TIDMBOWL
RNS Number : 4515I
Hollywood Bowl Group plc
14 December 2020
Hollywood Bowl Group plc
Final Results for the year ended 30 September 2020
FULL YEAR PERFORMANCE UNDERPINNED BY EXCELLENT FIRST HALF
WELL POSITIONED FOR THE FUTURE
Hollywood Bowl Group plc, ("Hollywood Bowl" or the "Group"), the
UK's market leading ten-pin bowling operator, announces its audited
results for the year ended 30 September 2020 ("FY2020").
This year included five months of normal trading conditions in
the first half and the subsequent five month closure of the estate
from March, followed by the reopening in mid-August (subject to
localised lockdowns) with trading restricted by capacity
limitations, 10pm curfew and smaller group sizes.
Operational Highlights
-- Well managed financial and operational response to COVID-19 pandemic
o Strengthened balance sheet with equity placing, landlord
negotiations and increased revolving credit facility
o Reopening plan executed well as 98% of estate reopened in
mid-August with comprehensive new COVID-secure measures
-- Consistent customer-focused strategy and ongoing rollout of
new initiatives underpinned excellent H1 and successful
reopening
o Renewed focus on "Sales, Service and Safety Superiority" with
introduction of a new "Have Fun, Play Safe" campaign with safety
initiatives including lane seating dividers, unique bowling balls
and a food and drink ordering app
o Further roll out of digital enhancements, new scoring system
now in 44 centres and Pins on Strings now in 18 centres
-- Strong customer demand and better than expected performance
in August and September upon reopening despite capacity and trading
restrictions
o Traded at 66% of prior year revenue with majority of centres
filling permitted 50% lane capacity at peak times
o Average spend increased by 5.3 per cent to GBP10.15
-- Successful launch of new Puttstars mini-golf concept with
three new centres opened in addition to three refurbishments and
rebrands and a new Hollywood Bowl centre in York
o Positive customer feedback and encouraging early trading in
line with pre-COVID revenue expectations for Puttstars Leeds
(opened March), Puttstars York and Puttstars Rochdale (August)
o Hollywood Bowl York features latest generation VIP lanes,
digital merchandising and leader boards
-- Strong balance sheet and cash generation
o Positive cash generation in both August and September
o Net debt of GBP8.7m at 30 September 2020; liquidity of
GBP31.8m
Financial Summary
12 months ended 12 months ended % Movement
30 September 30 September
2020 2019
(IFRS 16) (pre IFRS 16)
Total revenues GBP79.5m GBP129.9m -38.8%
Like for like (LFL(1)
) revenues +0.4% +5.5%
Group adjusted(2) EBITDA GBP29.8m GBP38.2m -22.0%
Operating profit GBP9.9m GBP28.4m -65.3%
Operating profit margin 12.4% 21.9% -9.5%pts
Group profit before tax GBP1.2m GBP27.6m -95.7%
Group profit after tax GBP1.4m GBP22.3m -93.8%
Basic earnings per share 0.90p 14.86p -93.9%
Net bank debt(3) GBP8.7m GBP2.1m
-------------------------- ---------------- ---------------- -----------
Outlook
-- Agile response to ongoing localised tier restrictions and
national lockdowns - successful reopening of c. 60% of the estate
on 2 December supported by localised marketing campaigns
-- Safely increased capacity through introduction of new,
approved COVID-secure measures, including full height lane seating
area dividers across the estate and uniquely identified bowling
balls for each lane
-- Ongoing roll out of digital enhancements, Pins on Strings and new scoring system
-- Conservative approach to capex with five - seven refurbishments planned for FY2021
-- Strong new centre pipeline to 2024 with additional opportunities for Puttstars expansion
-- Focused on continued investment in the portfolio and roll out of customer innovations
-- Continued, strong demand for a family focused, value-for-money and enjoyable experience
Stephen Burns, Chief Executive of Hollywood Bowl Group,
commented:
"Our ability to deliver this performance while having the
majority of the estate closed for almost half the year demonstrates
the strength of our business and the outstanding efforts of our
team. I would like to thank those who have collectively supported
our response throughout this pandemic, which has enabled us to
reopen in a robust position with a renewed focus on the highest
levels of safety and customer service.
"Some of the changes we have made as a result of COVID-19 have
enhanced our service proposition and we are very encouraged by the
customer response to our reopenings both in August and again in
December. I am very pleased with the success of our new Puttstars
concept and its performance despite opening in the most challenging
of circumstances, and we are excited about the opportunity
ahead.
"We remain confident in the continued strength of demand and we
are optimistic for a gradual return to more recognisable market
conditions in 2021. We will maintain our prudent approach but our
core focus and longer-term strategy remains unchanged: to deliver
the best possible inclusive, affordable, and safe family
entertainment experience."
1. LFL revenue is defined as total revenue excluding any new
centre openings from the current financial year until they are LFL,
closures since the same reporting period in the prior year and any
closure period impacted by Covid-19 from 16(th) March and is used
as a key measure of constant centre growth.
2. Group adjusted EBITDA (earnings before interest, tax,
depreciation and amortisation) reflects the underlying trade of the
overall business and excludes any one-off benefits (VAT rebates for
prior years) and costs. It is calculated as statutory operating
profit plus depreciation, amortisation, loss on disposal of
property, right-of-use assets, plant and equipment and software,
and any exceptional costs or income. It is management's view that
these are non-recurring benefits and costs. The reconciliation to
operating profit is set out below in this section of this
announcement. For comparative purposes, Group adjusted EBITDA pre
IFRS 16 is GBP14.0m (-63.4 per cent to FY2019).
3. Net bank debt is defined as bank borrowings from bank
facilities (GBP29.5m) excluding issue costs, less cash and cash
equivalents (GBP20.8m). Under IFRS 16, total net debt would include
lease liabilities of GBP173.8m.
Enquiries:
Hollywood Bowl Group via Tulchan
Stephen Burns, Chief Executive Officer Communications
Laurence Keen, Chief Financial Officer
Mat Hart, Chief Marketing and Technology Officer
Tulchan Communications
James Macey White
Elizabeth Snow +44 (0) 207
Laura Marshall 353 4200
CHAIRMAN'S STATEMENT
A dynamic response to a challenging year
My Chairman's Statement last year concluded with this paragraph:
"I look forward to the year ahead with great enthusiasm and
optimism. We are well placed to increase shareholder value through
the continued execution of our customer-led strategy, planned
effective investment and our highly motivated and engaged
team."
Without our highly motivated and engaged team, the year that
unfolded could have been significantly worse. I would like to thank
the entire team, in particular the senior leadership team of
Darryl, Mel, Mat, Laurence and Stephen, for their outstanding
efforts in the face of extremely challenging and testing
circumstances.
The year can be divided into three distinct parts: normal
trading, total closure and then finally reopening and trading with
COVID-secure measures and restrictions.
The first five months of the financial year delivered strong
financial and operational performance with the continued execution
of our customer-led strategy, delivering returns from product
innovations, new centre openings and the ongoing refurbishment
programme. At that point, revenue was up 12.5 per cent and
like-for-like revenue was up 9.4 per cent.
The second five months of the year took us into unprecedented
territory, with a total national lockdown. The immediate priorities
of team member welfare and liquidity were uppermost in the thoughts
of the senior leadership team. A combination of a capital raise
through the issue and sale of 7.5m shares and the securing of a
GBP10m revolving credit facility (RCF) under the Coronavirus Large
Business Interruption Loan Scheme (CLBILS), plus the low level of
net debt present in the Group, created good protection for our
medium-term viability.
The Group received further government support under the
Coronavirus Job Retention Scheme (CJRS) as it furloughed 98.6 per
cent of the total team. This brought the payroll to a manageable
level and the remaining team members proved their remarkable
adaptability by putting their 'can-do' approach into action in
taking on a wider range of duties, including ensuring all centres
were COVID-secure prior to opening.
Through the proactive, direct approach to our landlords, we
secured agreements that protected our rent position with the
majority of our landlords.
The period of closure was put to good use. We used it as an
opportunity to take a good look at the business, allowing us to
push forward several important projects. We also successfully
reviewed our operational structure and agreed processes to ensure
that when we reopened, we would hit the ground running with all the
required safety measures in place.
Reopening has not been without its challenges. Notwithstanding
the significant delay to restrictions being lifted for bowling, and
the disappointment at the false start, our comprehensive planning
enabled us to reopen successfully.
We continue to put our efforts into engagement with the
Department of Digital, Culture, Media & Sport (DCMS) and the
Treasury to extend the VAT reduction available to the leisure
sector, to bowling operators. We see this as crucial in ensuring a
level playing field for leisure operators.
Since reopening with our comprehensive COVID-secure measures,
performance to 30 September 2020 exceeded our expectations -
trading at 66 per cent of prior year revenue levels. However, the
introduction of tiered COVID alert systems in England and Scotland
has created further customer confusion which had an impact on
trading. We continue to proactively communicate with customers on a
location-by-location basis to keep them up to date and, where
possible, to reassure them that we are open. Despite all these
challenges, we are able to report the Group was cash positive for
the final two months of FY2020 and first month of FY2021, prior to
the November lockdown.
We have learned more since reopening about how we can operate
safely within a COVID-secure environment for our customers and team
members, while finding new ways to increase capacity and open more
lanes. We continue to listen to customers and team members to
adapt, test and trial new ideas - some of which will be rolled out
before the end of 2020 based on the excellent feedback we have
had.
Despite the pandemic, for the year under review, we reported a
profit of GBP1.4m. In line with previous announcements, we have
suspended all dividend payments until such time that we return to
trading levels which allow us to confidently reintroduce them.
Despite the disjointed nature of the year, we have adhered to
our strategy and continued to invest in, and develop, both our
teams and our assets. The most significant development was the
opening of the three Puttstars mini-golf centres, in Leeds, York
and Rochdale. I am pleased to report that despite the pandemic, the
centres have traded in line with pre-COVID expectations. We are
excited about the future opportunity for Puttstars and are already
exploring additional sites for expansion.
We also opened a new bowling centre in York. This centre is
particularly exciting for us. It contains all of our latest digital
developments - screens and scoring, including enhanced VIP lanes,
demonstrating that there is still opportunity to innovate and
develop the customer offer. The new centre is co-located with a
Puttstars, which will give us further insight into potential future
co-locations.
Our refurbishment programme continues, too. Although our overall
refurbishment spend in FY2020 was lower than we had planned as a
result of the pandemic, significant investments were made at
Crawley, Sheffield and Watford Woodside. These centres now have an
inspiring contemporary feel and have also been repurposed for
additional machines and/or additional lanes by combining the bar
and diner, refinements which also create more space and
efficiencies for the customer. In addition to these refurbishments,
we have rebranded Carlisle from AMF to Hollywood Bowl which has had
a very positive impact on the customer experience.
Investment continues with 'Pins on strings' and the upgrade of
the scoring system. Both investments deliver tangible benefits to
the customer, through performance and simplicity of use, and
ongoing returns for the Group. This level of sustained investment
in the existing portfolio of centres underpins our future
performance and reinforces the benefits of adopting and executing a
clearly defined strategy.
This year has been dominated by COVID-19, the unprecedented
impact it has had on the hospitality and leisure sector, and the
challenges that we have had to deal with. Throughout this whole
period, I remain impressed and inspired by the resilience and
adaptability of the wider team within our Group. This was best
illustrated by the manner in which we reopened our centres and
recommenced trading in August in such an efficient and positive
way, with so many examples of a 'can do' attitude and 'above and
beyond' personal performance.
Whilst at the time of writing we are not yet able to operate all
of our centres due to the government tiered restrictions, I firmly
believe that the spirit and enthusiasm of our people makes us well
placed to move forward and rediscover the success that has become
synonymous with Hollywood Bowl.
Peter Boddy
Non-Executive Chairman
14 December 2020
Chief executive'S Review
Operational and financial highlights
-- Pre-COVID trading ahead of expectations with significant cash
generation
-- Rapid lockdown of the estate, following UK government
announcement;
-- All centres closed on 20 March 2020;
-- Cost-reduction plans implemented to minimise cash outflows
during closure
-- Strengthened balance sheet with equity placing completed, net
proceeds of GBP10.5m and GBP10m CLBILS secured
-- Development of COVID-secure operating protocols in
preparation for the reopening of the estate during August
-- Majority of centres reopened, with significant capacity
restrictions, immediately following the lifting of local
restrictions (Wales, 4 August; England, 15 August; Scotland, 24
August)
-- Revenues from 15 August to 30 September were 66 per cent of
prior year on a like-for-like basis (LFL), with full year profit of
GBP1.4m
-- Cash flow positive in August, September and October 2020
-- Net debt of GBP8.7m at 30 September 2020; liquidity of
GBP31.8m
-- Four new centres opened in FY2020
FY2021 outlook
-- Centre reopenings in line with the regional tier system
restrictions
-- Q1 completion of rollout of new innovative COVID-secure
measures
Delivering on our strategy responsibly
The COVID-19 pandemic forced the closure of the entire Hollywood
Bowl Group estate on 20 March 2020 and we were one of the few
sectors to remain closed through to mid-August, resulting in nearly
five months of lost revenue. The Group entered the global crisis in
a strong financial position following a successful trading period
over the first half of the financial year. We have always
maintained a prudent approach to financing; a strategy that proved
to be the right one when we entered the crisis with a low leverage
with net debt of GBP14.6m and net debt:Group adjusted EBITDA (pre
IFRS 16) of 0.38x at 31 March 2020.
With no possibility of online trading, takeaway offer or any
clear idea as to how long we would be required to remain closed, we
needed to act quickly and decisively as a team to protect and
bolster the balance sheet. The prolonged period of closure meant
zero revenue which resulted in a very challenging time, even for a
healthy business such as ours. In response, we made significant
operating cost reductions and central cost savings, negotiated hard
with our landlords, and secured increased liquidity with a new
GBP10m RCF under CLBILS and GBP10.5m net proceeds via an equity
placing.
