The Guardian - 24.07.2019

(Michael S) #1

Section:GDN 1N PaGe:31 Edition Date:190724 Edition:01 Zone: Sent at 23/7/2019 20:26 cYanmaGentaYellowb


Wednesday 24 July 2019 The Guardian •


Financial^31


T

hat bill-payers got
stuff ed in the deal
that brought the
Hinkley Point C
project into existence
is beyond dispute
these days. Even ministers
barely quibble with the National
Audit Offi ce’s assessment that
consumers will be paying through
the nose for 35 years. The defence
has tended to be: don’t worry,
we’ve triggered a “resurgence” in
the nuclear industry and the next
reactors will be relative bargains.
Life has not worked out
as planned. The government
stretched the limits of fi nancial
acceptability to try to persuade
Hitachi to construct a £16bn plant
at Wylfa in Anglesey , but still
couldn’t get the Japanese fi rm to

Business view
Nils Pratley

Let’s pray a love-in
with the ‘regulated
asset base’ model does
not re-ignite ministerial
fantasies about a
resurgence in nuclear

▲ Hinkley Point C power station,
under construction in Somerset

Nuclear power reimagined



  • but still at core hideously


expensive and far from ideal


Gin slung: cool


start to British


summer leaves


Fever-T re e le s s


than sparkling


Sarah Butler


A cool start to the summer, rising
competition and a slowdown in the
gin trend knocked the fi zz out of Fever-
Tree Drinks, which has posted a worse
than expected slowdown in UK sales.
Shares in the tonic water maker
fell 9.6% yesterday, wiping more
than £280m off the company’s value,
as it admitted that poor weather in
the three months to 30 June had
dampened growth rates .”
Fever- Tree has been a strong stock-
market performer since its fl oat in 2014



  • creating a £2.4bn business that has
    made multi million-pound fortunes
    for co-founders Tim Warrillow and
    Charles Rolls – but its shares have
    retreated nearly 50% since their peak
    last year.
    The latest share decline came as
    Fever- Tree said UK sales rose 5% in the
    six months to 30 June, when analysts
    had expected 8%. Total sales rose 13%,
    versus a hoped-for 15%, as underlying
    profi ts for the whole group rose by 8%
    to £36.7m.
    Analysts said Fever- Tree was
    battling against a major promotion by
    rival Schweppes as well as a general
    slowdown in the drinks trade com-
    pared with last year’s hot summer.
    Warrillow, Fever– Tree’s chief exec-
    utive, said the industry had faced


an “exceptionally tough” period
compared with last year when the
hot weather combined with the royal
wedding and World Cup to create a
thirst for G&T.
Warrillow and Rolls co-founded
Fever-Tree in 2005, naming it after the
colloquial term for the cinchona tree,
the bark of which produces quinine –
a key ingredient in tonic water.
The British gin revival has also lost
momentum, although Fever -Tree said
it was still growing by more than 10%,
albeit in comparison with growth of
more than 50% last year.
Fever– Tree’s slowdown comes after
the Irn Bru maker, AG Barr, issued a
profi ts warning last week. It said it
expected sales to drop 10% this year
because of cooler weather and a recipe
change prompted by the sugar tax.
Russ Mould, investment director
at stockbroker AJ Bell, said fi rst-half
sales growth of 24% in the US was an
important counterpoint to trading in
Fever- Tree’s domestic market. He said:
“Fever- Tree’s poor UK growth was not
disaster territory as the company’s
future growth is arguably depend-
ent on cracking the US market – and
progress here is good.
“Ultimately Fever- Tree has become
a victim of its own success. Soaring
growth rates in recent years have raised
expectations for its performance and
failure to deliver anything but superior
rates leaves it open to fi erce criticism.”

