effects of reliefs | – | – | 85 |
| Non-qualifying depreciation | 567 | 154 | 881 |
| Total tax expense on exceptional items | (1,801) | (99) | (188) |
| Total tax expense reported in the income statement | 9,497 | 10,677 | 22,642 |
The deferred tax in the balance sheet is as follows:
| Deferred tax liabilities | Accelerated tax depreciation |
Other temporary |
Total |
|---|---|---|---|
| £000 | differences £000 |
£000 | |
| At 28 July 2019 | 36,799 | 4,255 | 41,054 |
| Previous year movement posted to the income statement | – | – | – |
| Movement during year posted to the income statement | (1,778) | (3) | (1,781) |
| Impact of tax rate change posted to the income statement | – | – | – |
| At 26 January 2020 | 35,021 | 4,252 | 39,273 |
| Deferred tax assets | Share based payments £000 |
Interest-rate swaps £000 |
Total £000 |
| At 28 July 2019 | 1,638 | 8,342 | 9,980 |
| Previous year movement posted to the income statement | – | – | – |
| Movement during year posted to the income statement | (438) | – | (438) |
| Movement during year posted to comprehensive income | – | 1,364 | 1,364 |
| Movement during year posted to equity | (139) | – | (139) |
| At 26 January 2020 | 1,061 | 9,706 | 10,767 |
Deferred tax assets and liabilities have been offset as follows:
| Unaudited | Unaudited | Audited | |
|---|---|---|---|
| 26 weeks | 26 weeks | 52 weeks | |
| ended | ended | ended | |
| 26 January | 27 January | 28 July | |
| 2020 | 2019 | 2019 | |
| £000 | £000 | £000 | |
| Deferred tax liabilities | 39,273 | 43,246 | 41,054 |
| Offset against deferred tax assets | (1,061) | (4,740) | (1,638) |
| Deferred tax liabilities | 38,212 | 38,506 | 39,416 |
| Deferred tax assets | 10,767 | 8,828 | 9,980 |
| Offset against deferred tax liabilities | (1,061) | (4,740) | (1,638) |
| Deferred tax asset | 9,706 | 4,088 | 8,342 |
As at 26 January 2020, the company had a potential deferred tax asset of £3.9m relating to capital losses. A deferred tax asset has not been recognised, as there is not sufficient certainty of recovery.
fdfdfds
Earnings per share are based on the weighted average number of shares in issue of 104,810,288 (2019: 105,501,035), including those held in trust in respect of employee share schemes. Earnings per share, calculated on this basis, are usually referred to as 'diluted', since all of the shares in issue are included.
Accounting standards refer to 'basic earnings' per share – these exclude those shares held in trust in respect of employee share schemes.
| Weighted average number of shares | Unaudited | Unaudited | Audited |
|---|---|---|---|
| 26 weeks | 26 weeks | 52 weeks | |
| ended | ended | ended | |
| 26 January | 27 January | 28 July | |
| 2020 | 2019 | 2019 | |
| Shares in issue (used for diluted EPS) | 104,810,288 | 105,501,035 | 105,439,345 |
| Shares held in trust | (2,143,674) | (2,248,342) | (2,313,464) |
| Shares in issue less shares held in trust (used for basic EPS) | 102,666,614 | 103,252,693 | 103,125,881 |
The weighted average number of shares held in trust for employee share schemes has been adjusted to exclude those shares which have vested, yet remain in trust.
| 26 weeks ended 26 January 2020 unaudited | Profit | Basic EPS | Diluted EPS |
|---|---|---|---|
| £000 | pence | pence | |
| Earnings before IFRS 16 | 31,287 | 30.5 | 29.8 |
| Impact of IFRS 16 | (5,107) | (5.0) | (4.8) |
| Earnings (profit after tax) | 26,180 | 25.5 | 25.0 |
| Exclude effect of exceptional items after tax | 14,147 | 13.8 | 13.5 |
| Earnings before exceptional items | 40,327 | 39.3 | 38.5 |
| Impact of IFRS 16 | 5,107 | 5.0 | 4.8 |
| Earnings before exceptional items and IFRS 16 | 45,434 | 44.3 | 43.3 |
| Exclude effect of property gains/(losses) | 172 | 0.1 | 0.2 |
| Underlying earnings before exceptional items | 45,606 | 44.4 | 43.5 |
| 26 weeks ended 27 January 2019 unaudited | Profit | Basic EPS | Diluted EPS |
|---|---|---|---|
| £000 | pence | pence | |
| Earnings (profit after tax) | 37,948 | 36.8 | 36.0 |
| Exclude effect of exceptional items after tax | 1,552 | 1.5 | 1.4 |
| Earnings before exceptional items | 39,500 | 38.3 | 37.4 |
| Exclude effect of property gains/(losses) | (3,772) | (3.7) | (3.5) |
| Underlying earnings before exceptional items | 35,728 | 34.6 | 33.9 |
| 52 weeks ended 28 July 2019 audited | Profit | Basic EPS | Diluted EPS |
|---|---|---|---|
| £000 | pence | pence | |
| Earnings (profit after tax) | 72,777 | 70.6 | 69.0 |
| Exclude effect of exceptional items after tax | 6,852 | 6.6 | 6.5 |
| Earnings before exceptional items | 79,629 | 77.2 | 75.5 |
| Exclude effect of property gains/(losses) | (5,599) | (5.4) | (5.3) |
| Underlying earnings before exceptional items | 74,030 | 71.8 | 70.2 |
The calculation of free cash flow per share is based on the net cash generated by business activities and available for investment in new pub developments and extensions to current pubs, after funding interest, corporation tax, all other reinvestment in pubs open at the start of the period and the purchase of own shares under the employee Share Incentive Plan ('free cash flow'). It is calculated before taking account of proceeds from property disposals, inflows and outflows of financing from outside sources and dividend payments and is based on the weighted average number of shares in issue, including those held in trust in respect of the employee share schemes.
| Free cash flow |
Basic free cash flow per share |
Diluted free cash flow per share |
|
|---|---|---|---|
| £000 | pence | pence | |
| 26 weeks ended 26 January 2020 | 48,966 | 47.7 | 46.7 |
| 26 weeks ended 27 January 2019 | 71,650 | 69.4 | 67.9 |
| 52 weeks ended 28 July 2019 | 96,998 | 94.1 | 92.0 |
Owners' earnings measure the earnings attributable to shareholders from current activities, adjusted for significant non-cash items and one-off items. Owners' earnings are calculated as profit before tax, exceptional items, depreciation and amortisation, lease interest and property gains and losses less reinvestment in current properties, payment of operating leases and cash tax. Cash tax is defined as the current year's current tax charge.