Once we had secured financial stability for a sustained period
of closure, we led the sector in developing the operational
protocols required to reopen the centres. With reduced capacity,
the team resourcing, marketing and technology requirements also
needed reworking and refining, ensuring that the business reopened
with sales, service and safety superiority as the core
objectives.
Our response to COVID-19
Our immediate focus at the onset of the pandemic was on securing
our properties and reassuring our team, a team I would like to take
this opportunity to thank for their incredible hard work and
dedication over the course of the last 12 months. One of the good
things about running a business that can see unexpected disruptions
to trade due to extreme weather, is our tried, tested and
well-practised ability to make significant changes to our operating
model at short notice.
Prior to the government making any announcements, we monitored
what was happening in the countries that were ahead of the UK
curve, and started planning for the inevitable lockdown. On 16
March, when the social distancing measures were first introduced,
we already had a detailed plan of how we would operate within the
guidelines and had trained our team on how to implement the
measures. When the full closure was announced, we put phase two of
our plan in motion. This phase included an itemised closedown
procedure that could be reversed later for a smooth reopening. We
quickly 'turned off' all discretionary spending and acted to
preserve and raise cash.
We were grateful for the swift response by government and made
full use of the CJRS. We chose to pay all our team full pay for the
first four weeks of lockdown and paid our salaried teams and
management trainees full pay to the end of May, with some enforced
holiday to relieve the post-opening burden. We also put in place a
plan for salary cuts and deferrals from July, including for
executive and non-executive directors, in preparation for a
potentially longer lockdown period, giving our team the certainty
and clarity they needed to plan their finances.
Refurbishments and new build work were paused and we reviewed
all planned projects, prioritising capital spend on projects that
guaranteed payback.
We took the decision to pay the March rent quarter in full and
to engage early with our landlords in order to agree to defer and,
or, waive payments during the period of closure.
The cash flow benefit of these agreements resulted in a cash
saving of GBP6.7m in the year to 30 September 2020, of which
GBP2.1m is waived and not due for repayment.
We further strengthened the balance sheet by raising GBP10.5m
(net proceeds) from a five per cent equity placing and are grateful
for the support shown by our shareholders in this capital raise. At
the same time, we added a GBP10m extension to our debt facility
through an RCF using CLBILS - which remains undrawn.
Operational and strategic progress
The results for FY2020 were substantially impacted by the five
months of closure. Revenues were GBP79.5m, down 38.8 per cent on
last year and Group adjusted EBITDA pre IFRS 16, was GBP14.0m
(FY2019: GBP38.2m). These figures are despite delivering a
fantastic performance over the first half of FY2020, before the
COVID-19 crisis, with all revenue lines in LFL growth compared to
the same period last year, spend per game up and Group adjusted
EBITDA pre IFRS 16 up 2.1 per cent, to GBP21.6m.
The business resumed trading during August, under the new
COVID-secure guidelines, with significant restrictions to capacity
and opening hours. Encouragingly, during the final few weeks of the
summer school holidays, we had far more demand than we could
accommodate. Trading over the final weeks of FY2020 was at 66 per
cent of prior year on a LFL basis. This was in spite of the
restrictions noted, as well as the 10:00pm curfew, rule of six and
tier system, all introduced during September 2020.
While the pandemic stopped us trading, it did not stop us
innovating - we executed elements of our strategy to improve the
quality of the estate and the experience we offer our
customers.
Once construction teams were permitted back on site, during June
2020, we completed the refurbishment of our Crawley centre, which
included adding two extra lanes as well as relocating the diner to
allow expansion of the amusement area. We also refurbished and
rebranded the AMF Carlisle centre in time for reopening. We took
the opportunity that lockdown presented to continue the rollout of
'Pins on strings', installing the technology in three centres
during June and July, adding to the four installations completed
during the first half.
We also did not stop at refurbishments and the rebrand. We
opened four new centres - one Hollywood Bowl in York and three new
Puttstars centres. York's Hollywood Bowl is located in the new
leisure extension to the successful Vangarde Way retail scheme,
co-located with our Puttstars, a Cineworld cinema and multiple
restaurants. The 28,000 square feet centre has 24 lanes, opened on
18 August 2020 and is trading in line with the rest of the
estate.
We had originally planned to further develop the new opening
Puttstars pipeline, but the pandemic has impacted a number of
property developers which has slowed negotiations. Three new
openings have been delayed, with the schemes in Swindon and
Colchester now under review. With the changes to the retail
landscape and availability of space, we believe there will be new
opportunities to backfill the pipeline and remain confident that
from FY2022, we will be able to open an average of two new centres
per year in line with our stated strategy.
Successful launch of new Puttstars mini-golf brand
We are very proud of having opened our new Puttstars concept
during FY2020. The three centres were carefully chosen to ensure a
robust test of the concept and reflect the different types of
property location available for a rollout once the trials proved
successful.
Puttstars Leeds opened first. It is a key leisure anchor,
alongside an Odeon Luxe and PureGym, in the new Springs retail and
leisure development adjacent to Junction 46 of the M1 at Thorpe
Park. Puttstars Leeds which occupies 21,000 square feet over two
floors, opened its doors just before the national lockdown and
reopened during July.
Puttstars Rochdale is sited in a new leisure extension to the
Riverside development, immediately beneath a new cinema and close
to several restaurants. The centre occupies 18,000 square feet, all
on one level and opened for trade in early August.
Our third centre is co-located with the new Hollywood Bowl in
York. Like Rochdale, it occupies 18,000 square feet and is on the
floor above the bowling centre.
Early trading has been encouraging, with all three centres
performing in line with our expectations. The bespoke scoring
system, gamification and digital journey combine with an affordable
price to offer a unique leisure experience that appeals to a wide
demographic. Customer feedback has been overwhelmingly positive and
we are very excited about the long-term opportunities the brand
presents.
Sustainability
Despite these challenging times, managing our business in a
sustainable manner remains a key element of our culture and
strategy.
Our customers benefit from our unique offering of affordable,
inclusive fun which allows for quality social engagement and has
been essential in our communities as we have started to emerge from
blanket lockdowns. Our ongoing team engagement and feedback
programmes have been vital during the periods of closure and we
have maintained strong focus on team wellbeing.
We are always looking for ways to minimise the impact of our
operations on the environment and finished our second solar
installation in Bentley Bridge with further centres planned for the
future. In our refurbishment and new centre openings there is
increased focus on the use of sustainable construction supplies and
we are making progress towards meeting our 70 per cent recycling
target by the end of FY2021.
Outlook
The Hollywood Bowl Group is uniquely positioned. Offering a
safe, fantastic value-for-money experience to a wide demographic,
the business is resilient in a recession, well capitalised and
ready to take full advantage of the opportunities that may present
themselves after the pandemic.
I am proud of the way our team has risen to the challenge of
creating a safe environment which allows our customers to enjoy the
same fun-filled experiences with us. The strong demand for bookings
following the opening in August 2020, is very encouraging and the
feedback we have received on our new COVID-secure operations has
been excellent. We continue to explore new ways of working to
increase our capacity at peak times whilst maintaining a safe and
compliant environment. Despite the ongoing uncertainty presented by
Lockdown 2.0 and the introduction of variable regional opening
restrictions, which have meant we are unable to open centres
located in the highest tiers, we remain confident in the continued
demand for a family focused, value for-money and enjoyable
experience.
The longer-term strategy remains unchanged: our high-quality,
well-invested estate is primed for growth; the property landscape
is changing; the tenant mix is becoming more leisure focused; and
we believe our customers will prioritise their leisure pound on
all-inclusive, value-for-money, family entertainment
experiences.
Stephen Burns
Chief Executive Officer
14 DEcember 2020
FINANCE REVIEW
FY2020 FY2020 FY2019 Movement
(pre IFRS (pre IFRS (pre IFRS
(IFRS 16) 16) 16) 16)
------------------------------------------- ----------- ----------- ----------- -----------
Revenue GBP79.5m GBP79.5m GBP129.9m -38.8%
------------------------------------------- ----------- ----------- ----------- -----------
Gross profit GBP67.9m GBP67.9m GBP111.4m -39.0%
------------------------------------------- ----------- ----------- ----------- -----------
Gross profit margin 85.5% 85.5% 85.7% -0.2%pts
------------------------------------------- ----------- ----------- ----------- -----------
Administrative expenses GBP58.1m GBP64.6m GBP82.9m -22.1%
------------------------------------------- ----------- ----------- ----------- -----------
Group adjusted EBITDA(1) GBP29.8m GBP14.0m GBP38.2m -63.8%
------------------------------------------- ----------- ----------- ----------- -----------
Group profit before tax GBP1.2m GBP2.4m GBP27.6m -91.2%
------------------------------------------- ----------- ----------- ----------- -----------
Free cash flow(2) (GBP4.2m) (GBP4.2m) GBP15.1m n/a
------------------------------------------- ----------- ----------- ----------- -----------
Group expansionary capital expenditure(3) GBP8.9m GBP8.9m GBP8.1m +9.3%
------------------------------------------- ----------- ----------- ----------- -----------
Average spend per game GBP10.15 GBP10.15 GBP9.64 +5.3%
------------------------------------------- ----------- ----------- ----------- -----------
1 Group adjusted EBITDA (earnings before interest, tax,
depreciation and amortisation) reflects the underlying trade of the
overall business and excludes any one-off benefits (VAT rebates for
prior years) and costs. It is calculated as statutory operating
profit plus depreciation, amortisation, loss on disposal of
property, right-of-use assets, plant and equipment and software,
any exceptional costs or income, and also shown pre IFRS 16 as well
as adjusted for IFRS 16. The reconciliation to operating profit is
set out below in this section of this announcement.
2 Free cash flow is defined as net cash flow pre dividends, bank
funding and any equity placing.
3 Group expansionary capital expenditure includes all capital on
new centres, refurbishments and rebrands only.
The results for FY2020 are presented on an IFRS 16 and pre IFRS
16 basis to enable a comparison with FY2019. For the purposes of
this review, the commentary will clearly state when it is referring
to figures on an IFRS 16 or pre IFRS 16 basis.
Total revenue for FY2020 was obviously impacted by the lockdown
which started on 20 March 2020. During this lockdown, and until the
gradual reopening of the sector, the Group saw no revenues. The
majority of the estate reopened on 15 August 2020 and was therefore
without revenues for 21.3 weeks of the financial year. For the
first half, the Group saw LFL revenue growth of 8.6 per cent, and
total revenue growth of 3.3 per cent. Since the reopening of the
sector, and with the Group operating within the approved guidelines
as outlined in the COVID-19 Response section, it has seen LFL
revenues at 66 per cent of the comparable period to 30 September
2020.
The total revenue for FY2020 was GBP79.5m (FY2019:
GBP129.9m).
Gross profit margin
As a result of the closure, gross profit margin reduced to
GBP67.9m (FY2019: GBP111.4m), with a margin rate of 85.5 per cent.
Gross margin for combined diner and bar was impacted by increased
waste as the Group entered lockdown, as well as the late notice of
the delayed reopening that was planned for 1 August. In total,
GBP0.2m was written off due to expiration dates of specific food
and drink product categories. Excluding this write off, gross
margin was in line with the prior year, at 85.7 per cent.
Administrative expenses
Administrative expenses, on a pre IFRS 16 basis, were GBP64.6m,
a decrease of GBP18.4m (22.1 per cent) on the corresponding period
in the prior year. During the four full months of lockdown, the
Group saw a reduction of 59.5 per cent in administrative expenses,
excluding depreciation and amortisation. This was principally due
to the reduction in employee costs with the support of the CJRS,
rent savings as agreed with landlords, and the business rates
suspension from 1 April 2020.
Mitigating actions to reduce costs
Upon closure of our centres, we were able to reduce the estate
running costs significantly: maintenance was reduced (to health and
safety requirements only) until late July when preparing the sites
for reopening; utilities were reduced, although not to zero as
standing charges were still incurred; costs from our external
cleaning company were reduced to zero.
In addition to the cost savings noted above, we reduced
marketing spend significantly, with minimal spend focused on our
social media channels and existing database communication.
During the closure period, we reviewed our support centre
structure to ensure we were set up in the most efficient way to
exit the lockdown and continue to drive the Group's strategy. This
review led to a reduction of 14 per cent in our headcount, an
annualised saving of GBP0.4m in Corporate costs.
Some of these savings were offset by one-off expenses to ensure
that centres were opened in a COVID-secure way as stipulated by the
guidelines. These costs included the development and rollout of
COVID-secure protocols and measures; investment to develop our own
COVID track and trace app; and an app-based food and drink ordering
system. The total cost of these was GBP0.2m. Corporate costs
decreased by GBP3.3m in FY2020 (FY2019: GBP11.9m).
Support from UK government initiatives
-- Compared to the prior year, the 12-month business rates
relief, from April 2020 to March 2021, provides a cash saving of
GBP7.3m, with GBP3.9m for FY2020 and the rest to be seen in FY2021.
From a profit and loss income statement perspective, the total
amount is split equally between FY2020 and FY2021.
-- The HMRC Time to Pay arrangement for the March 2020 VAT
quarter results in a deferred cash benefit of GBP2.1m. Based on
recent government legislation, this will now be paid over 11 equal
monthly instalments, starting in March 2021.
-- The CJRS meant that we were able to furlough 98.6 per cent of
our team from 23 March to shortly before the centres reopened, in
phases, from 4 August 2020. The Group took the decision to pay all
hourly paid team members the higher of the furlough rate and their
contracted hours for the first four weeks of lockdown, and then
moved onto the furlough scheme rules post that period. For all
salaried team members, the Group elected to top up salaries to 100
per cent of salary for March, April and May, and then moved to the
government scheme of 80 per cent of salary for the rest of the
lockdown period. The total support claimed from the CJRS in the
period was GBP8.2m, of which GBP7.7m cash was received in FY2020,
with the September claim being received in full, post year end.
