Pubs thrive while music bars dive
PUB giant Enterprise Inns set the party pace over Christmas and New Year while Britain's biggest music venue and nightclub operator Luminar lagged to top off a miserable 2004.
Luminar reported a 4.6% sales slide at music bars like Chicago Rock and Jumpin Jaks. Although sales jumped 11.9% at nightclubs like Lava Ignite and Liquid, the group also saw revenues falling by around 7% at its unbranded venues. Overall, like-for-like sales in the five weeks to 2 January were down 3.9%.
Meanwhile, Britain's biggest pub operator, Enterprise Inns, reported strong Christmas and New Year trading. 'Our business has continued to perform strongly in the first quarter, and over the Christmas and New Year period, with both earnings and cash generation in line with our expectations,' group Chairman Hubert Reid said in a trading statement ahead of Thursday's annual shareholder meeting.
The group, which runs nearly 9,000 tenanted pubs throughout the UK, said the performance of its recently acquired Unique business would allow it to repay £170m ($319.6m) of bank debt through a bond issue in February. The company reported a 33% rise in pretax profits last November for the year to end-September 2004.
Shares in Enterprise, which have outperformed the leisure sector by 11% in the last year, closed at 760½p on Wednesday, valuing the group at around £2.7bn, but fell 5p to 755½p as trading opened today.
Meanwhile, Luminar's shares have underperformed the leisure sector by about 6% over the last year, as its venues have suffered from slowing consumer spending, local crackdowns on binge-drinking and increased competition as more and more similar bars open up.
They closed at 558p on Wednesday, valuing the group at around £407m ($765.2m), but took a hit of 21p to 537p on the open this morning.
Most watched Money videos
- Here's the one thing you need to do to boost state pension
- Phil Spencer invests in firm to help list holiday lodges
- Is the latest BYD plug-in hybrid worth the £30,000 price tag?
- Jaguar's £140k EV spotted testing in the Arctic Circle
- Can my daughter inherit my local government pension?
- Five things to know about Tesla Model Y Standard
- Reviewing the new 2026 Ineos Grenadier off-road vehicles
- Putting Triumph's new revamped retro motorcycles to the test
- Richard Hammond to sell four cars from private collection
- Is the new MG EV worth the cost? Here are five things you need to know
- Steve Webb answers reader question about passing on pension
- Daily Mail rides inside Jaguar's first car in all-electric rebrand
-
China bans hidden 'pop-out' car door handles popularised...
-
FTSE 100 soars to fresh high despite metal price rout:...
-
At least 1m people have missed the self-assessment tax...
-
Irn-Bru owner snaps up Fentimans and Frobishers as it...
-
How to use reverse budgeting to get to the end of the...
-
Britain's largest bitcoin treasury company debuts on...
-
Thames Water's mucky debt deal offers little hope that it...
-
One in 45 British homeowners are sitting on a property...
-
Elon Musk confirms SpaceX merger with AI platform behind...
-
Bank of England expected to hold rates this week - but...
-
Satellite specialist Filtronic sees profits slip despite...
-
Plus500 shares jump as it announces launch of predictions...
-
Insurer Zurich admits it owns £100m stake in...
-
Fears AstraZeneca will quit the London Stock Market as...
-
Overhaul sees Glaxo slash 350 research and development...
-
Mortgage rates back on the rise? Three more major lenders...
-
Revealed: The sneaky tricks to find out if you've won a...
-
Porch pirates are on the rise... and these are areas most...