| 26 weeks ended 26 January 2020 unaudited | Owners' Earnings £000 |
Basic Owners' EPS pence |
Diluted Owners' EPS pence |
|---|---|---|---|
| Profit before tax and exceptional items (income statement) | 51,625 | 50.3 | 49.3 |
| Exclude depreciation and amortisation (note 2) | 64,102 | 62.4 | 61.2 |
| Exclude lease interest (note 6) | 10,853 | 10.6 | 10.4 |
| Less cash reinvestment in current properties | (29,350) | (28.6) | (28.0) |
| Exclude property gains and losses (note 3) | (175) | (0.2) | (0.2) |
| Less lease interest | (9,134) | (8.9) | (8.7) |
| Less lease principal payment | (19,356) | (18.9) | (18.6) |
| Less cash tax (note 7) | (12,367) | (12.0) | (11.8) |
| Owners' earnings | 56,198 | 54.7 | 53.6 |
| 26 weeks ended 27 January 2019 unaudited | Owners' Earnings £000 |
Basic Owners' EPS pence |
Diluted Owners' EPS pence |
|---|---|---|---|
| Profit before tax and exceptional items (income statement) | 50,276 | 48.7 | 47.7 |
| Exclude depreciation and amortisation (note 2) | 40,868 | 39.6 | 38.7 |
| Less cash reinvestment in current properties | (24,919) | (24.1) | (23.6) |
| Exclude property gains and losses (note 3) | (3,772) | (3.7) | (3.5) |
| Less cash tax (note 7) | (11,802) | (11.4) | (11.3) |
| Owners' earnings | 50,651 | 49.1 | 48.0 |
| 52 weeks ended 28 July 2019 audited | Owners' Earnings £000 |
Basic Owners' EPS pence |
Diluted Owners' EPS pence |
|---|---|---|---|
| Profit before tax and exceptional items (income statement) | 102,459 | 99.4 | 97.2 |
| Exclude depreciation and amortisation (note 2) | 81,811 | 79.3 | 77.6 |
| Less cash reinvestment in current properties | (55,239) | (53.6) | (52.4) |
| Exclude property gains and losses (note 3) | (5,599) | (5.4) | (5.3) |
| Less cash tax (note 7) | (23,406) | (22.7) | (22.2) |
| Owners' earnings | 100,026 | 97.0 | 94.9 |
| Analysis of additions by type | Unaudited | Unaudited | Audited |
|---|---|---|---|
| 26 weeks | 26 weeks | 52 weeks | |
| ended | ended | ended | |
| 26 January | 27 January | 28 July | |
| 2020 | 2019 | 2019 | |
| Reinvestment in existing pubs | 34,124 | 24,919 | 55,239 |
| Investment in new pubs and pub extensions | 23,679 | 14,934 | 35,172 |
| Freehold reversions and investment properties | 70,732 | 55,653 | 77,207 |
| 128,535 | 95,506 | 167,618 |
| Analysis of additions by category | Unaudited | Unaudited | Audited |
|---|---|---|---|
| 26 weeks | 26 weeks | 52 weeks | |
| ended | ended | ended | |
| 26 January | 27 January | 28 July | |
| 2020 | 2019 | 2019 | |
| Property, plant and equipment (note 13) | 121,687 | 93,032 | 161,242 |
| Intangible assets (note 12) | 773 | 2,381 | 5,925 |
| Investment properties (note 14) | 6,075 | – | – |
| Other non-current assets (note 15) | – | 93 | 451 |
| 128,535 | 95,506 | 167,618 |
fdfdfds
| Operating profit |
Basic operating profit per share |
Diluted operating profit per share |
|
|---|---|---|---|
| £000 | pence | pence | |
| 26 weeks ended 26 January 2020 | 76,560 | 74.6 | 73.0 |
| 26 weeks ended 27 January 2019 | 63,471 | 61.5 | 60.2 |
| 52 weeks ended 28 July 2019 | 131,917 | 127.9 | 125.1 |
Operating profit in the table above excludes the impact of IFRS 16.
| Unaudited* | Unaudited | Unaudited | Audited | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 26 weeks | 26 weeks | 26 weeks | 52 weeks | |
| ended 26 January |
ended 26 January |
ended 27 January |
ended 28 July |
|
| 2020 | 2020 | 2019 | 2019 | |
| £000 | £000 | £000 | £000 | |
| Profit for the period | 31,287 | 26,180 | 37,948 | 72,777 |
| Adjusted for: | ||||
| Tax (note 7) | 10,686 | 9,497 | 10,677 | 22,642 |
| Share-based charges (note 2) | 5,543 | 5,543 | 5,651 | 11,558 |
| Loss on disposal of property, plant and equipment (note 3) | 2,913 | 2,913 | (3,618) | (3,635) |
| Disposal of capitalised leases (note 3) | – | (347) | – | – |
| Net onerous lease provision (note 3) | – | – | 523 | 1,762 |
| Net impairment charge (note 3) | 12,326 | 12,326 | 806 | 3,695 |
| Interest receivable (note 6) | (41) | (41) | (26) | (41) |
| Interest payable (note 6) | 17,786 | 17,786 | 16,935 | 34,173 |
| Lease interest receivable (note 6) | – | (225) | – | – |
| Lease interest payable (note 6) | – | 11,078 | – | – |
| Amortisation of bank loan issue costs (note 6) | 722 | 722 | 58 | 925 |
| Depreciation of property, plant and equipment (note 13) | 37,718 | 37,718 | 36,825 | 73,779 |
| Amortisation of intangible assets (note 12) | 1,925 | 1,925 | 3,847 | 7,634 |
| Depreciation on investment properties (note 14) | 34 | 34 | 27 | 55 |
| Amortisation of other non-current assets (note 15) | 192 | – | 169 | 343 |
| Aborted properties costs | 33 | 33 | 407 | 430 |
| Amortisation of right-of-use assets (note 25) | – | 24,425 | – | – |
| 121,124 | 149,567 | 110,229 | 226,097 | |
| Change in inventories | 264 | 264 | 531 | (417) |
| Change in receivables | (5,801) | (6,341) | (1,206) | 1,228 |
| Change in payables | 15,959 | 16,546 | 23,678 | 268 |
| Cash flow from operating activities | 131,546 | 160,036 | 133,232 | 227,176 |
*This column shows the cash generated from operations as it would have been reported, before the introduction for IFRS 16. The amount of £131,546,000 shown is presented at the start of the pre-IFRS 16 cash flow presented within the primary statements.
The difference of £28,490,000 between the cash flow from operating activities of £160,036,000 and the pre-IFRS 16 number of £131,546,000 is formed from the net payments on leases accounted for under IFRS 16, as disclosed in note 25 of payments made of £29,232,000, less payments received of £742,000. These payments are deducted on the cash flow statement, resulting in a change in cash and cash equivalents and free cash flow being the same before and after the introduction of IFRS 16.
fdfdfds
| 28 July 2019 £000 |
IFRS migration £000 |
Cash flows £000 |
Non-cash movement £000 |
26 January 2020 £000 |
|
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Borrowings | |||||
| Cash in hand | 42,950 | – | 4,463 | – | 47,413 |
| Finance lease creditor – due before one year | (3,287) | – | 1,431 | (1,430) | (3,286) |
| Current net borrowings | 39,663 | – | 5,894 | (1,430) | 44,127 |
| Bank loans – due after one year | (770,076) | – | 25,000 | (702) | (745,778) |
| Finance lease creditor – due after one year | (6,607) | – | – | 1,430 | (5,177) |
| Private placement – due after one year | – | – | (97,679) | (20) | (97,699) |
| Non-current net borrowings | (776,683) | – | (72,679) | 708 | (848,654) |
| Net debt | (737,020) | – | (66,785) | (722) | (804,527) |
| Derivatives | |||||
| Interest-rate swaps asset – due after one year | 321 | – | – | (321) | – |
| Interest-rate swaps liability – due after one year | (49,393) | – | – | (7,703) | (57,096) |
| Total derivatives | (49,072) | – | – | (8,024) | (57,096) |
| Net debt after derivatives | (786,092) | – | (66,785) | (8,746) | (861,623) |
| Operating leases | |||||
| Operating lease assets – due before one year | – | 1,583 | (556) | 534 | 1,561 |
| Operating lease assets – due after one year | – | 11,853 | – | (534) | 11,319 |
| Operating lease obligations – due before one year | – | (61,252) | 19,912 | (17,988) | (59,328) |
| Operating lease obligations – due after one year | – | (570,052) | – | 32,554 | (537,498) |
| Net lease liabilities | – | (617,868) | 19,356 | 14,566 | (583,946) |
| Net debt after derivatives and lease liabilities | (786,092) | (617,868) | (47,429) | 5,820 | (1,445,569) |
The cash movement on the private placement is disclosed in the cash flow statement as an advance under private placement of £98,000,000 and a cash payment of loan issue costs of £321,000.
The non-cash movement in bank loans and the private placement relate to the amortisation of loan issue costs. The amortised charge for the year of £722,000 is disclosed in note 6. These are upfront payments made to obtain new borrowings. These costs are charged to the income statement over the expected life of the loan.
The movement in interest-rate swaps relates to the change in the 'mark to market' valuations for the year.