-- We have a strong relationship with our landlords which was
further enhanced with full payment of the March rent quarter. This
meant that, in April, we were able to engage with our landlords on
how to work in partnership to ensure an equitable solution for the
June and September quarters. We were able to agree with the vast
majority rent-free periods of varying lengths, as well as some
lease regears which we had been working on previously. For those
landlords that have not engaged, we have taken advantage of the
Corporate Insolvency and Governance (CIG) Bill, and deferred rent
payments for June and September quarters. The total value of this
deferment is GBP1.3m, exclusive of VAT, and we continue to look for
engagement on these units over the coming months. These deferments
did not impact the IFRS 16 income statement charge for FY2020 but
did reduce the cash rent outflow, thereby supporting operating cash
flow. If no agreements are reached, this deferred amount will be
due for payment on 31 December 2020, unless the CIG Bill is
extended.
-- The above actions resulted in Group cash rent for June of
GBP1.0m and GBP1.3m in September, which is a saving of GBP3.6m and
GBP3.2m respectively. Of these savings, GBP0.7m in June and GBP0.8m
in September, is deferred and will be due for payment as noted
above.
Excluding property lease assets depreciation, the depreciation
charge was GBP10.1m, compared to GBP9.0m in FY2019, as a result of
the continued capital investment programme, including new centres,
refurbishments and centre scoring technology rollout. Post the
adoption of IFRS 16, depreciation has increased from GBP9.0m in
FY2019 to GBP19.4m in FY2020.
Centre employee costs were GBP15.0m for FY2020, a decrease of
GBP10m on an overall Group basis on the same period in the prior
year. Excluding the CJRS benefit, we would have expected employee
costs to increase by 3.1 per cent due to a combination of National
Minimum/Living Wage increases and new centre openings.
Following the adoption of IFRS 16, administrative expenses
exclude property rents and include the depreciation of property
right-of-use assets. On this statutory basis, administrative
expenses decreased by GBP24.9m (30.0 per cent) compared with
FY2019.
Group adjusted EBITDA and operating profit
During H1, Group adjusted EBITDA pre IFRS 16, continued to grow,
albeit impacted by the COVID-19 enforced closure, and increased by
2.4 per cent compared to the prior year period, to GBP21.6m.
However, the closure of all centres from 20 March until the phased
reopening from 4 August, resulted in FY2020 Group adjusted EBITDA,
pre IFRS 16, of GBP14.0m (FY2019: GBP38.2m).
FY2020 FY2019
GBP'000 GBP'000
------------------------------------------------------------ --------- ---------
Operating profit 9,861 28,444
------------------------------------------------------------ --------- ---------
Depreciation 19,418 9,041
------------------------------------------------------------ --------- ---------
Amortisation 507 502
------------------------------------------------------------ --------- ---------
Loss on property, right-of-use assets, plant and equipment
and software disposal 22 596
------------------------------------------------------------ --------- ---------
Exceptional items - (380)
------------------------------------------------------------ --------- ---------
Group adjusted EBITDA under IFRS 16 29,808 38,203
------------------------------------------------------------ --------- ---------
IFRS 16 adjustment(1) (15,840) -
------------------------------------------------------------ --------- ---------
Group adjusted EBITDA pre IFRS 16 13,968 38,203
------------------------------------------------------------ --------- ---------
1 IFRS 16 adoption has an impact on EBITDA, with the removal of
rent from the calculation. For Group adjusted EBITDA pre IFRS 16,
it is deducted for comparative purposes and is used by investors as
a key measure of the business.
Management use EBITDA adjusted for exceptional items and IFRS 16
rent adjustment (Group adjusted EBITDA pre IFRS 16) as a key
performance measure of the business.
Statutory operating profit reduced to GBP9.9m in FY2020, a
reduction of GBP18.6m compared to the same period last year for the
reasons noted above in respect of COVID-19.
Exceptional costs
There were no exceptional costs for the period. The VAT rebate
shown in the period to FY2019 relates to a one-off retrospective
reclaim in respect of unclaimed input VAT on professional fees.
Share-based payments
During the first half of the year, the Group granted further
Long Term Incentive Plan (LTIP) shares to the senior leadership
team, including the CEO and CFO. These awards vest in three years
providing continuous employment during this period and the
attainment of certain performance conditions relating to earnings
per share (EPS). The Group also started a new Sharesave scheme,
open to all team members, in February 2020.
The Group recognised a total charge of GBP729,829 (FY2019:
GBP633,075) in relation to the Group's share-based payment
arrangements.
None of these non-cash costs are classified as exceptional
costs.
Finance costs
Finance costs increased to GBP8.8m in FY2020 (FY2019: GBP1.0m)
comprising the implied interest relating to the lease liability
under IFRS 16 of GBP7.8m and GBP1.0m associated with our bank
borrowing facilities.
Taxation
The Group has incurred a tax credit of GBP0.2m compared to a
charge of GBP5.3m in the comparable period in the prior year.
Earnings
Statutory profit before tax for the year was GBP1.2m, a decrease
of GBP26.4m on the corresponding period in FY2019 due to the
factors discussed above. The impact of IFRS 16 on FY2020 is to
reduce profit before tax by GBP1.2m.
The Group delivered profit after tax of GBP1.4m (FY2019:
GBP22.3m) and basic earnings per share were 0.90 pence (FY2019:
14.86 pence).
Financing
As highlighted previously, all centres were closed on 20 March,
in line with government guidance.
In light of the COVID-19 uncertainty, the Group conducted an
equity placing of 7,500,000 new ordinary shares (representing five
per cent of the issued share capital) which raised GBP10.9m gross
proceeds (GBP10.5m net of costs).
The Group also agreed with its lending bank, Lloyds, to a
combination of liquidity-enhancing amendments to its borrowing
facility. These included a GBP10m extension of the Group's RCF
under CLBILS, a number of covenant test relaxations and waivers
(listed below), and an additional year to extend the current
facility out to September 2022. The RCF under the CLBILS remains
undrawn.
* Leverage covenants extended to:
----------------------------------------------- -------
- September 2020 2.25x
----------------------------------------------- -------
- December 2020 waived
----------------------------------------------- -------
- March 2021 waived
----------------------------------------------- -------
- June 2021 1.50x
----------------------------------------------- -------
- September 2021 until
June 2022 1.50x
----------------------------------------------- -------
* Cash cover covenant waived for September 2020,
December 2020 and March 2021
--------------------------------------------------------
New liquidity and Group adjusted EBITDA (pre IFRS 16) covenant
tests have been agreed for December 2020 and March 2021:
-- Liquidity including balance sheet cash and any unutilised
RCFs at least GBP17m.
-- TTM Group adjusted EBITDA pre IFRS 16, minimum of -GBP3m.
Cash flow and net debt
Net debt at 30 September 2020 is GBP8.7m (FY2019: GBP2.1m),
consisting of GBP20.8m cash at bank and GBP29.5m gross debt.
FY2020 FY2019
GBP'000 GBP'000
-------------------------------------- -------- ---------
Group adjusted EBITDA 29,808 38,203
-------------------------------------- -------- ---------
Movement in working capital (3,546) 969
-------------------------------------- -------- ---------
Maintenance capital expenditure (4,862) (8,606)
-------------------------------------- -------- ---------
Taxation (3,116) (5,517)
-------------------------------------- -------- ---------
Payment of capital elements of leases (3,500) -
-------------------------------------- -------- ---------
Adjusted operating cash flow (OCF)(1) 14,785 25,050
-------------------------------------- -------- ---------
Adjusted OCF conversion 49.6% 65.6%
-------------------------------------- -------- ---------
Expansionary capital expenditure (8,852) (8,098)
-------------------------------------- -------- ---------
Exceptional items - 390
-------------------------------------- -------- ---------
Net bank loan interest paid (858) (711)
-------------------------------------- -------- ---------
Lease interest paid (7,770) -
-------------------------------------- -------- ---------
Debt repayments (1,500) (1,500)
-------------------------------------- -------- ---------
Free cash flow (FCF)(2) (4,195) 15,131
-------------------------------------- -------- ---------
Drawdown on RCF 4,000 -
-------------------------------------- -------- ---------
Dividends paid (14,489) (15,244)
-------------------------------------- -------- ---------
Equity placing (net of fees) 10,541 -
-------------------------------------- -------- ---------
Net cash flow (4,144) (1,113)
-------------------------------------- -------- ---------
1 Adjusted operating cash flow is calculated as Group adjusted
EBITDA less working capital, maintenance capital expenditure,
taxation and payment of capital element of leases. This represents
a good measure for the cash generated by the business after taking
into account all necessary maintenance capital expenditure to
ensure the routine running of the business. This excludes one-off
exceptional items, net interest paid, debt drawdowns and any debt
repayments.
2 Free cash flow is defined as net cash flow pre dividends, bank
funding and any equity placing.
The Group's free cash flow was significantly impacted by the
closure of its centres, although the impact would have been greater
if not for the considerable work undertaken on managing capital
expenditure through lockdown, and more notably the negotiations
undertaken with the Group's landlords.
Capital expenditure
Total net capital expenditure was down GBP3.0m year on year
(17.9 per cent) on the comparable period in the prior year, to
GBP13.7m.
At the start of the first lockdown, there were a number of
capital projects underway and therefore already committed to. These
included the new Puttstars centres in both York and Rochdale, the
new Hollywood Bowl in York, and refurbishments in Crawley and
Carlisle. These projects were all completed within a week of the
English centres being permitted to open (15 August), and we also
used the closure of centres to install 'Pins on strings' in two
further centres. It is anticipated that all of these projects will
generate returns in line with Board expectations. Four centres
opened in FY2020, resulting in net capital spend on new centres of
GBP7.7m, an increase of GBP2.3m on FY2019.
Dividend
As part of its COVID-19-related actions, the Board is not
recommending any dividend for FY2020.
The Group operates a highly cash generative business model, and
therefore once the overall impact of COVID-19 and the subsequent
recovery has been more clearly established, the Board believes it
will be in a position to reinstate its dividend policy. The RCF
available under the CLBILS would need to be closed for dividends to
recommence.
IFRS 16
The Group has applied IFRS 16 as at 1 October 2019. A
right-of-use asset and a lease liability is included on the balance
sheet, and interest and depreciation has been charged to the
consolidated income statement instead of existing rental
expenses.
IFRS 16 has no effect on how the business is run, and there will
be no change to the Group's cash flow and growth plans due to its
adoption.
The Group has adopted the modified retrospective method. Under
this method, comparative data is not restated and the cumulative
effect of applying IFRS 16 is recognised in retained earnings at
the date of initial application.
A summary of the impact on the Group consolidated income
statement and consolidated statement of financial position (balance
sheet), is as below:
FY2020
GBP'000
------------------------------------------ ---------
Administrative expenses:
------------------------------------------ ---------
* Rent(1) 15,840
------------------------------------------ ---------
* Depreciation (9,300)
------------------------------------------ ---------
* Gain on lease surrenders 6
------------------------------------------ ---------
Net reduction to administrative expenses 6,546
------------------------------------------ ---------
Finance costs (interest) (7,770)
------------------------------------------ ---------
Net decrease to profit before tax (1,224)
------------------------------------------ ---------
1 IFRS 16 adoption has an impact on EBITDA, with the removal of
rent from the calculation.
Impact on the Group consolidated statement of financial
position
FY2020
GBP'000
-------------------- ----------
Assets 135,176
-------------------- ----------
Deferred tax asset 5,611
-------------------- ----------
Lease liability (173,804)
-------------------- ----------
Retained earnings (33,017)
-------------------- ----------
Going concern
As part of the adoption of the going concern basis, the Group
has considered the Group's cash flow, liquidity and business
activities, as well as the uncertainty caused by the COVID-19
outbreak. All of the Group's centres were closed for trade from 20
March 2020 with a phased reopening from 4 August 2020, with the
majority of the centres reopening on 15 August.
As part of the review and the potential impact of the COVID-19
outbreak on the Group's cash flows and liquidity over the next 12
months, a base case and multiple downside scenarios were prepared.
Under each scenario, mitigating actions are within management
control and can be initiated as they relate to discretionary spend.
The actions include reduced employee costs, maintenance and
marketing spend, as well as reducing all non-essential and
non-committed capital expenditure. The Group also agreed with its
lending bank, Lloyds, to a combination of liquidity-enhancing
amendments to its borrowing facility. These include a GBP10m
extension of the Group's RCF under CLBILS, a number of covenant
test relaxations and waivers, and an additional year to extend the
current facility out to September 2022.
The base case has FY2021 revenues at levels of between -45 per
cent and -15 per cent of FY2020 (five months actual and seven
months budget), excluding the English lockdown in November 2020,
closed centres due to local tier trading restrictions, as well as
taking into account the impact of socially distanced
operations.
Under this base case scenario, in FY2021 the Group continues to
remain profitable with sufficient liquidity and no covenant
breaches.
As detailed in note 2 to the Financial Statements, the most
severe downside scenario modelled would still provide sufficient
liquidity to pass the liquidity and cash cover covenant tests.
However, under this severe downside, the TTM Group adjusted EBITDA
(pre IFRS 16) loan covenant, whilst not breached, would be
challenged at March 2021. In the event this covenant is breached,
an extension of this covenant would need to be negotiated with
Lloyds Bank plc, which particularly given the cash position of
between GBP18m and GBP22m, as well as the Group's success
negotiating recent covenant waivers, would likely be attained.
Nevertheless in the event of extended lockdown measures
impacting the Group's operations, the possibility of a covenant
breach at the end of March 2021 cannot be discounted, and as such
represents a material uncertainty that may cast significant doubt
on the Group's ability to continue as a going concern.
