Punch Taverns

Punch Taverns plc
Type Public (LSEPUB)
Industry Pubs
Founded 1997
Headquarters Burton upon Trent, England, UK
Key people Peter Cawdron, Chairman
Ian Dyson, CEO
Revenue £1,283.0 million (2010)[1]
Operating income £370.2 million (2010)[1]
Net income £(159.9) million (2010)[1]
Website www.punchtaverns.com

Punch Taverns plc (LSEPUB) is the largest pub and bar operator in the United Kingdom, with around 6,800 leased, tenanted and managed pubs. It is headquartered in the traditional brewing centre of Burton upon Trent in Staffordshire. It is listed on the London Stock Exchange and is a constituent of the FTSE SmallCap Index.

Contents

History

The company was established by former Pizza Express head Hugh Osmond and Café Rouge founder Roger Myers in 1997 when they bought the Bass portfolio of public houses.[2] In 1999 Punch purchased Allied Domecq's pubs for £3 billion, beating a rival bid from Whitbread.[3][4] After the deal, Punch spun off its managed pubs into a separate division, Punch Retail, which was later renamed Spirit Group.[5]

In 2009 Punch demerged the Callum highfield[6] and then floated itself on the London Stock Exchange.[7] Punch bought Pubmaster in November 2003: the acquisition of larger rival Pubmaster, catapulted the operator to number one in the league.[8] The acquisition took the group to more than 7,000 pubs and cemented Punch's position as a major pub operator. After completing this deal Punch later bought InnSpired Inns plc,[9] and then Avebury.[10]

Meanwhile, Spirit Group (at that time independent from Punch Taverns) expanded when it acquired Scottish & Newcastle's 1,450-strong pub estate in 2003, beating off rival Mitchells & Butlers.[11]

In September 2005, Spirit Group sold its "City Nights" portfolio of in excess of 180 pubs and clubs, en-bloc, to Alchemy - the financial backers behind the newly-formed Tattershall Castle Group (TCG).[12]

In December 2005, Punch agreed to re-acquire the Spirit Group for £2.68bn which since 2002 been owned by the private equity firms Blackstone, Texas Pacific and CVC Capital Partners.[13]

In 2006 the Company sold its Old Orleans pub chain, which it had acquired when it bought Spirit Group, to Regent Inns.[14] Punch also sold 290 Spirit sites to the private equity firm GI Partners.[15]

In March 2008 Punch withdrew from a bid to merge with Mitchells & Butlers.[16]

On 22nd March 2011 Punch announced that as part of a strategic review it would demerge its the managed and leased pub divisions into Spirit Pub Company plc and Punch plc; this demerger became effective on 1 August 2011.[17]

Operations

Leased pubs

The Group has about 6,000 leased and tenanted pubs forming the bulk of the portfolio.[18]

Spirit Pub Company

Spirit Pub Company is the managed arm of Punch Taverns operating several pub chains. The group owns over 800 outlets nationwide.

Pub chains owned by the Spirit Pub Company include Chef & Brewer, Taylor Walker Pubs, Fayre & Square, Two for £10 Pubs, Original Pub Company, Flaming Grill Pub Company, Roast Inn, John Barras Pub Company, Real Local Pubs, Two for One and Two for £9.

Wacky Warehouse

Punch Taverns operates

Premier Lodge

Spirit Group formerly owned the Premier Lodge chain of budget hotels. These were acquired by Whitbread in 2004 and rebranded as Premier Travel Inn hotels (now renamed as 'Premier Inn') However many Spirit Group run pubs remain integral parts of Premier Inn properties.

Goodnight Inns

Punch Taverns operates the Goodnight Inn hotel brand.

Reflections on business practice

On May 13, 2009, the House of Commons published a report[19] regarding its monopolies inquiry into pub groups. The report "raises a series of questions about the pub company (pubco) tied pub business model and calls on the Government to act urgently, in particular, to refer the matter to the Competition Commission. It challenges the pubcos which operate a tie to prove its benefits by giving lessees the choice between a tied or free of tie lease."[20] The report also raises issues regarding the actual conduct of pubcos in dealing with struggling tenants.