The migration movement of £617,868,000 is the recognition of the lease liability of £631,304,000 and the lease asset of £13,436,000 on adoption of IFRS 16. These amounts are disclosed in note 25. The non-cash movement in lease liabilities is analysed in the table below.
| Non-cash movement in net lease liabilities | Unaudited |
|---|---|
| 26 January | |
| 2020 | |
| £000 | |
| Recognition of new leases (note 25) | (27,361) |
| Remeasurements of existing leases (note 25) | 77 |
| Disposals of lease (note 25) | 41,656 |
| Exchange differences (note 25) | 194 |
| Non-cash movement in net lease liabilities | 14,566 |
The table below calculated a ratio between net debt, being borrowings less cash and cash equivalents, and earnings before interest, tax and deprecation (EBITDA). The numbers in this table are all before the effect of IFRS 16.
| Unaudited | Unaudited | Audited | |
|---|---|---|---|
| 26 weeks | 26 weeks | 52 weeks | |
| ended | ended | ended | |
| 26 January | 27 January | 28 July | |
| 2020 | 2019 | 2019 | |
| £000 | £000 | £000 | |
| Profit before tax (income statement) | 57,921 | 50,276 | 102,459 |
| Interest (note 6) | 18,467 | 16,967 | 35,057 |
| Depreciation and amortisation (note 2) | 39,869 | 40,868 | 81,811 |
| Earnings before interest, tax and depreciation (EBITDA) | 116,257 | 108,111 | 219,327 |
| Rolling EBITDA | |||
| Last full year | 219,327 | 214,496 | – |
| Last half year | (108,111) | (114,100) | – |
| Rolling earnings before interest, tax and depreciation (EBITDA) | 227,473 | 208,507 | 219,327 |
| Net debt/EBITDA | 3.54 | 3.47 | 3.36 |
| Unaudited 26 weeks ended 26 January 2020 £000 |
Unaudited 26 weeks ended 27 January 2019 £000 |
Audited 52 weeks ended 28 July 2019 £000 |
|
|---|---|---|---|
| Paid in the period | |||
| 2018 final dividend | – | 8,435 | 8,435 |
| 2019 interim dividend | – | – | 4,217 |
| 2019 final dividend | 8,371 | – | – |
| 8,371 | 8,435 | 12,652 | |
| Dividends in respect of the period | |||
| Interim dividend | – | 4,217 | 4,217 |
| Final dividend | – | – | 8,371 |
| – | 4,217 | 12,614 | |
| Dividend per share | – | 4p | 12p |
| Dividend cover | 3.1 | 4.5 | 5.8 |
Dividend cover is calculated as profit after tax and exceptional items over dividend paid.
fdfdfds
| Computer software and development |
Assets under construction |
Total | |
|---|---|---|---|
| £000 | £000 | £000 | |
| Cost: | |||
| At 29 July 2018 | 66,944 | 1,799 | 68,743 |
| Additions | 658 | 1,723 | 2,381 |
| Transfers | 165 | (165) | – |
| At 27 January 2019 | 67,767 | 3,357 | 71,124 |
| Additions | 1,075 | 2,469 | 3,544 |
| Transfers | 1,397 | (1,397) | – |
| Disposals | (22) | – | (22) |
| At 28 July 2019 | 70,217 | 4,429 | 74,646 |
| Additions | 7 | 766 | 773 |
| Transfers | 3,857 | (3,857) | – |
| At 26 January 2020 | 74,081 | 1,338 | 75,419 |
| Accumulated amortisation and impairment: | |||
| At 29 July 2018 | (43,964) | – | (43,964) |
| Provided during the period | (3,847) | – | (3,847) |
| At 27 January 2019 | (47,811) | – | (47,811) |
| Provided during the period | (3,787) | – | (3,787) |
| Disposals | 22 | – | 22 |
| At 28 July 2019 | (51,576) | – | (51,576) |
| Provided during the period | (1,925) | – | (1,925) |
| Impairment loss (note 4) | (9,540) | – | (9,540) |
| At 26 January 2020 | (63,041) | – | (63,041) |
| Net book amount at 26 January 2020 | 11,040 | 1,338 | 12,378 |
|---|---|---|---|
| Net book amount at 28 July 2019 | 18,641 | 4,429 | 23,070 |
| Net book amount at 27 January 2019 | 19,956 | 3,357 | 23,313 |
| Net book amount at 29 July 2018 | 22,980 | 1,799 | 24,779 |
The majority of intangible assets relates to computer software and software development. Examples include the development costs of our SAP accounting system, our Wisdom property-maintenance system and the Wetherspoon app.
| Freehold and long-leasehold property £000 |
Short- leasehold property £000 |
Equipment, fixtures and fittings £000 |
Assets under construction £000 |
Total £000 |
|
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cost: | |||||
| At 29 July 2018 | 1,110,875 | 356,160 | 617,800 | 54,202 | 2,139,037 |
| Additions | 40,278 | 1,602 | 14,438 | 36,714 | 93,032 |
| Transfers | 18,461 | 1,034 | 5,107 | (24,602) | – |
| Exchange differences | (367) | (68) | (137) | (595) | (1,167) |
| Transfer to held for sale | (5,450) | – | (600) | – | (6,050) |
| Disposals | (2,122) | (1,975) | (1,754) | – | (5,851) |
| Reclassification | 17,641 | (17,641) | – | – | – |
| At 27 January 2019 | 1,179,316 | 339,112 | 634,854 | 65,719 | 2,219,001 |
| Additions | 35,269 | 827 | 23,776 | 8,338 | 68,210 |
| Transfer from investment properties | 1,984 | – | – | – | 1,984 |
| Transfers | 5,228 | 458 | 209 | (5,895) | – |
| Exchange differences | 593 | 90 | 227 | 889 | 1,799 |
| Transfer to held for sale | 374 | – | (210) | – | 164 |
| Disposals | (5,483) | (1,437) | (2,595) | – | (9,515) |
| Reclassification | 11,891 | (11,891) | – | – | – |
| At 28 July 2019 | 1,229,172 | 327,159 | 656,261 | 69,051 | 2,281,643 |
| Additions | 64,215 | 480 | 15,650 | 41,342 | 121,687 |
| Transfers | 18,826 | 636 | 5,963 | (25,425) | – |
| Exchange differences | (1,426) | (148) | (424) | (1,608) | (3,606) |
| Transfer to held for sale | (1,335) | – | (458) | – | (1,793) |
| Disposals | (4,677) | (3,828) | (4,492) | – | (12,997) |
| Reclassification | 24,914 | (24,914) | – | – | – |
| At 26 January 2020 | 1,329,689 | 299,385 | 672,500 | 83,360 | 2,384,934 |
| Accumulated depreciation and impairment: | |||||
| At 29 July 2018 | (222,037) | (184,575) | (426,352) | – | (832,964) |
| Provided during the period | (9,058) | (6,019) | (21,748) | – | (36,825) |
| Exchange differences | 39 | – | 41 | – | 80 |
| Impairment loss | – | (545) | (261) | – | (806) |
| Transfer to held for sale | 2,067 | – | 600 | – | 2,667 |
| Disposals | 1,459 | 2,000 | 1,647 | – | 5,106 |
| Reclassification | (10,308) | 10,308 | – | – | – |
| At 27 January 2019 | (237,838) | (178,831) | (446,073) | – | (862,742) |
| Provided during the period | (9,213) | (5,714) | (22,027) | – | (36,954) |
| Transfer from investment properties | (76) | – | – | – | (76) |
| Exchange differences | (84) | (18) | (158) | – | (260) |
| Impairment loss | (1,326) | (859) | (559) | – | (2,744) |
| Transfer to held for sale | (4) | – | 77 | – | 73 |
| Disposals | 2,189 | 1,497 | 2,345 | – | 6,031 |
| Reclassification | (7,473) | 7,473 | – | – | – |
| At 28 July 2019 | (253,825) | (176,452) | (466,395) | – | (896,672) |
| Provided during the period | (9,697) | (5,501) | (22,520) | – | (37,718) |
| Exchange differences | 122 | (40) | 178 | – | 260 |
| Impairment loss | (495) | (682) | (1,609) | – | (2,786) |
| Transfer to held for sale | 1,028 | – | 415 | – | 1,443 |
| Disposals | 1,030 | 3,841 | 4,199 | – | 9,070 |
| Reclassification | (14,860) | 14,860 | – | – | – |
| At 26 January 2020 | (276,697) | (163,974) | (485,732) | – | (926,403) |
| Net book amount at 26 January 2020 | 1,052,992 | 135,411 | 186,768 | 83,360 | 1,458,531 |
| Net book amount at 28 July 2019 | 975,347 | 150,707 | 189,866 | 69,051 | 1,384,971 |
| Net book amount at 27 January 2019 | 941,478 | 160,281 | 188,781 | 65,719 | 1,356,259 |
| Net book amount at 29 July 2018 | 888,838 | 171,585 | 191,448 | 54,202 | 1,306,073 |
fdfdfds
The company owns three (2019: two) freehold property with existing tenants – and these assets have been classified as investment properties. Last year, the company started developing one of its investment properties into a pub. The property was transferred to property, plant and equipment. During this year, the company has purchased a further two investment properties.