▲ Andy Murray in action during
the Fever-Tree Championship at the
Queen’s Club in London in June.
PHOTOGRAPH STEVEN PASTON/ PA

Source: Refinitiv

35

30

20

25

Fever-Tree shares have fallen
nearly 50% since their peak of
£39.56 in 2018

£40

Jan
2018

Apr Jul Oct Jan
2019

Apr Jul

Supermarket sales under a cloud


Sales at UK supermarkets have
fallen for the fi rst time in three
years, after the cold weather in
early summer resulted in poor
sales of soft drinks, alcohol and ice
cream.Grocery sales were down
0.5% in the 12 weeks to 14 July,
compared with the same period
a year earlier, dragged lower by
weak performances from the UK’s
big four supermarkets, according
to market share data from Kantar.
Tesco, Sainsbury’s, Asda and
Morrisons, which together account
for two-thirds of grocery sales,
suff ered a collective 2.1% sales fall

over the period, as shoppers reined
in spending compared with last
year’s heatwave.
Overall, beer sales slid 11% and
cider was down 13% as consumers
spent £75m less on alcohol than
during the same period last year.
Soft-drink sales were down by
5.4% and ice cream by nearly 15%
year-on-year, although shoppers
spent 15% more on chocolate during
the wet weather.
Aldi , Lidl and the Co-op bucked
the trend. Lidl increased sales by
7%, Aldi by 6.7% and Co-op by 0.2%.
Sarah Butler

sign up. Nuclear still wasn’t getting
cheaper.
Now here’s the government’s
latest eff ort to resurrect the show


  • “an innovative funding model”.
    Of course, it’s not really innovative.
    The “regulated asset base” (RAB)
    approach, which could be used
    at Sizewell B in Suff olk, which is
    intended to copy the design of
    Hinkley in Somerset, is common in
    other parts of the utility world.
    Think of the RAB method as an
    attempt to knock the sharp edges
    off the fi nancial arrangements at
    Hinkley. There, the developer EDF
    carries the risks of cost overruns
    but is allowed to charge sky-high
    guaranteed prices once the plant
    is up and running. Under RAB,
    consumers would start to pay for
    a plant before it is built but the


electricity at the end should be
cheaper. For their part, investors get
a lower, but safer, regulated return.
Genius? Not really. Aside from
exposing consumers to the cost
of overruns, RAB eff ectively also
requires them to provide fi nancing
at zero interest, a point made by the
National Infrastructure Commission
last year. Little wonder that the juice
should be cheaper than Hinkley’s –
some of the costs will be hidden.
But is RAB an improvement?
Possibly. Competition among
outside investors to provide
capital may trim a few costs. And
by the time Sizewell could be
commissioned in 2021, EDF should
have completed its second plant
in China. So we may be better
able to judge whether the French
state-backed fi rm has learned from
its wretched experience with the
Flamanville plant in Normandy.
So, yes, the RAB model is worth
a consultation. But , as the same
NIC report said: “There is limited
experience of using the RAB model
for anything as complex or as risky
as nuclear.” Second, no fi nancing
model can disguise that the
technology is hideously expensive.
The NIC said last year that the
UK shouldn’t rush to tie itself to
an expensive nuclear future and
should instead back renewables,
notably wind and solar. Even
after recognising the need to have

secure “baseload” supplies, it
recommended commissioning only
one more nuclear plant, on top of
Hinkley, before 2025. That remains a
commonsense analysis. Renewables
are winning the price race.
Let us pray, then, that a love-
in with RAB does not re-ignite
ministerial fantasies about a
“resurgence” in nuclear..

Not on the money
Only a month ago, the banknote
printer De La Rue looked a takeover
target in the making. The CEO,
Martin Sutherland , had said he’d
quit after a profi ts warning. Then the
chairman, Philip Rogerson , said he
wanted to retire, followed by Andy
Stevens , the senior independent
director. In the wings, an activist
investor, Crystal Amber, was stirring
up bidders.
Then the Serious Fraud Offi ce
launched an inquiry – into
“suspected corruption” in the
group’s conduct of business in South
Sudan. The share price fell 16% to a
16-year low of 251p. Filling three big
boardroom posts by the end of the
year already looked a challenge –
and more so now.
Still, Rogerson has an early
opportunity to reveal how he will
execute his “orderly” succession
plan, because the annual meeting of
shareholders takes place tomorrow.
The gathering may be lively.

▲ Fever-Tree grew by more than 50%
last year as Britain had a hot summer

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