Taking the above and the principal risks faced by the Group into
consideration, and the Directors expectation that they could
negotiate an extension to the covenant should the need arise, the
Directors are satisfied that the Group has adequate resources to
continue in operation for the foreseeable future, a period of at
least 12 months from the date of this report. Accordingly, the
Group continues to adopt the going concern basis in preparing these
Financial Statements.
Laurence Keen
Chief Financial Officer
14 DECEMBER 2020
FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
Consolidated income statement and statement of comprehensive
income
Year ending 30 September 2020
30 September 30 September
2020 2019
Note GBP'000 GBP'000
------------------------------------------------------ ----- ------------- -------------
Revenue 79,473 129,894
Cost of sales (11,543) (18,542)
------------------------------------------------------ ----- ------------- -------------
Gross profit 67,930 111,352
Administrative expenses 5 (58,069) (82,908)
------------------------------------------------------ ----- ------------- -------------
Operating profit 9,861 28,444
------------------------------------------------------ ----- ------------- -------------
Underlying operating profit 9,861 28,064
Exceptional items 4 - 380
------------------------------------------------------ ----- ------------- -------------
Finance income 7 78 167
Finance expenses 7 (8,743) (1,023)
------------------------------------------------------ ----- ------------- -------------
Profit before tax 1,196 27,588
Tax expense 8 189 (5,303)
------------------------------------------------------ ----- ------------- -------------
Profit for the year attributable to equity
shareholders 1,385 22,285
Other comprehensive income - -
------------------------------------------------------ ----- ------------- -------------
Total comprehensive income for the year attributable
to equity shareholders 1,385 22,285
------------------------------------------------------ ----- ------------- -------------
Basic earnings per share (pence) 9 0.90 14.86
Diluted earnings per share (pence) 9 0.90 14.79
------------------------------------------------------ ----- ------------- -------------
Consolidated statement of financial position
As at 30 September 2020
30 September 30 September
2020 2019
Note GBP'000 GBP'000
------------------------------------- ----- ------------- -------------
ASSETS
Non-current assets
Property, plant and equipment 10 48,220 47,365
Right-of-use assets 11 135,176 -
Goodwill and intangible assets 12 78,173 78,457
Deferred tax asset 16 5,295 -
------------------------------------- ----- ------------- -------------
266,864 125,822
------------------------------------- ----- ------------- -------------
Current assets
Cash and cash equivalents 20,784 24,929
Trade and other receivables 13 1,720 8,014
Corporation tax receivable 285 -
Inventories 1,340 1,212
------------------------------------- ----- ------------- -------------
24,129 34,155
------------------------------------- ----- ------------- -------------
Total assets 290,993 159,977
------------------------------------- ----- ------------- -------------
LIABILITIES
Current liabilities
Trade and other payables 14 9,940 18,464
Lease liabilities 11 14,404 -
Loans and borrowings 15 5,205 1,380
Corporation tax payable - 2,517
------------------------------------- ----- ------------- -------------
29,549 22,361
------------------------------------- ----- ------------- -------------
Non-current liabilities
Other payables 14 814 6,846
Lease liabilities 11 159,400 -
Loans and borrowings 15 23,833 25,383
Deferred tax liabilities 16 - 596
Provisions 3,903 3,150
------------------------------------- ----- ------------- -------------
187,950 35,975
------------------------------------- ----- ------------- -------------
Total liabilities 217,499 58,336
------------------------------------- ----- ------------- -------------
NET ASSETS 73,494 101,641
------------------------------------- ----- ------------- -------------
Equity attributable to shareholders
Share capital 1,575 1,500
Share premium 10,466 -
Merger reserve (49,897) (49,897)
Retained earnings 111,350 150,038
------------------------------------- ----- ------------- -------------
TOTAL EQUITY 73,494 101,641
------------------------------------- ----- ------------- -------------
Consolidated statement of changes in equity
For the year ended 30 September 2020
Share Share Merger Retained
capital premium reserve earnings Total
GBP'000 GBP'000 GBP'000 GBP'000 GBP'000
----------------------------------- --------- --------- --------- ---------- ---------
Equity at 30 September 2018 1,500 - (49,897) 143,335 94,938
Dividends paid - - - (16,244) (16,244)
Share-based payments - - - 662 662
Profit for the period - - - 22,285 22,285
----------------------------------- --------- --------- --------- ---------- ---------
Equity at 30 September 2019 1,500 - (49,897) 150,038 101,641
Adjustment on initial application
of IFRS 16 (note 2) - - - (31,696) (31,696)
Taxation on IFRS 16 transition
adjustment (note 2) - - - 5,388 5,388
----------------------------------- --------- --------- --------- ---------- ---------
Adjusted balance at 1 October
2019 1,500 - (49,897) 123,730 75,333
Shares issued during the year 75 10,466 - - 10,541
Dividends paid - - - (14,489) (14,489)
Share-based payments - - - 724 724
Profit for the period - - - 1,385 1,385
----------------------------------- --------- --------- --------- ---------- ---------
Equity at 30 September 2020 1,575 10,466 (49,897) 111,350 73,494
----------------------------------- --------- --------- --------- ---------- ---------
Consolidated statement of cash flows
For the year ended 30 September 2020
30 September 30 September
2020 2019
Note GBP'000 GBP'000
---------------------------------------------------- ----- -------------- --------------
Cash flows from operating activities
Profit before tax 1,196 27,588
Adjusted by:
Depreciation of Property, plant and equipment 10 7,247 9,041
Depreciation of right-of-use assets 11 12,171 -
Amortisation of intangible assets 12 507 502
Net interest expense 8,665 856
Loss on disposal of property, plant and equipment
and software 22 596
Share-based payments 724 662
---------------------------------------------------- ----- -------------- --------------
Operating profit before working capital changes 30,532 39,245
(Increase)/decrease in inventories (128) 42
Decrease/(increase) in trade and other receivables 1,727 (1,444)
(Decrease)/increase in payables and provisions (5,868) 1,718
---------------------------------------------------- ----- -------------- --------------
Cash inflow generated from operations 26,263 39,561
Interest received 85 160
Income tax paid - corporation tax (3,117) (5,518)
Bank interest paid (943) (871)
Lease interest paid (7,770) -
---------------------------------------------------- ----- -------------- --------------
Net cash inflow from operating activities 14,518 33,332
---------------------------------------------------- ----- -------------- --------------
Cash flows from investing activities
Purchase of property, plant and equipment (13,492) (16,390)
Purchase of intangible assets (223) (311)
---------------------------------------------------- ----- -------------- --------------
Net cash used in investing activities (13,715) (16,701)
---------------------------------------------------- ----- -------------- --------------
Cash flows from financing activities
Repayment of bank loan (1,500) (1,500)
Drawdown of borrowings 4,000 -
Payment of capital elements of leases (3,500) -
Issue of shares 10,541 -
Dividends paid (14,489) (16,244)
---------------------------------------------------- ----- -------------- --------------
Net cash used in financing activities (4,948) (17,744)
---------------------------------------------------- ----- -------------- --------------
Net change in cash and cash equivalents for
the period (4,145) (1,113)
Cash and cash equivalents at the beginning
of the period 24,929 26,042
---------------------------------------------------- ----- -------------- --------------
Cash and cash equivalents at the end of the
period 20,784 24,929
---------------------------------------------------- ----- -------------- --------------
Notes to the Financial Statements
1. General information
The financial information set out above does not constitute the
company's statutory accounts for the years ended 30 September 2020
or 2019, but is derived from these accounts. Statutory accounts for
2019 have been delivered to the registrar of companies, and those
for 2020 will be delivered in due course. The auditor has reported
on those accounts; their reports were (i) unqualified, (ii) did not
include a reference to any matters which the auditor drew attention
by way of emphasis without qualifying their report and (iii) did
not contain a statement under section 498 (2) or (3) of the
Companies Act 2006. However the auditors' report on the statutory
accounts for 2020 included a reference to the material uncertainty
related to going concern.
Hollywood Bowl Group plc (together with its subsidiaries, 'the
Group') is a public limited company whose shares are publicly
traded on the London Stock Exchange and is incorporated and
domiciled in England and Wales. The registered office of the Parent
Company is Focus 31, West Wing, Cleveland Road, Hemel Hempstead,
HP2 7BW, United Kingdom. The registered Company number is
10229630.
The Group's principal activities are that of the operation of
ten-pin bowling and mini-golf centres as well as the development of
new centres and other associated activities.
The Directors of the Group are responsible for the consolidated
Financial Statements.
2. Accounting policies
Basis of preparation
The consolidated Financial Statements have been prepared on a
going concern basis under the historical cost convention.
The Company has elected to prepare its Financial Statements in
accordance with FRS 102, the Financial Reporting Standard
applicable in the UK and Republic of Ireland. On publishing the
Parent Company Financial Statements here together with the Group
Financial Statements, the Company has taken advantage of the
exemption in s408 of the Companies Act 2006 not to present its
individual income statement and statement of comprehensive income
and related notes that form a part of these approved Financial
Statements.
Judgements made by the Directors, in the application of these
accounting policies, that have significant effect on the Financial
Statements and estimates with a significant risk of material
adjustment in the next year are discussed below.
New standards adopted in the year
During the year the Group has adopted IFRS 16 for the first
time. The nature and effect of the impact of this are outlined in
the leases section in Note 11.
Earnings per share
The calculation of earnings per Ordinary share is based on
earnings after tax and the weighted average number of Ordinary
shares in issue during the year.
The adjusted earnings per share figures have also been
calculated based on earnings before adjusting items that are
significant in nature and/or quantum and are considered to be
distortive (see notes 4 and 9). These have been presented to
provide shareholders with an additional measure of the Group's
year-on-year performance.
For diluted earnings per share, the weighted average number of
Ordinary shares in issue is adjusted to assume conversion of all
dilutive potential Ordinary shares. The Group has one type of
dilutive potential Ordinary shares, being those unvested shares
granted under the Long Term Incentive Plans.
Standards issued not yet effective
At the date of authorisation of this financial information,
certain new standards, amendments and interpretations to existing
standards applicable to the Group have been published but are not
yet effective, and have not been adopted early by the Group. These
are listed below:
Applicable
for financial
years beginning
Standard/interpretation Content on/after
----------------------- --------------------------------------------------------- ----------------
IAS 1 Classification In January 2020, the IASB issued amendments to 1 October
of liabilities paragraphs 69 to 76 of IAS 1 to specify the requirements 2023
as current or for classifying liabilities as current or non-current.
non-current' The amendments are not expected to have a material
impact on the Group.
----------------------- --------------------------------------------------------- ----------------
IAS 16 Property, In May 2020, the IASB issued Property, Plant and 1 October
plant and equipment: Equipment: Proceeds before Intended Use, which 2022
Proceeds before prohibits entities deducting from the cost of
intended use an item of property, plant and equipment any proceeds
from selling items produced while bringing that
asset to the location and condition necessary
for it to be capable of operating in the manner
intended by management.
The amendment is not expected to have a material
impact on the Group.
----------------------- --------------------------------------------------------- ----------------
IFRS 17 Insurance In May 2017, the IASB issued IFRS 17 Insurance 1 October
contracts Contracts (IFRS 17), a comprehensive new accounting 2023
standard for insurance contracts covering recognition
and measurement, presentation and disclosure.
Once effective, IFRS 17 will replace IFRS 4 Insurance
Contracts (IFRS 4) that was issued in 2005.
The amendment is not expected to have a material
impact on the Group.
----------------------- --------------------------------------------------------- ----------------
IFRS 3 Reference In May 2020, the IASB issued Amendments to IFRS 1 October
to the conceptual 3 Business Combinations - Reference to the Conceptual 2022
framework Framework.
The amendment is not expected to have a material
impact on the Group.
----------------------- --------------------------------------------------------- ----------------
IAS 37 Onerous In May 2020, the IASB issued amendments to IAS 1 October
contracts 37 to specify which costs an entity needs to include 2022
when assessing whether a contract is onerous or
loss-making.
The amendment is not expected to have a material
impact on the Group.
----------------------- --------------------------------------------------------- ----------------
Interest rate The amendments address issues that might affect 1 October
benchmark reform: IFRS 9, IAS 39, IFRS 7, IFRS 4 and IFRS 16 as 2021
Phase 2 a result of the reform of an interest rate benchmark.
The amendment is not expected to have a material
impact on the Group.
----------------------- --------------------------------------------------------- ----------------
Going concern
In assessing the going concern position of the Group for the
Consolidated Financial Statements for the year ended 30 September
2020, the Directors have considered the Group's cash flow,
liquidity and business activities, as well as the uncertainty
caused by the COVID-19 outbreak. All of the Group's centres were
closed for trade from 20 March 2020 with a phased reopening from 4
August 2020, with the majority of the centres reopening on 15
August. At 30 September 2020, the Group had cash balances of
GBP20.8m and undrawn financing facilities of GBP11m.
As part of the review of the potential impact of the COVID-19
outbreak on the Group's cash flows and liquidity over the next 12
months, a base case and multiple downside scenarios were prepared.
Under each scenario, mitigating actions are within management
control and can be initiated as they relate to discretionary spend.
The actions include reduced employee costs, maintenance and
marketing spend, as well as reducing all non-essential and
non-committed capital expenditure. The Group also agreed with its
lending bank, Lloyds Bank plc, to a combination of
liquidity-enhancing amendments to its borrowing facility. These
include a number of covenant test relaxations and waivers, as well
as an additional year to extend the current facility out to
September 2022.
The base case has FY2021 revenues at levels of between -45 per
cent and -15 per cent of FY2020 (five months actual performance and
seven months budget), excluding the English lockdown in November
2020, closed centres due to local tier trading restrictions, as
well as taking into account the impact of socially distanced
operations. Under this base case scenario, in FY2021 the Group
continues to be profitable with sufficient liquidity and no
covenant breaches.