| £000 | |
|---|---|
| Cost: | |
| At 29 July 2018 | 7,751 |
| At 27 January 2019 | 7,751 |
| Transfer to property, plant and equipment | (1,984) |
| At 28 July 2019 | 5,767 |
| Additions | 6,075 |
| At 26 January 2020 | 11,842 |
| Accumulated depreciation and impairment: | |
| At 29 July 2018 | (257) |
| Provided during the period | (27) |
| At 27 January 2019 | (284) |
| Provided during the period | (28) |
| Transfer to property, plant and equipment | 76 |
| At 28 July 2019 | (236) |
| Net book amount at 26 January 2020 | 11,572 |
|---|---|
| Net book amount at 28 July 2019 | 5,531 |
Net book amount at 27 January 2019 7,467
Provided during the period (34) At 26 January 2020 (270)
Net book amount at 29 July 2018 7,494
Rental income received in the period from the current investment properties was £326,000 (2019: £157,000). Operating costs, excluding depreciation, incurred in relation to these properties amounted to £2,000 (2019: £4,000).
In the opinion of the directors, the fair value of the investment properties is approximately £18,000,000.
| £000 | |
|---|---|
| Cost: | |
| At 29 July 2018 | 12,727 |
| Additions | 93 |
| At 27 January 2019 | 12,820 |
| Additions | 358 |
| Disposals | (75) |
| At 28 July 2019 | 13,103 |
| Transferred to right-of-use assets | (13,103) |
| At 26 January 2020 | – |
| Accumulated amortisation and impairment: | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| ------------------------------------------ | -- | -- | -- | -- | -- |
| At 29 July 2018 | (4,802) |
|---|---|
| Provided during the period | (169) |
| At 27 January 2019 | (4,971) |
| Provided during the period | (174) |
| Impairment loss | (145) |
| Disposals | 75 |
| At 28 July 2019 | (5,215) |
| Transferred to right-of-use assets | 5,215 |
| At 26 January 2020 | – |
| Net book amount at 26 January 2020 | – |
|---|---|
| Net book amount at 28 July 2019 | 7,888 |
| Net book amount at 27 January 2019 | 7,849 |
| Net book amount at 29 July 2018 | 7,925 |
Other non-current assets are leases premiums, paid on leasehold properties. Please see note 25 for all IFRS 16 migration adjustments.
Bar, food and non-consumable stock held at our pubs and national distribution centre.
| Unaudited | Unaudited | Audited | |
|---|---|---|---|
| 26 January | 27 January | 28 July | |
| 2020 | 2019 | 2019 | |
| £000 | £000 | £000 | |
| Goods for resale at cost | 23,453 | 22,769 | 23,717 |
fdfdfds
This category relates to situations in which third parties owe the company money. Examples include rebates from suppliers and overpayments of certain taxes.
Prepayments relate to payments which have been made in respect of liabilities after the period's end.
| Unaudited | Unaudited | Audited | |
|---|---|---|---|
| 26 January | 27 January | 28 July | |
| 2020 | 2019 | 2019 | |
| £000 | £000 | £000 | |
| Other receivables | 1,810 | 1,054 | 1,135 |
| Receivables loss allowance | – | (22) | (8) |
| Accrued income | 1,777 | 1,593 | 2,327 |
| Prepayments | 18,804 | 21,710 | 18,449 |
| 22,391 | 24,335 | 21,903 |
Accrued income relates to discounts which are calculated based on certain products being delivered at an agreed rate per item.
| Credit risk | Unaudited | Unaudited | Audited |
|---|---|---|---|
| 26 January | 27 January | 28 July | |
| 2020 | 2019 | 2019 | |
| £000 | £000 | £000 | |
| Due from suppliers – not due | 1,451 | 996 | 898 |
| Due from suppliers – overdue | 359 | 58 | 237 |
| 1,810 | 1,054 | 1,135 |
Credit risk is the risk that a counterparty does not settle its financial obligation with the company. At the year end, the company has assessed the credit risk on amounts due from suppliers, based on historic experience, meaning that the expected lifetime credit loss was £Nil. Cash and cash equivalents are also subject to the impairment requirements of IFRS 9 – the identified impairment loss was immaterial.
These relate to situations in which the company has exchanged contracts to sell a property, but the transaction is not yet complete. As at 26 January 2020, one site was classified as held for sale (2019: two).
| Unaudited | Unaudited | Audited | |
|---|---|---|---|
| 26 January | 27 January | 28 July | |
| 2020 | 2019 | 2019 | |
| £000 | £000 | £000 | |
| Property, plant and equipment | 350 | 3,383 | 3,146 |
| Unaudited | Unaudited | Audited | |
|---|---|---|---|
| 26 January | 27 January | 28 July | |
| 2020 | 2019 | 2019 | |
| £000 | £000 | £000 | |
| Cash and cash equivalents | 47,413 | 37,354 | 42,950 |
Cash at bank earns interest at floating rates, based on daily bank deposit rates.
This category relates to money owed by the company to suppliers and the government.
Accruals refer to allowances made by the company for future anticipated payments to suppliers and other creditors.
| Unaudited | Unaudited | Audited | |
|---|---|---|---|
| 26 January | 27 January | 28 July | |
| 2020 | 2019 | 2019 | |
| £000 | £000 | £000 | |
| Trade payables | 165,309 | 202,514 | 162,070 |
| Other payables | 27,362 | 18,073 | 18,056 |
| Other tax and Social Security | 55,398 | 53,266 | 62,081 |
| Accruals and deferred income | 67,704 | 46,648 | 66,119 |
| 315,773 | 320,501 | 308,326 |
| Unaudited 26 January 2020 |
Unaudited 27 January 2019 |
Audited 28 July 2019 |
|
|---|---|---|---|
| £000 | £000 | £000 | |
| Current (due within one year) | |||
| Other | |||
| Finance lease obligations | 3,286 | 3,207 | 3,287 |
| Total current borrowings | 3,286 | 3,207 | 3,287 |
| Non-current (due after one year) | |||
| Bank loans | |||
| Variable-rate facility | 750,000 | 750,000 | 775,000 |
| Unamortised bank loan issue costs | (4,222) | 17 | (4,924) |
| 745,778 | 750,017 | 770,076 | |
| Private placement | |||
| Fixed-rate facility | 98,000 | – | – |
| Unamortised private placement issue costs | (301) | – | – |
| 97,699 | – | – | |
| Other | |||
| Finance lease obligations | 5,177 | 8,095 | 6,607 |
| Total non-current borrowings | 848,654 | 758,112 | 776,683 |
fdfdfds
| Legal claims £000 |
Onerous lease £000 |
Total £000 |
|
|---|---|---|---|
| At 28 July 2019 | 3,523 | 2,483 | 6,006 |
| Charged to the income statement: | |||
| – Transferred to right-of-use assets (note 25) | – | (2,483) | (2,483) |
| – Additional charges | 1,053 | – | 1,053 |
| – Unused amounts reversed | (496) | – | (496) |
| – Used during year | (964) | – | (964) |
| At 26 January 2020 | 3,116 | – | 3,116 |
| Unaudited | Unaudited | Audited | |
|---|---|---|---|
| 26 January | 27 January | 28 July | |
| 2020 | 2019 | 2019 | |
| £000 | £000 | £000 | |
| Current | 3,116 | 5,499 | 4,072 |
| Non-current | – | 2,453 | 1,934 |
| Total provisions | 3,116 | 7,952 | 6,006 |
The amounts represent a provision for ongoing legal claims brought against the company by customers and employees in the normal course of business. Owing to the nature of the business, we expect to have a continuous provision for outstanding employee and public liability claims. All claim provisions are considered current and are not, therefore, discounted to take into account the passage of time.
The amounts represent a provision for future rent payments on sites which are not expected to generate sufficient profits. Also included are provisions on any sublet properties for which rent is not fully recovered. These provisions are expected to be utilised over a period of up to 22 years and are discounted to take into account the passage of time.
