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From: | "tennyson@caverock.net.nz" <tennyson@caverock.net.nz> |
Date: | Thu, 25 Sep 2003 13:10:43 +1200 |
Hi alec, > > Snoopy, > I am unsure how much power one of their restaurants would use, but as > a comparison I run two services stations. One 24 hr site has had a > power increase from $22k pa to $29k pa over the last 18 months. The > other 18 hr site has had an increase from $14k pa to $20k pa. > Different contract times and companies, but it is fair to assume that > RBD will have had at least a 10% increase in power. I am running > chillers and air conditioning but my floor area would be smaller than > theirs. I do have extra lighting costs on the forecourt (approx 8 kwh) > but don't have the cooking cost of running vats etc. Petrol pumps are > all pressure systems that consume approx .3kwh over a 24 hr period. I > think their energy costs will be quite substantial and increases over > the last 18 months will have taken there toll. Predicted rises will > also have an impact. > Appreciate your response, as I was really flying blind on my estimate of how much energy an RBD store would use. I don't know of any RBD stores that have air conditioning. They certainly do have their share of stand up chillers though. Cooking, I imagine, would use most of their power. I was guessing that cookers would use a lot of power on start up, then use a lower amount of power to retain temperature once they got to target temperature. Then again if most of the cooking is done in vats exposed directly to the atmosphere, perhaps not. Furthermore, the hours that a restaurant is open, while long, would not compare to the opening hours of a garage I would have thought. I would imagine that RBD is able to negotiate power at favourable rates based on some kind of bulk nationwide deal. Equally well that doesn't mean the percentage increase in their bill will be any less than the rest of us are stuck with. If we take your lower figure, a $6,000 increase and multiply it by 12/18 to take account of the shorter opening hours a restaurant would have, that gives a power bill increase of $4,000 per restaurant. Multiply that by 262 restaurants gives a power price increase of $1.05million. Divide by the number of shares on issue (94.815million) and you get a net increase in costs of 1.1c per share. I think that sounds more realistic That comes out as 10% of profits, so it is significant. Whack on another 1c to account for the 'pressure on margins' RBD talk about and you are looking at an annual profit of 9c per share for FY2004. That would no longer cover the dividend. Nevertheless companies are loathe to cut dividends if the outlook for the following year is so much better. I'm picking that the strong cash flows will mean that the dividend is maintained. RBD didn't pay out all their profits as dividends last year. Hopefully this means RBD retains enough imputation credits to maintain a fully franked dividend of 4.5c, even though earnings for the first half of FY2004 may be less than that. SNOOPY -- Message sent by Snoopy on Pegasus Mail version 4.02 ---------------------------------- "Sometimes to see the wood from the trees, you have to cut down all the trees." ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- To remove yourself from this list, please use the form at http://www.sharechat.co.nz/chat/forum/
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