Sports Direct has delayed the publication of its annual financial results, warning that it could miss profit forecasts amid uncertainty over the performance of House of Fraser.
Shares in the retail group, controlled by the Newcastle United owner Mike Ashley, fell nearly 10% to 238p, their lowest level this year, as analysts suggested the company was struggling to cope with a string of acquisitions made in the past 18 months.
Sports Direct said it was not ready to publish its results for the year to 28 April on Thursday, as previously planned, for several reasons, including: “The complexities of the integration into the company of the House of Fraser business and the current uncertainty as to the future trading performance of this business.”
The company said it believed its accounts and their audit were at “an advanced stage. However, there are a number of key areas to conclude on which could materially affect the guidance given in Sports Direct’s announcement of 13 December 2018.”
On that day, Ashley admitted that total profits would fall after the British high street endured an “unbelievably bad” November when Brexit worries deterred shoppers. It said underlying profits would rise by 5% to 15%.
Analysts said Ashley faced a series of problems at his business.
“House of Fraser is clearly in a degree of disarray, it would appear that the finance department is understaffed to cope with the array of acquisitions and we are also concerned about the direction of the core business,” said Jonathan Pritchard and John Stevenson, retail analysts at the stockbroker Peel Hunt. They suggested House of Fraser could be set to lose more than the £50m already expected for the year and take longer to recover.
They said that Ashley and his team appeared to have taken on too much, having bought Evans Cycles, the furniture business Sofa.com, Game Digital and House of Fraser, as well as becoming involved in a bitter, and ultimately unsuccessful, battle for control of Debenhams. Ashley is also embroiled in a bust-up with Goals Soccer Centre, the five-a-side pitch operator where shares have dived after the company admitted it had underpaid VAT. “He’s trying to coach the England football team while running the netball, the tennis and the chess team as well,” Pritchard and Stevenson said.
The pressure on Sports Direct’s management team has ramped up in recent weeks after the sudden exit of Ashley’s long-term lieutenant Karen Byers and the company secretary Cameron Olsen in an apparent falling out over strategy.
Suppliers confirmed that House of Fraser was trading very poorly in many locations during a difficult period for all retailers. Shoppers are reining in spending on clothing amid economic uncertainty, poor weather and competition from other attractions such as mobile phones and events. House of Fraser has also suffered disruption since Sports Direct bought it out of administration in a £90m rescue deal last August.
One source said: “Its an absolute shocker. There are lots of reasons. Lots of people look online before buying [even in store] and the website is a car crash. Some [brands] who were taking £10m a year are now taking almost nothing … Some stores are full of Sports Direct clearance rails.”
Retail insiders are expecting House of Fraser to close a number of stores after Christmas as it tries to limit losses and focus on revamping the best sites into upmarket brand, Frasers.
Sports Direct said in its statement on Monday that increased regulatory scrutiny of auditors and audits, including a review by the Financial Reporting Council, the corporate watchdog, of Grant Thornton’s audit of Sports Direct’s accounts, had also contributed to the delay.
Last week, Grant Thornton came bottom in the Financial Reporting Council’s annual review of audits by the UK’s large accountants. The watchdog reviewed the company’s audits of Patisserie Valerie, Interserve and Woodford Patient Capital Trust, as well as Sports Direct. Photo-Me International, the photo kiosk and launderette operator, delayed publishing its accounts last week as it said Grant Thornton needed more time to go over its numbers.
Sports Direct now expects its audited results to be published between 26 July and 23 August.