These amounts were transferred into the right-of-use assets created on migration to IFRS 16.
The table below analyses the company's financial liabilities in relevant maturity groupings, based on the remaining period at the balance sheet date to the contractual maturity date. The amounts disclosed in the table are the contractual undiscounted cash flows.
| Within | More than | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 year | 1–2 years | 2–3 years | 3–4 years | 4–5 years | 5 years | Total | |
| £000 | £000 | £000 | £000 | £000 | £000 | £000 | |
| At 26 January 2020 | |||||||
| Bank loans | 20,310 | 20,310 | 20,310 | 770,317 | – | – | 831,248 |
| Private placement | 2,920 | 2,920 | 2,920 | 2,920 | 2,920 | 103,841 | 118,443 |
| Trade and other payables | 260,375 | – | – | – | – | – | 260,375 |
| Derivatives | 13,141 | 10,120 | 6,929 | 5,113 | 3,017 | 17,332 | 55,653 |
| Finance lease obligations | 3,286 | 3,286 | 2,465 | – | – | – | 9,037 |
| Within | More than | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 year | 1–2 years | 2–3 years | 3–4 years | 4–5 years | 5 years | Total | |
| £000 | £000 | £000 | £000 | £000 | £000 | £000 | |
| At 28 July 2019 | |||||||
| Bank loans | 20,039 | 20,039 | 20,039 | 20,039 | 786,726 | – | 866,882 |
| Trade and other payables | 246,245 | – | – | – | – | – | 246,245 |
| Derivatives | 13,089 | 13,089 | 6,962 | 6,877 | 3,052 | 18,651 | 61,720 |
| Finance lease obligations | 3,287 | 3,287 | 3,287 | 819 | – | – | 10,680 |
On 20 August 2019, the company authorised the issue and sale of £98m aggregate principal amount of its Senior Secured Notes due 20 August 2026; this extends its total facilities, excluding finance leases, from £895m to £993m.
At the balance sheet date, the company had loan facilities of £993m (2019: £895m) as detailed below:
The company has hedged its interest-rate liabilities to its banks by swapping the floating-rate debt into fixed-rate debt which has fixed £770m of these borrowings at rates of between 0.61% and 3.84%. The effective weighted average interest rate of the swap agreements used during the year is 2.82% (2019: 2.88%), fixed for a weighted average period of 4.6 years (2019: 4.8 years). In addition, the company has entered into forward-starting interest-rate swaps as detailed in the table below.
| From | To | Total swap value £m | Weighted average interest % |
|---|---|---|---|
| 02/07/2018 | 29/07/2021 | 770 | 2.42 |
| 30/07/2021 | 30/07/2023 | 770 | 1.61 |
| 31/07/2023 | 30/07/2026 | 770 | 1.10 |
| 31/07/2026 | 30/06/2028 | 770 | 1.33 |
| 01/07/2028 | 29/03/2029 | 770 | 1.32 |
At the balance sheet date, £750m (2019: £750m) was drawn down under the £875m unsecured-term revolving-loan facility. The amounts drawn under this agreement can be varied, depending on the requirements of the business. In future, it is expected that the draw-down required by the company will be more than £770m for the duration of the interest-rate swaps detailed above.
fdfdfds
The company's capital structure comprises shareholders' equity and loans. The objective of capital management is to ensure that the company is able to continue as a going concern and provide shareholders with returns on their investment, while managing risk.
The company does not have a specific measure for managing capital structure; instead, the company plans its capital requirements and manages its loans, dividends and share buybacks accordingly. The company measures loans using a ratio of net debt to EBITDA which was 3.54 times (2019: 3.47 times) at the period end.
Financial risks associated with financial instruments, including credit risk and liquidity risk, are discussed in the annual report 2019 in section 2 on page 49.
IFRS 7 requires disclosure of fair value measurements by level, using the following fair value measurement hierarchy:
The fair value of the interest-rate swaps is considered to be level 2. All other financial assets and liabilities are measured in the balance sheet at amortised cost – and their valuation is also considered to be level 2.
An analysis of the interest-rate profile of financial liabilities, after taking account of all interest-rate swaps, is set out in the following table.
Interest-rate and currency risks of financial liabilities
| Unaudited | Unaudited | Audited | |
|---|---|---|---|
| 26 January | 27 January | 28 July | |
| 2020 | 2019 | 2019 | |
| £000 | £000 | £000 | |
| Analysis of interest-rate profile of financial liabilities | |||
| Bank loans | |||
| Floating rate due after one year | – | – | 76 |
| Fixed rate due after one year | 745,778 | 750,017 | 770,000 |
| 745,778 | 750,017 | 770,076 | |
| Finance lease obligation | |||
| Fixed rate due in one year | 3,286 | 3,207 | 3,287 |
| Fixed rate due after one year | 5,177 | 8,095 | 6,607 |
| 8,463 | 11,302 | 9,894 | |
| Private placement | |||
| Fixed rate due after one year | 97,699 | – | – |
| 97,699 | – | ||
| 851,940 | 761,319 | 779,970 |
The floating-rate borrowings are interest-bearing borrowings at rates based on LIBOR, fixed for periods of up to one month. The fixed-rate loan is that element of the company's borrowings which has been fixed with interest-rate swaps.
In some cases, payments which are due to be made in the future by the company or due to be received by the company have to be given a fair value.
The table below highlights any differences between book value and fair value of financial instruments.
| Unaudited 26 January 2020 Book value £000 |
Unaudited 26 January 2020 Fair value £000 |
Unaudited 27 January 2019 Book value £000 |
Unaudited 27 January 2019 Fair value £000 |
Audited 28 July 2019 Book value £000 |
Audited 28 July 2019 Fair value £000 |
|
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Financial assets at amortised cost | ||||||
| Cash and cash equivalents | 47,413 | 47,413 | 37,354 | 37,354 | 42,950 | 42,950 |
| Operating lease assets | 12,880 | 12,955 | – | – | – | – |
| Receivables | 1,810 | 1,810 | 1,032 | 1,032 | 1,127 | 1,127 |
| 62,103 | 62,178 | 38,386 | 38,386 | 44,077 | 44,077 | |
| Financial liabilities at amortised cost | ||||||
| Trade and other payables | (260,375) | (260,375) | (267,235) | (267,235) | (246,245) | (246,245) |
| Finance lease obligations | (8,463) | (8,478) | (11,302) | (11,600) | (9,894) | (9,915) |
| Operating lease obligations | (596,826) | (606,018) | – | – | – | – |
| Private placement | (97,699) | (99,457) | – | – | – | – |
| Borrowings | (745,778) | (746,554) | (750,017) | (749,150) | (770,076) | (771,093) |
| (1,709,141) | (1,720,882) | (1,028,554) | (1,027,985) | (1,026,215) | (1,027,253) | |
| Derivatives – cash flow hedges | ||||||
| Non-current derivative financial asset | – | – | 11,420 | 11,420 | 321 | 321 |
| Non-current derivative financial liability | (57,096) | (57,096) | (35,465) | (35,465) | (49,393) | (49,393) |
| (57,096) | (57,096) | (24,045) | (24,045) | (49,072) | (49,072) |
The fair value of derivatives has been calculated by discounting all future cash flows by the market yield curve at the balance sheet date. The fair value of borrowings has been calculated by discounting the expected future cash flows at the year end's prevailing interest rates.