The most severe downside scenario was prepared using the
following key assumptions:
-- revenue assumed at 11 percentage points down on the base case
for FY2021;
-- the centres closed due to local tier trading restrictions
that commenced on 2 December 2020, to remain closed until the end
of February 2021;
-- in line with the revenue reduction, reduced employee costs.
When centres are forced to close, taking advantage of the CJRS and
no additional top up pay for centre teams;
-- reduced maintenance and marketing spend, as well as reducing
all non-essential and non-committed capital expenditure in FY2021;
and
-- no dividend payments in FY2021.
The most severe downside scenario modelled would still provide
sufficient liquidity within its cash position, but under this
severe downside, the TTM Group adjusted EBITDA (pre IFRS 16) loan
covenant would be challenged at March 2021. In the event this
covenant is breached, an extension of this covenant would need to
be negotiated with Lloyds Bank plc. The Directors believe this is
likely to be attained, particularly given the strong cash position
of the Group in this scenario being between GBP18m and GBP22m,
depending on capital expenditure, as well as its strong
relationship and success on obtaining covenant waivers with its
lending bank recently. The Group would also have access to GBP11m
in undrawn RCFs.
Nevertheless in the event of extended lockdown measures
impacting the Group's operations, the possibility of a covenant
breach at the end of March 2021 cannot be discounted, and as such
represents a material uncertainty that may cast significant doubt
on the Group's ability to continue as a going concern, in which
case it may be unable to realise its assets and discharge its
liabilities in the normal course of business.
Taking the above and the principal risks faced by the Group into
consideration, and the Directors expectation that they could
negotiate an extension to the covenant should the need arise, the
Directors are satisfied that the Group has adequate resources to
continue in operation for the foreseeable future, a period of at
least twelve months from the date of this report. Accordingly, the
Group continues to adopt the going concern basis in preparing these
financial statements.
Leases
IFRS 16 Leases replaces existing guidance under IAS 17 and
introduces a fundamental change to the recognition, measurement,
presentation and disclosure of leases for lessees.
The Group adopted IFRS 16 with effect from 1 October 2019. The
Group applied the standard using the modified retrospective
approach and thus comparative information has not been restated and
is presented, as previously reported, under IAS 17.
The new standard results in all property and amusement machine
leases being recognised on the Statement of Financial Position as,
from a lessee perspective, there is no longer any distinction
between operating and finance leases. Under IFRS 16, an asset is
based on the right to use a leased item over a long-term period and
a financial liability to pay rentals are recognised. The only
exceptions are short-term and low-value leases.
The Group leases properties, which under IAS 17 were classified
as a series of operating lease contracts with payments made (net of
any incentives received from the lessor) charged to profit or loss
as arising over the period of the lease.
The Group obtains control over amusement machines using extended
credit terms over four years. For financial years up to 30
September 2019, these were accounted for as property, plant and
equipment under IAS 16, with an associated creditor with respect to
the extended credit. Upon adoption of IFRS 16, the Group has
re-assessed the amusement machines contract as meeting the
definition of a lease. Accordingly, these amusement machines have
been accounted for under IFRS 16 from 1 October 2019.
From 1 October 2019, under IFRS 16, leases are recognised as a
right-of-use asset with a corresponding lease liability from the
date at which the leased asset becomes available for use by the
Group.
Right-of-use assets are measured at cost, less any accumulated
depreciation and impairment losses, and adjusted for any
remeasurement of lease liabilities. The cost of right-of-use assets
includes the amount of lease liabilities recognised, less any lease
incentives received. Right-of-use assets are depreciated on a
straight-line basis over the shorter of the lease term and the
estimated useful lives of the assets.
Lease liabilities are measured at the present value of lease
payments to be made over the lease term. The lease payments include
fixed payments (including in-substance fixed payments) less any
lease incentives receivable and variable lease payments that depend
on an index or a rate. Variable lease payments that do not depend
on an index or a rate are recognised as expenses in the period in
which the event or condition that triggers the payment occurs.
In calculating the present value of lease payments, the Group
uses its incremental borrowing rate at the lease commencement date
because the interest rate implicit in the lease is not readily
determinable. After the commencement date, the amount of lease
liabilities is increased to reflect the accretion of interest and
reduced for the lease payments made. In addition, the carrying
amount of lease liabilities is remeasured if there is a
modification, a change in the lease term or a change in the lease
payments (e.g. changes to future payments resulting from a change
in an index or rate used to determine such lease payments).
In applying IFRS 16 for the first time, the Group has used the
following practical expedients permitted by the standard:
-- Use of a single discount rate to a portfolio of leases with
reasonably similar characteristics for amusement machines.
-- Short-term leases (leases of less than 12 months) and leases
with less than 12 months remaining as at the date of adoption of
the new standard are not within the scope of IFRS 16.
-- Leases for which the asset is of low value (IT equipment and
small items of office equipment) are not within the scope of IFRS
16.
-- Exclusion of initial direct costs from the measurement of the
right-of-use asset on transition.
-- The use of hindsight in determining the lease term when the
contract included options to extend the lease.
On adoption of IFRS 16, the Group recognised lease liabilities
in relation to leases previously classified as 'operating leases'
under the principles of IAS 17 Leases. For all leases, these
liabilities were measured at the present value of the remaining
lease payments, discounted using the Group's incremental borrowing
rate as of 1 October 2019, specific to each type of asset. This
ranged from 4.05 per cent to 5.53 per cent for property leases and
2.90 per cent for amusement machine leases.
The associated right-of-use assets were measured using the
approach set out in IFRS 16.C8(b)(i), whereby right-of-use assets
are measured at their carrying amount as if the standard had been
applied since the lease commencement date, but discounted using the
Group's incremental borrowing rate at the date of initial
application.
Under IFRS 16, the right-of-use assets are tested for impairment
in accordance with IAS 36 Impairment of Assets. This replaces the
previous requirement to recognise a provision for onerous leases.
An impairment assessment of the cash-generating unit (CGU) assets
was performed on transition at 1 October 2019 with no initial
impairment charge identified.
The effect of the accounting policy change on the Consolidated
Statement of Financial Position at implementation on 1 October 2019
was:
As at 30 As at
September IFRS 16 1 October
2019 adjustments 2019
GBP'000 GBP'000 GBP'000
------------------------------------------------------- ---------- ------------ ----------
Assets
Property, plant and equipment 47,365 (6,312) 41,053
Right-of-use assets - 136,337 136,337
Prepayments 7,240 (4,561) 2,679
Deferred tax asset - 5,388 5,388
------------------------------------------------------- ---------- ------------ ----------
Total assets 54,605 130,852 185,457
------------------------------------------------------- ---------- ------------ ----------
Liabilities
Lease liabilities - current - 10,965 10,965
Lease liabilities - non-current - 156,417 156,417
Lease incentives - current (within other payables) 219 (219) -
Lease incentives - non-current (within other payables) 2,437 (2,437) -
Rent-free creditor (within accruals) 1,269 (1,269) -
Amusement machine creditor - current (within other
payables) 2,652 (2,652) -
Amusement machine creditor - non-current (within
other payables) 3,645 (3,645) -
------------------------------------------------------- ---------- ------------ ----------
Total liabilities 10,222 157,160 167,382
------------------------------------------------------- ---------- ------------ ----------
Retained earnings 150,038 (31,696) 118,342
Retained earnings - deferred tax - 5,388 5,388
------------------------------------------------------- ---------- ------------ ----------
Total retained earnings 150,038 (26,308) 123,730
------------------------------------------------------- ---------- ------------ ----------
The adoption of IFRS 16 reduced opening retained earnings as at
1 October 2019 by GBP26.3m.
The table below presents a reconciliation from operating lease
commitments disclosed at 30 September 2019 to lease liabilities
recognised at 1 October 2019:
GBP'000
----------------------------------------------------------- --------
Operating lease commitments disclosed at 30 September 2019 245,557
Increased rent reviews(1) 131
Effect of discounting(2) (84,527)
Amusement machines(3) 6,221
----------------------------------------------------------- --------
Lease liabilities recognised as at 1 October 2019 167,382
----------------------------------------------------------- --------
Of which are:
Current lease liabilities 10,965
Non-current lease liabilities 156,417
----------------------------------------------------------- --------
Lease liabilities recognised as at 1 October 2019 167,382
----------------------------------------------------------- --------
1 A number of outstanding rent reviews have been finalised since
the end of FY19; these were not included in the operating lease
commitments disclosed at 30 September 2019.
2 Previously, disclosures of lease commitments were undiscounted
whilst under IFRS 16 lease commitments are discounted based on the
Group's incremental borrowing rate.
3 Previously, amusement machines were accounted for under IAS 16
Property, plant and equipment.
During the year ended 30 September 2020, the application of IFRS
16 resulted in increased adjusted EBITDA, as reported in the
Consolidated Income Statement and Statement of Comprehensive
Income, of GBP15.8m in comparison to treatment under IAS 17 for
property and IAS 16 for amusement machines. There was an increase
to operating profit of GBP6.5m. The differences have arisen as
operating lease payments under IAS 17 were replaced by a
depreciation charge on right-of-use assets, and adjustments to rent
free periods and other lease incentives. Profit before taxation
therefore decreased by a total of GBP1.2m with the inclusion of
GBP7.8m of finance costs under the new standard.
The table below reconciles operating profit between IAS 17 and
the new standard, IFRS 16:
GBP'000
----------------------------------------------------------------- -------
Add: Operating lease costs under IAS17(1) 15,840
----------------------------------------------------------------- -------
Impact on adjusted EBITDA for the year ended 30 September 2020 15,840
Less: Depreciation of right-of-use assets for leases previously
recognised as operating leases under IAS 172 (9,300)
Add: Gain on lease surrenders 6
----------------------------------------------------------------- -------
Impact on operating profit for the year ended 30 September 2020 6,546
Less: Finance costs associated with lease liabilities (7,770)
----------------------------------------------------------------- -------
Impact on profit before tax for the year ended 30 September 2020 (1,224)
----------------------------------------------------------------- -------
1 The Group has applied the practical expedient to all rent
concessions that meet the conditions in paragraph 46B of the
COVID-19-related rent concessions amendment to IFRS 16 published in
May 2020 (see further detail below). This figure includes GBP1.4m
of rent savings recognised in profit or loss to reflect changes in
lease payments that arose as a result of COVID-19-related rent
concessions.
2 This is net of GBP2.9m of depreciation that would have been
charged if the amusement machine assets were still accounted for
under IAS 16 Property, Plant and Equipment.
On 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, but this will be offset by an increase in lease capital
payments.
Short-term leases and leases of low-value assets
The Group applies the short-term lease recognition exemption to
its short-term leases of machinery and equipment (i.e. those leases
that have a lease term of 12 months or less from the commencement
date and do not contain a purchase option). It also applies the
lease of low-value assets recognition exemption to leases of office
equipment that are considered to be low value. Lease payments on
short-term leases and leases of low-value assets are recognised as
expense on a straight-line basis over the lease term.
Amendments to IFRS 16: COVID-19 Related Rent Concessions
On 28 May 2020, the IASB issued COVID-19-Related Rent
Concessions - amendment to IFRS 16 Leases. The amendments provide
relief to lessees from applying IFRS 16 guidance on lease
modification accounting for rent concessions arising as a direct
consequence of the COVID-19 pandemic. As a practical expedient, a
lessee may elect not to assess whether a COVID-19-related rent
concession from a lessor is a lease modification. A lessee that
makes this election accounts for any change in lease payments
resulting from the COVID-19-related rent concession the same way it
would account for the change under IFRS 16, if the change were not
a lease modification.
The practical expedient was adopted by the Group and the impact
on the consolidated Financial Statements is outlined in note
11.
Summary of critical accounting estimates and judgements
The preparation of the consolidated Group Financial Statements
requires management to make judgements, estimates and assumptions
in applying the Group's accounting policies to determine the
reported amounts of assets, liabilities, income and expenditure.
Actual results may differ from these estimates. The estimates and
underlying assumptions are reviewed on an ongoing basis, with
revisions applied prospectively.
Judgements made by the Directors in the application of these
accounting policies that have a significant effect on the
consolidated Group Financial Statements are discussed below.
Critical accounting judgements
Determining the incremental borrowing rate used to measure lease
liabilities
The Group cannot readily determine the interest rate implicit in
the lease therefore, it uses its incremental borrowing rate (IBR)
to measure lease liabilities. Judgement is applied in determining
the components of the IBR used for each lease including risk-free
rates, the Group's credit risk and any lease specific
adjustments.
IBRs depend on the term and start date of the lease. The IBR is
determined based on a series of inputs including: the risk-free
rate based on government bond rates and a credit risk adjustment
based on the average credit spread from commercial bank
lenders.
Key sources of estimation uncertainty
The key estimates are discussed below:
Property, plant and equipment and right-of-use asset impairment
reviews
Plant and equipment and right-of-use assets are reviewed for
impairment when there is an indication that the assets might be
impaired by comparing the carrying value of the assets with their
recoverable amounts. The recoverable amount of an asset or a CGU is
typically determined based on value-in-use calculations prepared on
the basis of management's assumptions and estimates.
The key assumptions in the value-in-use calculations include
growth rates of revenue and expenses, and discount rates. Due to
the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic, there is an increased level of
uncertainty in all of the above assumptions such that a reasonably
possible change in these assumptions could lead to a material
change in the carrying value of the assets.
Further information in respect of the Group's property, plant
and equipment and right-of-use assets is included in notes 10 and
11 respectively.
