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SSPG Ssp Group Plc

196.70
-2.60 (-1.30%)
26 Apr 2024 - Closed
Delayed by 15 minutes
Share Name Share Symbol Market Type Share ISIN Share Description
Ssp Group Plc LSE:SSPG London Ordinary Share GB00BGBN7C04 ORD 1 17/200P
  Price Change % Change Share Price Bid Price Offer Price High Price Low Price Open Price Shares Traded Last Trade
  -2.60 -1.30% 196.70 197.30 197.50 201.20 197.10 200.00 1,408,264 16:35:14
Industry Sector Turnover Profit EPS - Basic PE Ratio Market Cap
Food Preparations, Nec 3.02B 8.1M 0.0102 193.43 1.57B
Ssp Group Plc is listed in the Food Preparations sector of the London Stock Exchange with ticker SSPG. The last closing price for Ssp was 199.30p. Over the last year, Ssp shares have traded in a share price range of 175.70p to 283.20p.

Ssp currently has 796,529,196 shares in issue. The market capitalisation of Ssp is £1.57 billion. Ssp has a price to earnings ratio (PE ratio) of 193.43.

Ssp Share Discussion Threads

Showing 176 to 199 of 1225 messages
Chat Pages: Latest  13  12  11  10  9  8  7  6  5  4  3  2  Older
DateSubjectAuthorDiscuss
27/10/2015
11:36
Wheat prices on a low
Oil prices on a low
Weak euro so lots of air travel which will boost airport eateries
got some great brands in here too. Love a upper crust baguette, me.
The Group will announce its 2015 Full Year results on 26 November 2015.

dlku
26/10/2015
16:08
It is a high valuation because institutions know that travel retail is a dead cert for future profits and these companies like sspg and smwh are going to be cash cows with low risk and plenty of upside.

250-300p is a fair price at the moment and (excluding index ups and downs) valuation should grow ~10% a year if results are in-line, so i believe it will be a slow mountain climb rather than the rocket ship to the moon that some are speculating here.

My target is 500p in 5 years (with £120m profit and a £2.4bn valuation on PE of 20).

rarther
26/10/2015
13:17
Stock Rank of 43 and PE ratio of 22.2. I don't think I'll touch this one.
treeshake
26/10/2015
08:25
this is about to go seriously horizontal! hold on tight :)
rarther
23/10/2015
16:03
going vertical
dlku
23/10/2015
14:07
Dont say i dont give you nuttin
spatula spatula
23/10/2015
08:30
Will have benefitted from the big air traffic increases with everyone going on holiday
Marks and spencer food shops at rail stations will also be doing well

Also falling wheat prices
Falling oil prices

Could see 350p here sharpish

spatula spatula
22/10/2015
22:29
retail sales figs up sharply
all those travelling to shops like to snack

dlku
21/10/2015
11:56
Wheat hitting the lows again today too.


Great news for Upper Crust!!

dlku
15/10/2015
09:14
Big numbers from WHSmith (LSE:SMWH) today. Travel +4% LFL. Increasing passenger numbers cited as a key driver.
rarther
13/10/2015
15:49
This a good example of a company which would benefit from the UK being in a single currency (perhaps the EU should adopt the Pound).
rarther
13/10/2015
15:35
good read diku, where's that from?
rarther
11/10/2015
08:14
Over the past three months, millions of holidaymakers have spent hours at airports and railway stations across Europe and beyond.
Arriving early, waiting for delayed flights or whisked through security faster than expected, they have mostly whiled away their time, shopping, eating and drinking.
Many will have eaten or drunk at restaurants, bars and cafes operated by a company few people have ever heard of: SSP. Floated in July 2014, it runs about 2,000 outlets at 124 airports and 270 stations worldwide.
Going unnoticed: Many will have eaten or drunk at restaurants, bars and cafes operated by a company few people have ever heard of: SSP
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Going unnoticed: Many will have eaten or drunk at restaurants, bars and cafes operated by a company few people have ever heard of: SSP
Some brands belong exclusively to the group, such as Millie’s Cookies, Upper Crust and Caffè Ritazza.
But in many cases, SSP uses a franchise model, running sites for well-known names such as Nando’s, Burger King, YO! Sushi and Starbucks and paying these companies a royalty in return. SSP was also the first to open an M&S Simply Food outlet in a travel location – Liverpool Station in 2001. Now it runs stores around the country in stations, airports and hospitals.
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The group works with small chains, local cafes and individual restaurateurs, too, so that eateries in airports and stations are not entirely uniform.
Run by Kate Swann, former chief executive of WH Smith, SSP shares are 303p. They have done well since flotation but should continue to flourish. Swann, who was credited with turning round Smiths, joined SSP just two years ago. Since then, she and her team have constructed a strong plan to expand the company.