The minimum lease payments under finance leases fall due as follows:
| Unaudited | Unaudited | Audited | |
|---|---|---|---|
| 26 January | 27 January | 28 July | |
| 2020 | 2019 | 2019 | |
| £000 | £000 | £000 | |
| Within one year | 3,286 | 3,207 | 3,287 |
| In the second to fifth year, inclusive | 5,751 | 9,116 | 7,393 |
| 9,037 | 12,323 | 10,680 | |
| Less future finance charges | (574) | (1,021) | (786) |
| Present value of lease obligations | 8,463 | 11,302 | 9,894 |
| Less amount due for settlement within one year | (3,286) | (3,207) | (3,287) |
| Amount due for settlement during the second to fifth year, inclusive | 5,177 | 8,095 | 6,607 |
All finance lease obligations are in respect of various equipment used in the business. No escalation clauses are included in the agreements.
fdfdfds
At 26 January 2020, the company had fixed-rate swaps designated as hedges of floating-rate borrowings. The floating-rate borrowings are interest-bearing borrowings at rates based on LIBOR, fixed for periods of up to one month.
| Loss/(gain) on interest-rate |
Deferred tax |
Charged to equity |
|
|---|---|---|---|
| swaps | |||
| £000 | £000 | £000 | |
| As at 27 January 2019 | 24,045 | (4,088) | 19,957 |
| Change in fair value posted to comprehensive income | 25,027 | – | 25,027 |
| Deferred tax posted to comprehensive income | – | (4,254) | (4,254) |
| As at 28 July 2019 | 49,072 | (8,342) | 40,730 |
| Change in fair value posted to comprehensive income | 8,024 | – | 8,024 |
| Deferred tax posted to comprehensive income | – | (1,364) | (1,364) |
| As at 26 January 2020 | 57,096 | (9,706) | 47,390 |
No ineffectiveness arose during the period (2019: £Nil). Amounts charged to the profit and loss account in relation to interest-rate swaps are charged to finance costs – see note 6.
The company's interest-rate swap agreements are in place as protection against future changes in borrowing costs. Under these agreements, the company pays a fixed interest charge and receives variable interest income which matches the variable interest payments made on the company's borrowings.
There is an economic relationship among the company's revolving-loan facility, the hedged item and the company's interest-rate swaps, the hedging instruments, where the company pays a floating interest charge on the loan and receives a floating interest-rate credit on the interest-rate swap. The interest-rate swap agreement allows the company to receive a floating interest-rate credit and requires the company to pay an agreed fixed interest charge.
The company has established a hedging ratio of 1:1 between the interest-rate swaps and the company's floating-rate borrowings, meaning that floating interest rates paid should be identical to the amounts received for a given amount of borrowings.
These hedges could be ineffective, if the:
The company tests hedge effectiveness prospectively using the hypothetical derivative method and compares the changes in the fair value of the hedging instrument with those in the fair value of the hedged item attributable to the hedged risk.
During the 26 weeks ended 26 January 2020, if the interest rates on UK-denominated borrowings had been 1% higher, with all other variables constant, pre-tax profit for the year would have been increased by £146,000 and equity increased by £67,386,000. The movement in equity arises from a change in the 'mark to market' valuation of the interest-rate swaps into which the company has entered, calculated by a 1% shift of the market yield curve. The company considers that a 1% movement in interest rates represents a reasonable sensitivity to potential changes. However, this analysis is for illustrative purposes only.
| Unaudited | Unaudited | Audited | |
|---|---|---|---|
| 26 January | 27 January | 28 July | |
| 2020 | 2019 | 2019 | |
| £000 | £000 | £000 | |
| Operating lease incentives | – | 11,235 | 10,930 |
Included in other liabilities were lease incentives on leases where the lessor retains substantially all of the risks and benefits of ownership of the asset. The lease incentives were recognised as a reduction in rent over the lease term and shown as a liability on the balance sheet. These amounts now form part of the right-of-use assets, please see note 25.
About 36% of the company's pubs are leasehold. New leases are normally for 30 years, with a break clause after 15 years. Most leases have upwards-only rent reviews, based on open-market rental at the time of review, but most new pub leases have an uplift in rent which is fixed at the start of the lease.
The table below shows the movements in the company's right-of-use assets.
| £000 | |
|---|---|
| Cost: | |
| Recognition of assets | 617,837 |
| Additions | 27,361 |
| Remeasurement | (77) |
| Exchange differences | (216) |
| Disposals | (41,886) |
| At 26 January 2020 | 603,019 |
| Accumulated depreciation and impairment: |
| Provided during the period | (24,425) |
|---|---|
| Exchange differences | 4 |
| Disposals | 577 |
| At 26 January 2020 | (23,844) |
| Net book amount at 26 January 2020 | 579,175 |
|---|---|
fdfdfds
The tables below analyse the company's lease liabilities and assets in relevant maturity groupings, based on the remaining period at the balance sheet date to the end of the lease. The amounts disclosed in the table are the contractual undiscounted cash flows. The impact of discounting reconciles these amounts to the values disclosed in the balance sheet.
| 26 January | 28 July | |
|---|---|---|
| 2020 | 2019 | |
| £000 | £000 | |
| Within one year | 59,328 | 61,252 |
| Between one and two years | 58,597 | 61,177 |
| Between two and three years | 55,965 | 58,523 |
| Between three and four years | 55,074 | 57,050 |
| Between four and five years | 54,623 | 56,400 |
| After five years | 506,892 | 541,916 |
| Lease commitments payable | 790,479 | 836,318 |
| Discounting lease liability | (193,653) | (205,014) |
| Lease liability | 596,826 | 631,304 |
| Lease assets maturity profile | Unaudited | Unaudited |
|---|---|---|
| 26 January | 28 July | |
| 2020 | 2019 | |
| £000 | £000 | |
| Within one year | 1,561 | 1,583 |
| Between one and two years | 1,501 | 1,545 |
| Between two and three years | 1,413 | 1,448 |
| Between three and four years | 1,258 | 1,391 |
| Between four and five years | 1,110 | 1,125 |
| After five years | 8,850 | 9,338 |
| 15,693 | 16,430 | |
| Discounting lease asset | (2,813) | (2,994) |
| Lease asset | 12,880 | 13,436 |
The comparative numbers disclosed above are those included in the migration note in the 2019 annual report.
The tables below show the movements in the period of the lease liability and the lease asset.
| Lease liability | Unaudited |
|---|---|
| 26 January | |
| 2020 | |
| £000 | |
| At 28 July 2019 | – |
| Recognition of liability | 631,304 |
| Additions | 27,361 |
| Remeasurements of leases | (77) |
| Disposals | (41,656) |
| Exchange differences | (194) |
| Lease liabilities before payments | 616,738 |
| Interest due | 9,320 |
| Payments made | (29,232) |
| Net principal repayments | (19,912) |
| At 26 January 2020 | 596,826 |
Future rental payments, up to the end of the lease, are capitalised, including any agreed increases. Future rent payments could change as a result of open-market rent reviews or options being exercised to terminate a lease early. Any changes in the minimum unavoidable lease payments will be included as a remeasurement of the lease liability.
Leases with lease terms of less than one year are not capitalised.
| Lease assets | Unaudited |
|---|---|
| 26 January | |
| 2020 | |
| £000 | |
| At 28 July 2019 | – |
| Recognition of asset | 13,436 |
| Lease assets before payments | 13,436 |
| Interest due | 186 |
| Payments made | (742) |
| Net principal repayments | (556) |
| At 26 January 2020 | 12,880 |
The company has sublet several of its leases which have been capitalised above, with lease assets being the capitalised future rent receivables from sublet sites.
The interest payable and receivable shown in the tables above is the interest element of the payments made and received in the period. These amounts differ from the lease interest charged/credited to the income statement in the period – see note 6. The amounts charged/credited to the income statement in the period will also include amounts due, but not paid, in the period.
The incremental borrowing rate applied to lease liabilities and assets was 2.7–3.9%, depending on the lease's length.
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This standard replaces IAS 17 Leases and is effective for accounting periods beginning on or after 1 January 2019. The standard was adopted by the company on 29 July 2019.
When the new standard became effective, the company recognised, on the balance sheet, a right-of-use asset and a lease liability for future lease payments, in respect of all leases, excluding those with terms less than 12 months and those for low-value assets.
Lessor accounting remains similar to the previous standard. The lessor continues to classify leases as finance or operating leases, depending on whether the risks and rewards of ownership have been transferred to the lessee. Some of the company's sublet properties were classified as finance leases under the new standard, as the risks and rewards of ownership of the IFRS 16 right-of-use asset was transferred to the lessee, whereas, under IAS 17, there was no asset recognised in the accounts; as a result, the leases were treated as operating leases.
On 29 July 2019, the company adopted the standard using the modified retrospective approach. The new standard allows, on a lease-by-lease basis, for the value of the right-of-use assets to be determined as if the lease had started on the date of transition or the start date of the lease. This choice does not affect the recognised lease liability, but does affect the value of the asset. Valuing on the day of transition results in a right-of-use asset of broadly the same value as the lease liability. Valuing at the start date of the lease results in a lower asset value at transition, reflecting the amortisation which would have been charged on the asset between the start of the lease and the date of transition. The reduction in the asset value would be offset by a reduction in distributable reserves on the balance sheet. The company has chosen to value all leases on the date of transition.