3. Reconciliation of operating profit to Group adjusted
EBITDA
30 September 30 September
2020 2019
GBP'000 GBP'000
---------------------------------------------------------------- ------------ ------------
Operating profit 9,861 28,444
Depreciation of property, plant and equipment (note 10) 7,247 9,041
Depreciation of right-of-use assets (note 11) 12,171 -
Amortisation of intangible assets (note 12) 507 502
Loss on disposal of property, plant and equipment, right-of-use
assets and software (notes 10-12) 22 596
---------------------------------------------------------------- ------------ ------------
EBITDA 29,808 38,583
Exceptional items (note 4) - (380)
---------------------------------------------------------------- ------------ ------------
Group adjusted EBITDA 29,808 38,203
---------------------------------------------------------------- ------------ ------------
Group adjusted EBITDA (earnings before interest, tax,
depreciation and amortisation) reflects the underlying trade of the
overall business. It is calculated as operating profit plus
depreciation, amortisation and loss on disposal of property, plant
and equipment, right-of-use assets and software and any exceptional
items.
Management use Group adjusted EBITDA as a key performance
measure of the business and it is considered by management to be a
measure investors look at to reflect the underlying business.
4. Exceptional items
Exceptional items are disclosed separately in the Financial
Statements where the Directors consider it necessary to do so to
provide further understanding of the financial performance of the
Group. They are material items or expenses that have been shown
separately due to the significance of their nature or amount:
30 September 30 September
2020 2019
GBP'000 GBP'000
-------------- ------------- -------------
VAT rebate(1) - 380
-------------- ------------- -------------
- 380
-------------- ------------- -------------
1 In FY19 the Group was able to make a non-recurring
retrospective reclaim in respect of overpaid VAT relating to
transaction fees.
5. Profit from operations
Profit from operations includes the following:
30 September 30 September
2020 2019
GBP'000 GBP'000
---------------------------------------------------------------- ------------ ------------
Amortisation of intangible assets 507 502
Depreciation of property, plant and equipment 7,247 9,041
Depreciation of right-of-use assets 12,171 -
Operating leases:
- Property - 14,991
- Other 50 50
Loss on disposal of property, plant and equipment, right-of-use
assets and software 22 596
Loss/(gain) on foreign exchange 23 (61)
---------------------------------------------------------------- ------------ ------------
Auditor's remuneration:
- Fees payable for audit of these Financial Statements 155 100
Fees payable for other services
- Audit of subsidiaries 45 35
- Audit of subsidiaries relating to prior year 20 -
- Review of interim Financial Statements - 25
- Other services 14 9
---------------------------------------------------------------- ------------ ------------
234 169
---------------------------------------------------------------- ------------ ------------
6. Staff numbers and costs
The average number of employees (including Directors) during the
period was as follows:
30 September 30 September
2020 2019
--------------- ------------ ------------
Directors 6 6
Administration 65 67
Operations 1,970 1,996
--------------- ------------ ------------
Total staff 2,041 2,069
--------------- ------------ ------------
The cost of employees (including Directors) during the period
was as follows:
30 September 30 September
2020 2019
GBP'000 GBP'000
---------------------- ------------ ------------
Wages and salaries 16,563 28,045
Social security costs 1,371 2,072
Pension costs 297 350
Share-based payments 695 662
---------------------- ------------ ------------
Total staff cost 18,926 31,129
---------------------- ------------ ------------
FY20 staff costs includes GBP8,232,000 (FY19: GBPnil) of CJRS
government grant received.
7. Finance income and expenses
30 September 30 September
2020 2019
GBP'000 GBP'000
------------------------------------ ------------ ------------
Interest on bank deposits 78 164
Other interest - 3
------------------------------------ ------------ ------------
Finance income 78 167
------------------------------------ ------------ ------------
Interest on bank borrowings 904 930
Other interest 5 55
Finance costs on lease liabilities 7,770 -
Unwinding of discount on provisions 64 38
------------------------------------ ------------ ------------
Finance expense 8,743 1,023
------------------------------------ ------------ ------------
8. Taxation
30 September 30 September
2020 2019
GBP'000 GBP'000
-------------------------------------------------- ------------ ------------
The tax expense is as follows:
- UK corporation tax 339 5,134
- Adjustment in respect of prior years (24) 60
-------------------------------------------------- ------------ ------------
Total current tax 315 5,194
Deferred tax:
Origination and reversal of temporary differences 39 123
Effect of changes in tax rates (546) (14)
Adjustment in respect of prior years 3 -
-------------------------------------------------- ------------ ------------
Total deferred tax (504) 109
-------------------------------------------------- ------------ ------------
Total tax (credit)/expense (189) 5,303
-------------------------------------------------- ------------ ------------
Factors affecting current tax charge/(credit):
The tax assessed on the profit for the period is different to
the standard rate of corporation tax in the UK of 19 per cent (30
September 2019: 19 per cent). The differences are explained
below:
30 September 30 September
2020 2019
GBP'000 GBP'000
--------------------------------------------------------- ------------ ------------
Profit excluding taxation 1,196 27,588
Tax using the UK corporation tax rate of 19% (2019: 19%) 227 5,242
Change in tax rate on deferred tax balances (546) (14)
Non-deductible expenses 58 89
Tax exempt revenues 93 (74)
Adjustment in respect of prior years (21) 60
--------------------------------------------------------- ------------ ------------
Total tax (credit)/expense included in profit or loss (189) 5,303
--------------------------------------------------------- ------------ ------------
The Group's standard tax rate for the year ended 30 September
2020 was 19 per cent (30 September 2019: 19 per cent).
The FY2019 adjustment in respect of prior years for current
taxation of GBP60,000 relates to an Advance Thin Capitalisation
Agreement tax liability. This was settled with HMRC during the
prior year.
At Budget 2020, the government announced that the corporation
tax main rate for the years starting 1 April 2020 and 2021 would
remain at 19 per cent. As such, the rate used to calculate the
deferred tax balances as at 30 September 2020 has increased from 17
per cent to 19 per cent.
9. Earnings per share
Basic earnings per share is calculated by dividing the profit
attributable to equity holders of Hollywood Bowl Group plc by the
weighted average number of shares outstanding during the year,
excluding invested shares held pursuant to Long Term Incentive
Plans.
Diluted earnings per share is calculated by adjusting the
weighted average number of Ordinary shares outstanding to assume
conversion of all dilutive potential Ordinary shares. During the
years ended 30 September 2020 and 30 September 2019, the Group had
potentially dilutive shares in the form of unvested shares pursuant
to Long Term Incentive Plans.
30 September 30 September
2020 2019
----------------------------------------------------- ------------ ------------
Basic and diluted
Profit for the year after tax (GBP'000) 1,385 22,285
Basic weighted average number of shares in issue for
the period (number) 153,401,639 150,000,000
Adjustment for share awards 935,738 676,861
----------------------------------------------------- ------------ ------------
Diluted weighted average number of shares 154,337,377 150,676,861
----------------------------------------------------- ------------ ------------
Basic earnings per share (pence) 0.90 14.86
Diluted earnings per share (pence) 0.90 14.79
----------------------------------------------------- ------------ ------------
Adjusted underlying earnings per share
Adjusted earnings per share is calculated by dividing adjusted
underlying earnings after tax by the weighted average number of
shares issued during the year.
30 September 30 September
2020 2019
----------------------------------------------------------- ------------ ------------
Adjusted underlying earnings after tax (before exceptional
costs) (GBP'000) 1,385 21,905
Basic adjusted earnings per share (pence) 0.90 14.60
Diluted adjusted earnings per share (pence) 0.90 14.54
----------------------------------------------------------- ------------ ------------
Adjusted underlying earnings after tax is calculated as
follows:
30 September 30 September
2020 2019
GBP'000 GBP'000
------------------------------------------- ------------ ------------
Profit before taxation 1,196 27,588
Exceptional items (note 4) - (380)
------------------------------------------- ------------ ------------
Adjusted underlying profit before taxation 1,196 27,208
Add/(less) taxation 189 (5,303)
------------------------------------------- ------------ ------------
Adjusted underlying earnings after tax 1,385 21,905
------------------------------------------- ------------ ------------
10. Property, plant and equipment
Plant
Long & machinery,
leasehold Short leasehold Lanes and Amusement fixtures
property property pinspotters machines and fittings Total
GBP'000 GBP'000 GBP'000 GBP'000 GBP'000 GBP'000
---------------------------------- ----------- --------------- ------------ --------- ------------- --------
Cost
At 1 October 2018 1,251 18,311 8,561 14,912 25,699 68,734
Additions - 5,321 1,594 2,981 6,751 16,647
Disposals (10) (34) (85) (1,531) (3,039) (4,699)
---------------------------------- ----------- --------------- ------------ --------- ------------- --------
At 30 September 2019 1,241 23,598 10,070 16,362 29,411 80,682
---------------------------------- ----------- --------------- ------------ --------- ------------- --------
Adjustment on initial application
of IFRS 16 (note 2) - - - (16,362) - (16,362)
Additions - 5,125 2,537 - 6,780 14,442
Disposals (1) (71) (338) - (34) (444)
---------------------------------- ----------- --------------- ------------ --------- ------------- --------
At 30 September 2020 1,240 28,652 12,269 - 36,157 78,318
---------------------------------- ----------- --------------- ------------ --------- ------------- --------
Accumulated depreciation
At 1 October 2018 207 6,492 3,668 8,173 9,117 27,657
Depreciation charge 48 2,201 413 2,687 3,692 9,041
Disposals (10) (29) (60) (810) (2,472) (3,381)
---------------------------------- ----------- --------------- ------------ --------- ------------- --------
At 30 September 2019 245 8,664 4,021 10,050 10,337 33,317
---------------------------------- ----------- --------------- ------------ --------- ------------- --------
Adjustment on initial application
of IFRS 16 (note 2) - - - (10,050) - (10,050)
Depreciation charge 48 2,417 647 - 4,135 7,247
Disposals (1) (70) (321) - (24) (416)
---------------------------------- ----------- --------------- ------------ --------- ------------- --------
At 30 September 2020 292 11,011 4,347 - 14,448 30,098
---------------------------------- ----------- --------------- ------------ --------- ------------- --------
Net book value
---------------------------------- ----------- --------------- ------------ --------- ------------- --------
At 30 September 2020 948 17,641 7,922 - 21,709 48,220
---------------------------------- ----------- --------------- ------------ --------- ------------- --------
At 30 September 2019 996 14,934 6,049 6,312 19,074 47,365
At 30 September 2018 1,044 11,819 4,893 6,739 16,582 41,077
---------------------------------- ----------- --------------- ------------ --------- ------------- --------
Plant & machinery, fixtures and fittings includes GBPnil (30
September 2019: GBP1,228,000) of assets in the course of
construction, relating to the development of new centres.
Impairment
Impairment testing is carried out at the CGU level. A CGU is the
smallest identifiable group of assets that generates cash inflows
that are largely independent of the cash inflows from other assets
or groups of assets. Each individual centre is considered to be a
CGU.
Each CGU is tested for impairment at the balance sheet date if
any indicators of impairment have been identified. The UK
government restrictions implemented as a result of the COVID-19
pandemic are considered an impairment trigger. An initial
impairment test was performed on all 64 centres. A detailed
impairment test based on a base case was then performed on two
centres, where the excess of recoverable amount over the
value-in-use calculation was sensitive to changes in the key
assumptions.
Property, plant and equipment and right-of-use assets for two
centres have been tested for impairment by comparing the carrying
value of each CGU with its recoverable amount determined from
value-in-use calculations using cash flow projections based on
financial budgets approved by the Board covering a three-year
period.
Cash flows beyond this three-year period are extrapolated using
the estimated growth rates stated in the key assumptions. The key
assumptions used in the value-in-use calculations are:
2020 2019
--------------------------------- ---- ----
Discount rate (pre-tax) 8.5% 8.5%
Growth rate (beyond three years) 2.0% 2.0%
--------------------------------- ---- ----
The base case has FY2021 revenues at levels of between -45 per
cent and -15 per cent of FY2020 (five months actual performance and
seven months budget), excluding the English lockdown in November
2020, as well as taking into account the impact of socially
distanced operations. In line with the revenue reductions the
employee costs were reduced, taking advantage of the CJRS and no
additional top up for centre teams. Maintenance and marketing
spend, as well as all non-essential and non-committed capital
expenditure were reduced in FY2021.
Discount rates reflect management's estimate of return on
capital employed required and assessment of the current market
risks. This is the benchmark used by management to assess operating
performance and to evaluate future capital investment proposals.
These discount rates are derived from the Group's weighted average
cost of capital. Changes in the discount rates over the years are
calculated with reference to latest market assumptions for the
risk-free rate, equity risk premium and the cost of debt.
Sensitivity to changes in assumptions
The estimate of the recoverable amounts associated with the two
centres affords reasonable headroom over the carrying value of the
property, plant and equipment and right-of-use assets under the
base case. Management have sensitised the key assumptions in the
impairment tests of the two centres under the base case.
A reduction in revenue of six percentage points down on the base
case for FY2021 to FY2023 and an increase in the discount rate
applied to the cash flows of the CGU of one per cent would not
cause the carrying value to exceed its recoverable amount. Detailed
impairment testing for the two centres showed that the growth rate
(beyond three years) would need to be -1% per annum for the assets
recoverable amounts to be equal to the value-in-use calculations.
Therefore, management believe that any reasonable possible change
in the key assumptions would not result in an impairment
charge.
11. Leases
Group as a lessee
The Group has lease contracts for property and amusement
machines used in its operations. The Group's obligations under its
leases are secured by the lessor's title to the leased assets. The
Group is restricted from assigning and subleasing the leased
assets. There are several lease contracts that include variable
lease payments.
The Group also has certain leases of equipment with lease terms
of 12 months or less and leases of office equipment with low value.
The Group applies the 'short-term lease' and 'lease of low-value
assets' recognition exemptions for these leases.