Committee chairman Peter Luff, MP says: "The report explicitly acknowledges that 'not all the problems of the pub industry come from the tied pub model. It is clear there are many pressures on any retail business ... Nonetheless, our inquiry found alarming evidence indicating there may be serious problems caused by the dominance of the large pub companies.'"[20]

The Committee commissioned its own independent survey as part of the inquiry, to determine whether the negative evidence received from lessees was typical of feelings in the industry.[20]

"The survey results, printed with the Committee’s evidence, underpinned the Committee’s findings. 64 per cent of lessees did not think their pubco added any value and while a fifth had had a dispute with their pubco, few (18 per cent) were satisfied with the outcome. The Committee was astonished to learn that 67 per cent of the lessees surveyed earned less than £15,000 pa and over 50 per cent of the lessees who had turnover of more than £500,000 pa earned less than £15,000 – a 3 per cent rate of return. The lessees may share the risks with their pubco but they do not appear to share the benefits. The report therefore concludes that problems which were identified by the Trade and Industry Committee four years ago remain. An imbalance of bargaining power between lessees and pubcos persists and the arrangements for assessing rents remain opaque. Rental assessment should be the basis for negotiation, but incumbent lessees often risk the loss of their home as well as their business if they cannot reach agreement, the report says."[20]

The committee recommended that "the tying of beers, other drinks and ancillary products should be severely limited to ensure that competition in the retail market is restored." The Eye notes that select committee chairman Peter Luff "may be looking to right the wrong created by the Thatcher government’s disastrous "Beer Orders" of 1989, in which he was involved."[21]

Shortly following the committee's report CAMRA issued a 'Super-Complaint' forcing the Office of Fair Trading to investigate this within 90 days. The OFT published its report on the 22nd of October 2009. The report largely cleared the industry of behaving in any way that caused damage to consumers [22]

References

  1. ^ a b c Annual Report 2010
  2. ^ "Company History". www.punchtaverns.com. http://www.punchtaverns.com/Punch/Corporate/About+us/Company+history/. Retrieved 2008-05-01. 
  3. ^ "Punch Taverns plc -- Company History". http://www.fundinguniverse.com/company-histories/Punch-Taverns-plc-Company-History.html. Retrieved 31 May 2011. 
  4. ^ Mr Punch aims at Allied Domecq Independent, 22 June 1999
  5. ^ Business Big Shot: Hugh Osmond
  6. ^ Punch weighs up £4bn demerger
  7. ^ Punch rises above issue price in revived IPO
  8. ^ Punch agrees to buy Pubmaster for £1.2bn
  9. ^ Punch buys InnSpired pub group
  10. ^ Punch swallows Avebury for £219m
  11. ^ Spirit poised to buy £2.5bn S&N pubs
  12. ^ Tattershall Castle Group sells pubs
  13. ^ Punch Taverns buys rival pub operator Spirit for £2.68bn
  14. ^ Regent Inns buys Old Orleans
  15. ^ Punch Taverns sell 290 pubs to GI Partners for £571m
  16. ^ "Punch Taverns cancels M&B merger". news.bbc.co.uk. 2008-03-28. http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/business/7318011.stm. Retrieved 2008-05-01. 
  17. ^ "Spirit shares start trading after Punch demerger". The Publican's Morning Advertizer. 2011-08-01. http://www.morningadvertiser.co.uk/news.ma/article/91283. Retrieved 2011-08-01. 
  18. ^ Punch Taverns: What we do
  19. ^ House of Commons. Business and Enterprise Committee: Pub Companies Retrieved 06-07-2009
  20. ^ a b c d MPs publish report on pub companies Retrieved 06-07-2009
  21. ^ Private Eye. Pubs: All tied and emotional. p. 2 Retrieved 06-07-2009
  22. ^ 'Office Of Fair Trading Website - OFT publishes response to CAMRA super-complaint Retrieved 06 Nov 2009

External links