The company has elected to use the following practical exemptions in transitioning to IFRS 16:
On 29 July 2019, the company recognised a right-of-use asset of £618m, a lease liability of £631m and a finance lease asset of £14m, related to sublet sites. The right-of-use assets comprise the net lease liability of £617m, rent prepayments of £14m, operating lease incentives of £11m and onerous leases of £2m. There was no adjustment to retained earnings.
As at 28 July 2019, the company had contractual operating lease commitments payable of £836m and contractual operating lease commitments receivable of £23m. A reconciliation to the transition value is provided below.
The total profit and loss charge over the life of a lease will remain unchanged under IFRS 16, but the new standard will change the pattern of how the expense is recognised in the income statement, over time, with more costs recognised in the early years of a lease and fewer in its later years. The expense will be recognised as a depreciation and interest charge replacing the operating expenses under IAS 17.
In the 2019 annual report, the company estimated that, for the year ending 26 July 2020, EBITDA will have increased by £58m and operating profit by £8m. Finance costs are expected to increase by £22m, resulting in a decrease in profit before tax of £14m. These estimates are based on the leaseholds held at year end and will be affected by the company purchasing the freehold interest in its leasehold sites.
The IFRS 16 depreciation and interest expense will be deducted when calculating current tax. It is estimated, in the current financial year, that current tax will be reduced by £2m. The reduction in tax payments in the early years of a lease will be offset by higher tax payments in its later years.
The company expects a small increase in the effective tax rate. This is due to disallowable expenses, which will remain unchanged, being a larger proportion of reduced profits.
On the application of IFRS 16, there will be no impact on cash flows, except in relation to tax payments. The presentation of cash flows will change. Cash flows from operating activities will increase, yet will be exactly offset by an increase in interest and lease principal payments.
The table below shows the transition adjustments applied to the opening balance sheet for the year ending 26 July 2020.
| July 2019 £000 |
IFRS 16 £000 |
Re-stated £000 |
|
|---|---|---|---|
| Other | 1,422,235 | – | 1,422,235 |
| Other non-current assets | 7,888 | (7,888) | – |
| Right-of-use assets | – | 617,837 | 617,837 |
| Lease receivables | – | 11,853 | 11,853 |
| Total non-current assets | 1,430,123 | 621,802 | 2,051,925 |
| Other current assets | 69,813 | – | 69,813 |
| Lease receivables | – | 1,583 | 1,583 |
| Receivables | 21,903 | (5,693) | 16,210 |
| Total assets | 1,521,839 | 617,692 | 2,139,531 |
| Other current liabilities | (326,671) | 748 | (325,923) |
| Lease liabilities | – | (61,252) | (61,252) |
| Total current liabilities | (326,671) | (60,504) | (387,175) |
| Other non-current liabilities | (865,492) | – | (865,492) |
| Lease liabilities | – | (570,052) | (570,052) |
| Provisions | (1,934) | 1,934 | – |
| Other liabilities | (10,930) | 10,930 | – |
| Total liabilities | (1,205,027) | (617,692) | (1,822,719) |
| Net assets | 316,812 | – | 316,812 |
| Equity | 316,812 | – | 316,812 |
The table below shows a reconciliation between the operating lease commitments (as disclosed in the 2019 annual report in note 25) and the lease liability and assets to be recognised under IFRS 16.
| 2019 | |
|---|---|
| £000 | |
| Lease commitments, payable | 836,318 |
| Discounting lease liability | (205,014) |
| Lease liability recognised | 631,304 |
| Discounting lease asset Lease asset recognised |
(2,994) 13,436 |
|---|---|
| Leases not capitalised | (6,427) |
| Lease commitments, receivable | 22,857 |
| 2019 £000 |
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The table below shows how the value of the right-of-use asset was calculated on migration.
| Unaudited | |
|---|---|
| 26 January | |
| 2020 | |
| £000 | |
| Recognition of leases | |
| Lease receivables (note 25) | (13,436) |
| Lease liabilities (note 25) | 631,304 |
| Non-current assets | |
| Other non-current assets (note 15) | 7,888 |
| Current assets | |
| Rent prepayments (note 17) | 5,693 |
| Current liabilities | |
| Rent payables (note 20) | (199) |
| Onerous lease creditor less than one year (note 22) | (549) |
| Non-current liabilities | |
| Other non-current liabilities (note 24) | (10,930) |
| Onerous lease creditor more than one year (note 22) | (1,934) |
| Right-of-use assets | 617,837 |
Lease liabilities and assets were calculated by discounting future unavoidable rental payments and rents receivable for any of those sites which had been sublet. To the value of the lease liabilities and assets were added all balance sheet items held in relation to these leases. These included lease premiums paid, disclosed as other non-current assets, prepaid and accrued rental charges, the onerous lease provision and lease incentives, disclosed as other non-current liabilities.
Before the introduction of IFRS 16, leases in a lessee's accounts were defined as finance leases and operating leases. Although this distinction no longer exists within IFRS 16, the distinction has been maintained in the narrative description of leases within the company's accounts, so that the impact of the new standard can be clearly seen.
At 26 January 2020, the company had £28.2m (July 2019: £37.9m) of capital commitments, relating to the purchase of 10 (July 2019: 16) sites, for which no provision had been made, in respect of property, plant and equipment.
The company had some other sites in the property pipeline; however, any legal commitment is contingent on planning and licensing. Therefore, there are no commitments at the balance sheet date.
J D Wetherspoon is the owner of the share capital of the following companies:
| Company name | Country of incorporation | Ownership | Status |
|---|---|---|---|
| J D Wetherspoon (Scot) Limited | Scotland | Wholly owned | Dormant |
| J D Wetherspoon Property Holdings Limited | England | Wholly owned | Dormant |
| Moon and Spoon Limited | England | Wholly owned | Dormant |
| Moon and Stars Limited | England | Wholly owned | Dormant |
| Moon on the Hill Limited | England | Wholly owned | Dormant |
| Moorsom & Co Limited | England | Wholly owned | Dormant |
| Sylvan Moon Limited | England | Wholly owned | Dormant |
| Checkline House (Head Lease) Limited | Wales | Wholly owned | Dormant |
All of these companies are dormant and contain no assets or liabilities and are, therefore, immaterial. As a result, consolidated accounts have not been produced. The company has an overseas branch located in the Republic of Ireland.
| Number of shares 000s |
Share capital £000 |
|
|---|---|---|
| Balance at 29 July 2018 (audited) | 105,501 | 2,110 |
| Closing balance at 27 January 2019 (unaudited) | 105,501 | 2,110 |
| Repurchase of shares | (403) | (8) |
| Balance at 28 July 2019 (audited) | 105,098 | 2,102 |
| Repurchase of shares | (420) | (8) |
| Closing balance at 26 January 2020 (unaudited) | 104,678 | 2,094 |
The balance classified as share capital represents proceeds arising on issue of the company's equity share capital, comprising 2p ordinary shares and the cancellation of shares repurchased by the company.
The total authorised number of 2p ordinary shares is 500,000,000 (2019: 500,000,000). All issued shares are fully paid. In the period, there were no proceeds from the issue of shares (2019: £Nil).
During the period, 419,741 shares were repurchased by the company for cancellation, representing approximately 0.40% of the issued share capital, at a cost of £6.5m, including stamp duty, representing an average cost per share of 1,523p. The capital redemption reserve increased owing to the repurchase of a number of shares in the period.
While the memorandum and articles of association allow for preferred, deferred or special rights to attach to ordinary shares, no shares carried such rights at the balance sheet date.
On 11 March 2020, the chancellor presented the UK budget announcement and confirmed that the rate of corporation tax would remain at 19% from 1 April 2020. This is expected to be substantively enacted by the year-end balance sheet date.
As a result of this post balance sheet announcement, the prevailing tax rate used to calculate the income and deferred tax liabilities for the year ended 26 July 2020 will be 19%, instead of 18.33% used in the half-year results. Furthermore, the deferred tax balances will be recalculated at the year end to 19%; it is anticipated that this will result in a rate-change adjustment of approximately £3.4m.