Set out below are the carrying amounts of right-of-use assets
recognised and the movements during the period:
Amusement
Property machines Total
Right-of-use assets GBP'000 GBP'000 GBP'000
-------------------------------------- -------- --------- --------
Cost
At transition on 1 October 2019 130,227 6,110 136,337
Lease additions 1,762 1,995 3,757
Lease surrenders - (443) (443)
Lease modifications 7,710 - 7,710
-------------------------------------- -------- --------- --------
At 30 September 2020 139,699 7,662 147,361
-------------------------------------- -------- --------- --------
Accumulated depreciation
At transition on 1 October 2019 - - -
Depreciation charge to profit or loss 9,481 2,690 12,171
Depreciation charge to PPE 261 - 261
Lease surrenders - (247) (247)
-------------------------------------- -------- --------- --------
At 30 September 2020 9,742 2,443 12,185
-------------------------------------- -------- --------- --------
Net book value
-------------------------------------- -------- --------- --------
At 30 September 2020 129,957 5,219 135,176
-------------------------------------- -------- --------- --------
At 30 September 2019 - - -
-------------------------------------- -------- --------- --------
Set out below are the carrying amounts of lease liabilities and
the movements during the period:
Amusement
Property machines Total
Lease liabilities GBP'000 GBP'000 GBP'000
-------------------------------- -------- --------- --------
At transition on 1 October 2019 161,161 6,221 167,382
Lease additions 1,762 1,995 3,757
Accretion of interest 7,609 161 7,770
Lease modifications 7,710 (203) 7,507
Payments(1) (11,142) (1,470) (12,612)
-------------------------------- -------- --------- --------
At 30 September 2020 167,100 6,704 173,804
-------------------------------- -------- --------- --------
Current 11,438 2,966 14,404
Non-current 155,662 3,738 159,400
-------------------------------- -------- --------- --------
167,100 6,704 173,804
-------------------------------- -------- --------- --------
1 As a result of COVID-19 rent concessions, GBP3,591,000 of
property payments and GBP1,376,000 of amusement machine payments
noted above were deferred during the year and are netted off the
payments. A further GBP1,400,000 of rent savings were taken to
profit or loss as a credit to variable lease payments within
administrative expenses.
The following are the amounts recognised in profit or loss:
2020
GBP'000
--------------------------------------------------------------------------- --------
Depreciation expense of right-of-use assets 12,171
Interest expense on lease liabilities 7,770
Expense relating to leases of low-value assets (included in administrative
expenses) 50
Variable lease payments (included in administrative expenses) 110
COVID-19 rent savings (included in administrative expenses) (1,400)
--------------------------------------------------------------------------- --------
Total amount recognised in profit or loss 18,701
--------------------------------------------------------------------------- --------
Variable lease payments relate to revenue-based rent top-ups at
three centres.
Impairment testing is carried out as outlined in note 10.
12. goodwill and Intangible assets
Goodwill Brand(1) Trademark(1) Software Total
GBP'000 GBP'000 GBP'000 GBP'000 GBP'000
------------------------- -------- -------- ------------ -------- --------
Cost
At 1 October 2018 75,034 3,360 798 1,455 80,647
Additions - - - 311 311
Disposals - - - (129) (129)
------------------------- -------- -------- ------------ -------- --------
At 30 September 2019 75,034 3,360 798 1,637 80,829
Additions - - - 223 223
Disposals - - - - -
------------------------- -------- -------- ------------ -------- --------
At 30 September 2020 75,034 3,360 798 1,860 81,052
------------------------- -------- -------- ------------ -------- --------
Accumulated amortisation
At 1 October 2018 - 684 216 1,099 1,999
Amortisation charge - 168 50 284 502
Disposals - - - (129) (129)
------------------------- -------- -------- ------------ -------- --------
At 30 September 2019 - 852 266 1,254 2,372
Amortisation charge - 168 50 289 507
Disposals - - - - -
------------------------- -------- -------- ------------ -------- --------
At 30 September 2020 - 1,020 316 1,543 2,879
------------------------- -------- -------- ------------ -------- --------
Net book value
------------------------- -------- -------- ------------ -------- --------
At 30 September 2020 75,034 2,340 482 317 78,173
------------------------- -------- -------- ------------ -------- --------
At 30 September 2019 75,034 2,508 532 383 78,457
At 30 September 2018 75,034 2,676 582 356 78,648
------------------------- -------- -------- ------------ -------- --------
1 This relates to the Hollywood Bowl brand and trademark
only.
Impairment testing is carried out at the CGU level on an annual
basis. A CGU is the smallest identifiable group of assets that
generates cash inflows that are largely independent of the cash
inflows from other assets or groups of assets. Each individual
centre is considered to be a CGU. However, for the purposes of
testing goodwill for impairment, it is acceptable under IAS 36 to
group CGUs, in order to reflect the level at which goodwill is
monitored by management. The whole Group is considered to be one
CGU, for the purposes of goodwill impairment test, on the basis of
the level at which goodwill is monitored by management and
historical allocation of goodwill upon acquisition.
The recoverable amount of the CGU is determined based on a
value-in-use calculation using cash flow projections based on
financial budgets approved by the Board covering a three-year
period. Cash flows beyond this period are extrapolated using the
estimated growth rates stated in the key assumptions. The key
assumptions used in the value-in-use calculations are:
2020 2019
--------------------------------- ---- ----
Discount rate (pre-tax) 8.5% 8.5%
Growth rate (beyond three years) 2.0% 2.0%
--------------------------------- ---- ----
As part of the review of the potential impact of the COVID-19
outbreak on the cash flows of the CGU, a base case was prepared.
The base case has FY2021 at levels of between -45 per cent and -15
per cent of FY2020 (5 months actual and 7 months budget), closed
centres due to local tier restrictions, as well as taking into
account the impact of socially distanced operations. In line with
the revenue reductions the employee costs were reduced, taking
advantage of the CJRS and no additional top up for centre teams.
Maintenance and marketing spend, as well as all non-essential and
non-committed capital expenditure were reduced in FY2021. Discount
rates reflect management's estimate of return on capital employed
required and assessment of the current market risks. This is the
benchmark used by management to assess operating performance and to
evaluate future capital investment proposals. These discount rates
are derived from the Group's weighted average cost of capital.
Changes in the discount rates over the years are calculated with
reference to latest market assumptions for the risk-free rate,
equity risk premium and the cost of debt.
Sensitivity to changes in assumptions
Management have sensitised the key assumptions in the impairment
tests of the CGU under the base case scenario.
The key assumptions used and sensitised were forecast growth
rates and the discount rates, which were selected as they are the
key variable elements of the value-in-use calculation. The combined
effect of a reduction in revenue of six percentage points on the
base case for FY2021 to FY2023, an increase in the discount rate
applied to the cash flows of the CGU of one per cent and a
reduction of one per cent in the growth rate (beyond three years),
would reduce the headroom by GBP176.0m. This scenario would not
cause the carrying value to exceed its recoverable amount.
Therefore, management believe that any reasonable possible change
in the key assumptions would not result in an impairment
charge.
13. Trade and other receivables
30 September 30 September
2020 2019
GBP'000 GBP'000
------------------ ------------ ------------
Trade receivables 143 734
Other receivables 48 40
Prepayments 1,529 7,240
------------------ ------------ ------------
1,720 8,014
------------------ ------------ ------------
Trade receivables have an ECL against them that is immaterial.
There were no overdue receivables at the end of any period.
14. Trade and other payables
30 September 30 September
2020 2019
GBP'000 GBP'000
------------------------------- ------------ ------------
Current
Trade payables 2,909 3,189
Other payables 1,251 3,493
Accruals and deferred income 4,229 8,735
Taxation and social security 1,551 3,047
------------------------------- ------------ ------------
Total trade and other payables 9,940 18,464
------------------------------- ------------ ------------
30 September 30 September
2020 2019
GBP'000 GBP'000
--------------- ------------ ------------
Non-current
Other payables 814 6,846
--------------- ------------ ------------
Accruals and deferred income includes a staff bonus provision of
GBP410,000 (30 September 2019: GBP2,913,000). Deferred income
includes GBP148,000 (30 September 2019: GBP472,000) of customer
deposits received in advance, all of which is recognised in the
income statement during the following financial year.
Non-current other payables includes lease incentives received of
GBPnil (30 September 2019: GBP2,437,000) which were expected to be
released to the income statement on a straight-line basis over the
remaining term of each lease, which ranged from 1 to 25 years. In
FY2019, this also included extended credit of GBP4,409,000 from an
amusement machine supplier. These are both now accounted for as
part of IFRS 16 leases (see note 2).
15. Loans and borrowings
30 September 30 September
2020 2019
GBP'000 GBP'000
--------------------------------- ------------ ------------
Current
Bank loan 5,205 1,380
--------------------------------- ------------ ------------
Borrowings (less than 1 year) 5,205 1,380
--------------------------------- ------------ ------------
Non-current
Bank loan 23,833 25,383
--------------------------------- ------------ ------------
Borrowings (greater than 1 year) 23,833 25,383
--------------------------------- ------------ ------------
Total borrowings 29,038 26,763
--------------------------------- ------------ ------------
Bank borrowings have the following maturity profile:
30 September 30 September
2020 2019
GBP'000 GBP'000
------------------------ ------------ ------------
Due in less than 1 year 5,500 1,500
Less issue costs (295) (120)
------------------------ ------------ ------------
5,205 1,380
------------------------ ------------ ------------
Due 2 to 5 years 24,000 25,500
Less issue costs (167) (117)
------------------------ ------------ ------------
Total borrowings 29,038 26,763
------------------------ ------------ ------------
The bank loans are secured by a fixed and floating charge over
all assets. The loans carry interest at LIBOR plus a variable
margin.
30 September 30 September
2020 2019
GBP'000 GBP'000
------------------------------------- ------------ ------------
Loans and borrowings brought forward 26,763 28,143
Repayment during the year (1,500) (1,500)
Drawdown during the year 4,000 -
Issue costs (350) -
Amortisation of issue costs 125 120
------------------------------------- ------------ ------------
Loans and borrowings carried forward 29,038 26,763
------------------------------------- ------------ ------------
On 7 May 2020, the Group amended its facility with Lloyds Bank
plc to add an additional GBP10m under the CLBILS.
On 21 September 2020, the Group extended its GBP35m facility
with Lloyds Bank plc for a further year, resulting in a revised
expiry date of 2 September 2022. The next repayment of GBP0.3m is
due on 31 December 2020 and every six months up to 30 June 2022.
The remaining balance will be repayable on the expiry date of 2
September 2022.
As at 30 September 2020, the outstanding loan balance, excluding
the amortisation of issue costs, was GBP29,500,000 (30 September
2019: GBP27,000,000). In addition, the Group had an undrawn GBP1m
revolving credit facility and undrawn GBP10m CLBILS facility at 30
September 2020 (30 September 2019: GBP5m undrawn RCF). All loans
carry interest at LIBOR plus a margin, which varies in accordance
with the ratio of net debt divided by EBITDA and cash flow cover.
The margin at 30 September 2020 was 2.0 per cent (30 September
2019: 1.75 per cent). The Group considers this feature to be a
non-financial variable that is specific to a party to the contract
and hence not treated as an embedded derivative.
During the year, the Group drew down GBP4m of its RCF facility
with Lloyds Bank plc.
The terms of the facility include the following Group financial
covenants:
(i) that the ratio of consolidated total net debt to EBITDA in
respect of any relevant period shall not exceed 1.25:1 up to 31
March 2020, 1.50:1 for the quarter ending 30 June 2020, 2.25:1 for
the quarter ending 30 September 2020, waived for the quarters
ending 31 December 2020 and 31 March 2021, and 1.50:1 for the
quarter ending 30 June 2021 and thereafter; and
(ii) that the ratio of consolidated cash flow to consolidated
debt service in respect of any relevant period shall not be less
than 1:1 (waived for the quarters ending 30 June 2020, 30 September
2020, 31 December 2020 and 31 March 2021).
New covenants were introduced for 31 December 2020 and 31 March
2021:
(i) Liquidity, including balance sheet cash and undrawn RCFs, at
least GBP17m; and
(ii) Trailing twelve-month Group adjusted EBITDA pre IFRS 16 a
minimum of -GBP3m.
The Group operated within these covenants during the period and
the previous period.
16. Deferred tax assets and liabilities
30 September 30 September
2020 2019
GBP'000 GBP'000
------------------------------------ ------------ ------------
Deferred tax assets and liabilities
Deferred tax assets 6,115 824
Deferred tax liabilities (820) (1,420)
------------------------------------ ------------ ------------
5,295 (596)
------------------------------------ ------------ ------------
30 September 30 September
2020 2019
GBP'000 GBP'000
-------------------------------------------- ------------ ------------
Reconciliation of deferred tax balances
Balance at beginning of period (596) (487)
Deferred tax (charge)/credit for the period 500 (109)
IFRS 16 transition adjustment 5,388 -
Adjustment in respect of prior years 3 -
-------------------------------------------- ------------ ------------
Balance at end of period 5,295 (596)
-------------------------------------------- ------------ ------------
The components of deferred tax are:
30 September 30 September
2020 2019
GBP'000 GBP'000
------------------------------ ------------ ------------
Deferred tax assets
Fixed assets 5,740 562
Other temporary differences 375 262
------------------------------ ------------ ------------
6,115 824
------------------------------ ------------ ------------
Deferred tax liabilities
Property, plant and equipment (376) (446)
Intangible assets (444) (426)
Capital gain - (548)
------------------------------ ------------ ------------
(820) (1,420)
------------------------------ ------------ ------------
Deferred tax assets and liabilities are measured using the tax
rates that are expected to apply to the periods when the assets are
realised or liabilities settled, based on tax rates enacted or
substantively enacted at 30 September 2020.
The capital gain relates to a site sold in 2010, where the gain
crystallised during the year.
17. Related party transactions
30 September 2020 and 30 September 2019
During the period, and the previous period, there were no
transactions with related parties.
