Gome Electronic Appliances Holding Ltd's profit rose 22 per cent in the first
quarter of the year, thanks to its maturing sales network.
A massive and aggressive expansion in less wealthy cities last year made the
mainland's largest home appliances retailer suffer a 5 per cent drop in its
profit. But it paid dividends when it recorded a profit of 153.69 million yuan
(US$19.2 million) for the first three months of this year, against 126.3 million
yuan (US$15.9 million) for the same period last year.
"The year 2005 was our seeding year, during which about 143 outlets were
opened... now we expect to gather the rewards as the new stores see booming
sales. Our chain network is getting sounder and more competitive," Gome
Executive Director Du Juan said over the telephone yesterday.
The Beijing-based company plans to open 120 to 150 more stores and expects
its net profit to rise by 0.5 per cent this year. Gome runs 296 stores today, 33
more than last year.
Its first quarter same-store sales grew 0.68 per cent, but sales per square
metre dropped 28 per cent because of its expansion into lower-income and
sparsely populated second-tier cities.
Its revenue grew 67.8 per cent, to reach 5.6 billion yuan (US$700 million), a
year-on-year increase of 2.26 billion yuan (US$280 million).
The company's sales during the just concluded Labour Day Golden Week Holiday
climbed to 4 billion yuan (US$500 million), against 1.8 billion yuan (US$22.5
million) in the same period last year.
"Our stores were open till midnight during the Labour Day holidays, and the
spending ability of mainland consumers remained strong," Du said. The strong
sales show the retail sector has not suffered because of the rising interest
rate on the mainland.
In a bid to cool down the overheated mainland economy, the People's Bank of
China tightened the credit policy just days before the Golden Week by raising
the lending rate by 27 basis points to 5.85 per cent.
Retail sales on the mainland grew 12.9 per cent, to reach 6.7 trillion yuan
last year.
In its annual result, announced in March, Gome said that its profit margin
before tax had dropped 4.84 per cent because of the expansion exercise.
The swim or sink situation in the mainland's hotly contested domestic
appliance sector, Gome said, had prompted it to try and capture as much share of
the market as possible.
Twenty-four stores, complete with digital products, both in first- and
second-tier cities were closed down last year. The reason: the new ones are
equally costly to run, even though they are less profitable than those in
first-class cities.
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