For information on COVID-19, please see note 31.
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J D Wetherspoon plc is a public limited company, incorporated and domiciled in England and Wales. Its registered office address is: Wetherspoon House, Central Park, Reeds Crescent, Watford, WD24 4QL.
The company is listed on the London Stock Exchange.
This condensed half-yearly financial information was approved for issue by the board on 19 March 2020.
This interim report does not comprise statutory accounts within the meaning of Sections 434 and 435 of the Companies Act 2006. Statutory accounts for the year ended 28 July 2019 were approved by the board of directors on 12 September 2019 and delivered to the Registrar of Companies. The report of the auditors on those accounts was unqualified, did not contain an emphasis-of-matter paragraph or any statement under Sections 498 to 502 of the Companies Act 2006.
The advent of the COVID-19 virus supersedes the principal risks and uncertainties as set out in the financial statements for the 52 weeks ended 28 July 2019, pages 48 and 49, and will remain the most significant risk facing the company in the next six months, please see note 31.
This condensed half-yearly financial information of J D Wetherspoon plc (the 'Company'), which is abridged and unaudited, has been prepared in accordance with the Disclosure and Transparency Rules of the Financial Services Authority and with International Accounting Standards (IAS) 34, Interim Financial Reporting, as adopted by the European Union. This interim report should be read in conjunction with the annual financial statements for the 52 weeks ended 28 July 2019 which were prepared in accordance with IFRSs, as adopted by the European Union.
The directors have made enquiries into the adequacy of the Company's financial resources, through a review of the Company's budget and medium-term financial plan, including capital expenditure plans and cash flow forecasts. Material uncertainty which may cast significant doubt regarding the Company's ability to trade as a going concern has resulted from the impact of the COVID-19 virus on the economy and the hospitality industry. The directors have considered the impact on the company, including the possibility of temporary closure. The directors are satisfied that the Company will not breach its borrowing covenants during a temporary closure. If the closure is prolonged, the Company would consider whether to take further actions at that time. In that respect, the directors have considered the comments of the Bank of England on 17 March 2020 in which it said that the "CCFF (a new funding facility) will provide funding to businesses by purchasing commercial paper of up to 1 year maturity, issued by firms making a material contribution to the UK economy. It will help businesses across a range of sectors to pay wages and suppliers, even while experiencing severe disruption to cashflows". The directors have also taken account of the suspension of business rates for 12 months from April 2020, which will result in a saving by the Company of over £50m. As a result, the directors have satisfied themselves that the Company will continue in operational existence for the foreseeable future. For this reason, they continue to adopt the going-concern basis in preparing the Company's financial statements.
The financial information for the 52 weeks ended 28 July 2019 is extracted from the statutory accounts of the Company for that year.
The interim results for the 26 weeks ended 26 January 2020 and the comparatives for 27 January 2019 are unaudited, yet have been reviewed by the independent auditors. A copy of the review report is included at the end of this report.
With the exception of tax and IFRS 16, which has been implemented in these financial statements, the accounting policies adopted in the preparation of the interim report are consistent with those applied in the preparation of the Company's annual report for the year ended 28 July 2019 – and the same methods of computation and presentation are used.
Taxes on income in the interim periods are accrued using the tax rate which would be applicable to expected total annual earnings.
At the date of authorisation of these financial statements, certain new standards and amendments to existing standards have been published which are not yet effective and have not been adopted early by the Company. Information on those expected to be relevant to the financial statements is provided below:
IFRS 16 Leases is effective for accounting periods starting on or after 1 January 2019, replacing IAS 17 Leases. The impact of this change is disclosed in note 25 of these accounts.
Other standards which are not expected to have a material impact are shown below:
The directors confirm that this condensed interim financial information has been prepared in accordance with IAS 34, as adopted by the European Union, and that the interim management report includes a fair review of the information required by DTR 4.2.7 and DTR 4.2.8, namely:
The directors of J D Wetherspoon plc are listed in the J D Wetherspoon annual report for 28 July 2019. A list of current directors is maintained on the J D Wetherspoon plc website: jdwetherspoon.com
By order of the board
John Hutson Ben Whitley Director Director 19 March 2020 19 March 2020
We have reviewed the condensed set of financial statements in the half-yearly financial report of J D Wetherspoon plc (the 'Company') for the 26 week period ended 26 January 2020 which comprises the Income Statement, the Statement of Comprehensive Income, the Cash Flow Statement, the Balance Sheet, the Statement of Changes in Equity and the related notes. We have read the other information contained in the half-yearly financial report which comprises the Financial Highlights and the Chairman's Statement and Operating Review and considered whether it contains any apparent misstatements or material inconsistencies with the information in the condensed set of financial statements.
The half-yearly financial report is the responsibility of, and has been approved by, the directors. The directors are responsible for preparing the half-yearly financial report in accordance with the Disclosure Guidance and Transparency Rules of the United Kingdom's Financial Conduct Authority.
As disclosed in note 31, the annual financial statements of the Company are prepared in accordance with International Financial Reporting Standards as adopted by the European Union. The condensed set of financial statements included in this half-yearly financial report has been prepared in accordance with International Accounting Standard 34, 'Interim Financial Reporting', as adopted by the European Union.
Our responsibility is to express a conclusion to the Company on the condensed set of financial statements in the half-yearly financial report based on our review.
We conducted our review in accordance with International Standard on Review Engagements (UK and Ireland) 2410, 'Review of Interim Financial Information Performed by the Independent Auditor of the Entity'. A review of interim financial information consists of making enquiries, primarily of persons responsible for financial and accounting matters, and applying analytical and other review procedures. A review is substantially less in scope than an audit conducted in accordance with International Standards on Auditing (UK) and consequently does not enable us to obtain assurance that we would become aware of all significant matters that might be identified in an audit. Accordingly, we do not express an audit opinion.
Based on our review, nothing has come to our attention that causes us to believe that the condensed set of financial statements in the half-yearly financial report for the 26 week period ended 26 January 2020 is not prepared, in all material respects, in accordance with International Accounting Standard 34, 'Interim Financial Reporting', as adopted by the European Union and the Disclosure Guidance and Transparency Rules of the United Kingdom's Financial Conduct Authority.
We draw attention to note 31 and the principal risks and uncertainties in note 30 in the half yearly financial statements, which highlight the risks on the Company's ability to continue trading if resultant closures from the Covid-19 virus are on a prolonged basis. As stated in note 31, the impact of the Covid-19 virus on the Company's ability to trade if closures are on a prolonged basis, indicates that a material uncertainty exists that may cast significant doubt on the Company's ability to continue as a going concern. Our review opinion is not modified in respect of this matter.
This report is made solely to the Company, as a body, in accordance with International Standard on Review Engagements (UK and Ireland) 2410, 'Review of Interim Financial Information performed by the Independent Auditor of the Entity'. Our review work has been undertaken so that we might state to the Company those matters we are required to state to it in an independent review report and for no other purpose. To the fullest extent permitted by law, we do not accept or assume responsibility to anyone other than the Company as a body, for our review work, for this report, or for the conclusion we have formed.
Grant Thornton UK LLP Statutory Auditor, Chartered Accountants London 19 March 2020
Name Address Town Postcode Country The Railway 113 Station Road Rainham ME8 7SF England
| Name | Address | Town | Postcode | Country |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Last Plantagenet | 107 Granby Street | Leceister | LE1 6FD | England |
| Baron of Hinckley | 5–7 Regent Street | Hinckley | LE10 0AZ | England |
| Penny Black | 14–18 Bull Ring | Kidderminster | DY10 2AZ | England |
| Rhinoceros | 35–37 Bridgegate | Rotherham | S60 1PL | England |
| Brun Lea (Lloyds) | 31–39 Manchester Road | Burnley | BB11 1HG | England |
| Isaac Merritt | 54–58 Torquay Road | Paignton | TQ3 3AA | England |
PUBS CLOSED SINCE 29 JULY 2019
J D Wetherspoon plc Wetherspoon House, Central Park Reeds Crescent, Watford, WD24 4QL
PUBS CLOSED SINCE 29 JULY 2019
56 INTERIM REPORT 2020 J D WETHERSPOON PLC
01923 477777 jdwetherspoon.com
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