18. Dividends paid and proposed
30 September 30 September
2020 2019
GBP'000 GBP'000
------------------------------------------------------------- ------------ ------------
The following dividends were declared and paid by the
Group:
Final dividend year ended 30 September 2018 - 4.23p per
Ordinary share - 6,344
Special dividend year ended 30 September 2018 - 4.33p
per Ordinary share - 6,495
Interim dividend year ended 30 September 2019 - 2.27p
per Ordinary share - 3,405
Final dividend year ended 30 September 2019 - 5.16p per
Ordinary share 7,739 -
Special dividend year ended 30 September 2019 - 4.50p
per Ordinary share 6,750 -
------------------------------------------------------------- ------------ ------------
14,489 16,244
------------------------------------------------------------- ------------ ------------
Proposed for approval by shareholders at AGM (not recognised
as a liability at 30 September 2020)
Final dividend year ended 30 September 2020 - 0.00p per
Ordinary share (2019: 5.16p) - 7,739
Special dividend year ended 30 September 2020 - 0.00p
per Ordinary share (2019: 4.50p) - 6,750
------------------------------------------------------------- ------------ ------------
Stephen Burns Laurence Keen
Chief Executive Officer Chief Financial Officer
14 December 2020 14 December 2020
PRINCIPAL RISKS - effective risk management
Our approach to risk
When we look at risk, we specifically consider the effects it
could have on our business model, our culture and therefore our
ability to deliver our long--term strategic.
We consider both short- and long-term risks within a timeframe
of up to three years. We consider social, operational, technical,
governance and environmental risks, as well as financial risks.
Risk appetite
This describes the amount of risk we are willing to tolerate as
a business. We have a higher appetite for risks accompanying a
clear opportunity to deliver on the strategy of the business.
We have a low appetite for, and tolerance of, risks that have a
downside only, particularly when they could adversely impact health
and safety or our values, culture or business model.
Our risk management process
The Board is ultimately responsible for ensuring that a robust
risk management process is in place and that it is being adhered
to. The main steps in this process are:
-- Department heads formally review their risks on a six-monthly
basis to compile their department risk register. They consider the
impact each risk could have on the department and overall business,
as well as the mitigating controls in place. They assess the
likelihood and impact of each risk.
-- The Executive team reviews each departmental risk register.
Any risks which are deemed to have a level above our appetite are
added to/retained on the Group risk register (GRR) which provides
an overview of such risks and how they are being managed. The GRR
also includes any risks the Executive team is managing at a Group
level. The Executive team determines mitigation plans for review by
the Board.
-- The Board challenges and agrees the Group's key risk,
appetite and mitigation actions twice yearly and uses its findings
to finalise the Group's principal risks.
-- The principal and emerging risks are taken into account in
the Board's consideration of long-term viability as outlined in the
viability statement.
-- We acknowledge that risks and uncertainties of which we are
unaware, or which we currently believe are immaterial, may have an
adverse effect on the Group.
covid-19
The COVID-19 pandemic, the associated lockdown and the closure
of our business significantly impacted our financial year. Our
colleagues, customers and suppliers have all experienced
significant disruption with numerous personal and operational
challenges arising. The pandemic and the social and macroeconomic
impact it brought has created a risk event for the Group, which has
been considered as set out in the viability statement.
In our initial response phase to COVID-19, our priority was to
safeguard the health and wellbeing of our colleagues and customers,
and to mitigate the closure of our centres. We moved into a
resilience phase early in the lockdown period following extensive
modelling of the financial impact of COVID-19. It was necessary to
impose tighter control over liquidity, which informed our decisions
on a series of measures, including the furloughing of colleagues
and negotiating payment terms with our suppliers, as well as
landlords in regard to rental payments. Resilience will remain
central to our risk management focus throughout 2021; however, in
readiness for the easing and removal of lockdown restrictions, we
are preparing for the recovery phase and, ultimately, new ways of
working.
Where the impact of the pandemic has exacerbated a principal
risk, we have incorporated a commentary on the COVID-19 mitigation
being taken.
Our principal risks are described below, along with a summary of
our mitigation activities.
Risk management activities
Risks are identified via: operational reviews by senior
management; internal audits; control environments; our
whistleblowing helpline; and independent project analysis.
The internal audit team provides independent assessment of the
operation and effectiveness of the risk framework and process in
centres, including the effectiveness of the controls, reporting of
risks and reliability of checks by management.
We have undertaken an extensive review of the organisation's
risk profile to verify that current and emerging risks have been
identified and considered by management.
Each risk has been scaled as shown on the risk heat map
below:
Risk type Risk and impact Mitigating factors
------------ ------------------------------------------------------------- ------------------------------------------------------------
FINANCIAL
1 * Adverse economic conditions may affect Group results. * An economic contraction is likely, impacting consumer
revenue confidence and discretionary income. The Group has
risk the lowest price per game of the branded operators
Increasing * A decline in spend on discretionary leisure activity and whilst it would suffer in such a recession, the
could lead to a reduction in profits. Board is comfortable that the majority of centre
locations are based in high-footfall areas which
should stand up to a recessionary decline.
* Lack of free cash flow may impact on the
refurbishment strategy.
* Along with appropriate financial modelling and
available liquidity, a focus on opening new centres
* A prolonged period of uncertainty as a result of the only with appropriate property costs, as well as
COVID-19 pandemic could cause significant disruption capital contributions, remains key to the Group's new
to business operations. centre-opening strategy. Recent new openings continue
to provide strong returns.
* We have an unrelenting focus on service, safety,
quality and value, and are continuing to invest in
our centres. Plans are developed to mitigate many
cost increases.
* During the COVID-19 pandemic and period of closure,
management identified and implemented measures to
preserve cash, reduce discretionary spend and
facilitate reopening expediently to minimise revenue
loss, as well as utilising the CJRS.
* We have developed a comprehensive framework of
protocols for operating our centres in a COVID-secure
way. This framework was developed in line with
government guidelines for the wider hospitality and
leisure sectors and also includes specific protocols
for bowling. We have introduced enhanced cleaning
protocols and equipment, capacity limits within each
centre and appropriate social distancing measures in
all areas of our spacious centres. To provide further
confidence and guidance to our customers, we have
implemented a comprehensive communication plan ('Have
Fun - Play Safe') providing customers with
information, videos and FAQs via email, on our
website and in the centres themselves.
------------ ------------------------------------------------------------- ------------------------------------------------------------
FINANCIAL
2 * Adversely impacted by a failure to review funding * The pandemic has elevated this risk, and financial
covenant arrangements when they become due, or a failure to resilience has therefore become central to our
breach meet banking covenants. decision-making and will remain key for the
risk foreseeable future.
Increasing
* Covenant breach would result in a review of banking
arrangements and potential liquidity issues. * Appropriate financial modelling has been undertaken
to support the assessment of the business as a going
concern. The Group has headroom on the current
facility with net debt and cash flow cover below its
covenant levels, as shown in the monthly Board packs.
We prepare short-term and long-term cash flow, EBITDA
and covenant forecasts to ensure risks are identified
early. Tight controls exist over the approval for
capital expenditure and expenses.
* Early in the period of the first lockdown due to the
pandemic, the Group was able to access substantial
liquidity (GBP10.5m) through an equity placing and an
incremental RCF of GBP10m through the CLBILS, as well
as agree relaxing of various financial covenants (as
set out in the Finance Review section of this
announcement). The Group has also agreed a one-year
extension on its current credit facility.
* The Group was able to take advantage of the
government support for business through CJRS,
business rates holiday and the VAT deferment scheme
(for the March 2020 quarter). In addition, the Group
worked in partnership with landlords and key
suppliers to reduce cash outflow through a mixture of
payment waivers and deferrals.
* The Directors consider that the combination of events
required to lower the profitability of the Group to
the point of breaching bank covenants is unlikely,
but not implausible. In the event that the Group
fails to meet one or more of its covenants, the
Directors believe it likely that an agreement could
be reached with its lending bank, to waive or amend
covenants further. However, no such commitment for
further covenant waivers is currently in place with
the lending bank.
------------ ------------------------------------------------------------- ------------------------------------------------------------
FINANCIAL
3 * The result of Brexit could cause disruption to * Collaborative relationships with key suppliers,
brexit risk business conditions and increase input costs for Brakes and Molson Coors, to help identify any
Unchanged certain food and drink due to additional import potential cost increases under both a 'no deal'
costs. Brexit and a continued EU relationship.
* The COVID-19 pandemic puts extra financial pressure
on the Group's suppliers, however, given their size
and liquidity, it is management's belief that all
should survive this period.
* Minimal fresh ingredients, which are likely to see
the largest financial cost impact, in the business.
* Increased stock holdings on all identified risk lines
upon consultation with suppliers.
------------ ------------------------------------------------------------- ------------------------------------------------------------
operational
1 * Failure in the stability or availability of * All core systems (non-cloud based) are backed up to
core information through IT systems could affect Group our disaster recovery centre.
systems business and operations.
risk
Unchanged * The reservation/CRM systems, provided by a third
* Customers not being able to book through website. party, are hosted by Microsoft Azure Cloud for added
resilience and performance. This also has full
business continuity provision and scalability for
* Inaccuracy of data could lead to incorrect business peak trading periods.
decisions being made.
* The reservations system also has an offline mode, so
customers could still book but the CCC and online
booking facility would be down. A back-up system
exists for CCC to take credit card payments offline.
A full audit process exists for offline
functionality.
* The business has migrated to Microsoft365 for added
resilience and to ensure that email is always
available for communications.
* All technology changes which affect core systems are
authorised via change control procedures.
* The Group undertakes periodic strategic reviews of
its core system set up with associated market
comparisons of available operating systems to ensure
that it has the most appropriate technology in place.
------------ ------------------------------------------------------------- ------------------------------------------------------------
operational
2 * Operational business failures from key suppliers * The Group has key suppliers in food and drink under
supplier (non-IT). contract to tight service level agreements (SLAs).
risk Other suppliers that know our business could be
Unchanged introduced, if needed, at short notice. Centres hold
* Unable to provide customers with a full experience. between 14 and 21 days of food, drink and amusement
product. Regular reviews and updates are held with
external partners to identify any perceived risk and
its resolution.
------------ ------------------------------------------------------------- ------------------------------------------------------------
operational
3 * Any disruption which affects Group relationship with * Regular key supplier meetings between our Head of
amusement amusement suppliers. Amusements, and Namco and Inspired Gaming. There are
supplier quarterly meetings between the CEO, CFO and Namco.
risk
Unchanged * Customers would be unable to utilise a core offer in
the centres. * Namco is a long-term partner that has a strong UK
presence and supports the Group with trials,
initiatives and discovery visits.
* Namco also has strong liquidity which should allow
for a continued relationship post any consumer
recession.
------------ ------------------------------------------------------------- ------------------------------------------------------------
operational
4 * Loss of key personnel - centre managers. * The Group runs centre manager in training (CMIT) and
centre assistant manager in training (AMIT) programmes
manager annually, which identify potential centre talent and
retention * Lack of direction at centre level with effect on develop staff ready for these roles. Centre managers
risk customers. in training run centres, with assistance from the
Decreasing regional support manager as well as experienced
centre managers from across the region, when a
* More difficult to execute business plans and strategy, vacancy needs to be filled at short notice.
impacting on revenue and profitability.
* The centre manager bonus scheme has been reviewed for
FY2021 to ensure it is still a strong recruitment and
retention tool. Small amends to make it more
attractive include a long-term retention plan, as
well as quarterly payouts.
* Wellbeing guides were issued across the business
during the pandemic, as well as frequent Group Zoom
Q&A sessions and updates via our team member app, to
ensure team engagement.
------------ ------------------------------------------------------------- ------------------------------------------------------------
operational
5 * Major food incident including allergen or fresh food * Food and drink audits are undertaken in all centres
food safety issues. based upon learnings of prior year and food incidents
risk seen in other companies, as well as for health,
Unchanged safety and legal compliance. STRIKES training, which
* Loss of trade and reputation, potential closure and includes allergen and intolerance issues, to be
litigation. reviewed, understood and complied with.
* Allergen information has been updated and remains a
focus for the centres. This was enhanced further in
the new menu, along with an online allergens list. A
primary local authority partnership is in place with
South Gloucestershire covering health and safety, as
well as food safety.
------------ ------------------------------------------------------------- ------------------------------------------------------------
TECHNICAL
1 * Data protection or GDPR breach. * The Group's IT networks are protected by firewalls
gdpr & and secure passwords. Vulnerability scans are
cyber frequently run on firewalls to ensure their
security * Obtaining all customer email addresses and impact on integrity.
risk reputation with customer database. The Group does not
Unchanged hold any customer payment information.
* A data protection officer has been in position for 36
months and has attended external courses to continue
to build knowledge.
* All team members have been briefed via online
presentations. A training course on GDPR awareness
was created on STRIKES and all team members have to
complete pre being able to work on shift.
* A cyber security partner is in place to handle any
cyber security breaches and will work with the Group
on a priority basis - 365x24x7 - if necessary.
* Regular penetration testing is conducted through a
third-party cyber security company.
------------ ------------------------------------------------------------- ------------------------------------------------------------
REGULATORY
1 * Failure to adhere to regulatory requirements such as * Expert opinion is sought where relevant. We run
compliance listing rules, taxation, health and safety, planning continuous training and development for appropriately
risk regulations and other laws. qualified staff.
Unchanged
* Potential financial penalties and reputational * The Board has oversight of the management of
damage. regulatory risk and ensures that each member of the
Board is aware of their responsibilities.
* Compliance documentation for centres to complete for
health and safety, and food safety, are updated and
circulated twice per year. Adherence to company/legal
standards is audited by the internal audit team.
------------ ------------------------------------------------------------- ------------------------------------------------------------
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