SSP was initially part of catering giant Compass and built its reputation as an operator of fast-food joints in railway forecourts. It was sold to a Swedish private equity firm in 2006 and expanded over the next eight years, moving into more stations and airports while increasing the number of different outlets it manages.
Today, it has about 300 brands. In line with changing consumer tastes, many are considerably more upmarket than the burger and sandwich outlets of a decade ago, serving healthier, premium food. SSP even runs a Michelin-starred restaurant in Hong Kong airport, Hung’s Delicacies.
Even so, it still derives 40 per cent of its revenues from the UK, with 44 per cent coming from the Continent. The US and Canada account for about 10 per cent while Asia and the Middle East make up the rest. This is where much of the growth potential lies.
North America has traditionally been dominated by one large operator, but SSP has muscled in, moving in to prestigious airports such as JFK in New York. It also won contracts in Texas, Florida and Montreal in the first six months of this year.
In Asia, even though China is not growing as fast as it once was, passenger numbers are still rising by 6 to 8 per cent annually and the country plans to open 70 new airports over the next ten years.
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New venture: SSP is run by former W H Smith boss Kate Swann
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New venture: SSP is run by former W H Smith boss Kate Swann
All those new travellers will need to be fed and watered, so hundreds of bars, cafes and restaurants will be built, many of which will be run by external operators. SSP has been investing in its Asian business and recently won a £60 million contract to run eight new outlets at Beijing Capital International airport.
The Middle East offers plenty of room for growth, too, particularly the Gulf States, where air travel is increasing rapidly.
Closer to home, the company won a seven-year contract at the newly-revamped Stansted Airport, including the first ever airport restaurant from celebrity chef James Martin, the James Martin Kitchen.
SSP’s financial year runs to September 30 – last Wednesday – and the results will be revealed in a few weeks’ time. Sales of about £1.8 billion are expected, in line with last year, after being hit by the strength of sterling against the euro and Scandinavian currencies.
But profits should still show strong growth, rising about 25 per cent to £78million and a further 14 per cent to £89million in 2016. A dividend of 4.2p is expected this year, rising to 4.75 next.
Swann is keen to make the company more profitable by sourcing food and drink more efficiently, making sure staff are on site when needed and using consumer data to find out more about people’s preferences.
Midas verdict: SSP shares are 297½p and should deliver long-term rewards. Air travel is increasing and SSP is working hard to make sure it reaps the benefits. Buy.
HOW SWANN SPREAD HER WINGS
Kate Swann is a rare beast: a very well paid, internationally respected businesswoman.
Having started her career at Tesco as a graduate trainee she worked her way up the retail ladder to become managing director of Homebase, before taking the same position at Argos in 2000. Three years later she was appointed chief executive of W H Smith.
The business was on its knees, but Swann turned it round by cutting costs, moving away from less profitable goods such as CDs and DVDs and expanding into airports.
From there SSP was a natural progression, though ironically she admits to a fear of flying. For investors this minor phobia matters less than Swann’s forensic attention to costs and profits. Disciplined and with a retailer’s attention to detail, she is described as driven, forceful and dynamic.

dlku
24/9/2015
09:58
You can be sure that they are pushing shareholder value and expanding the margins but not so much because of commodities - more like vicious cost saving and heads rolling.
rarther
23/9/2015
10:08
low oil and low wheat prices must be sending the margins up!
dlku
17/9/2015
15:23
just had a delicious baguette from Upper Crust
dlku
07/9/2015
09:10
had a few here
opodio
18/8/2015
13:39
looking ready to clatter northwards
dlku
14/8/2015
10:23
had a burger king run by ssp last night
delicious

dlku
13/8/2015
09:16
07 Aug 2014 7:00 am
RNS
Factsheet SSP Group PLC (SSPG) Interim Management Statement


must be IMS soon

opodio
06/8/2015
09:46
299.9p next level
rarther
06/8/2015
08:37
360p next level imho
dlku
03/8/2015
10:16
360 next level
dlku
29/7/2015
10:36
good read across from GRG

This is superb rollout should relaly be worth same as pret so should double

dlku
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