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Yum! Brands in China

 
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Author Yum! Brands in China
HenryTo
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PostPosted: Sun Apr 24, 2005 3:00 pm    Post subject: Yum! Brands in China Reply with quote

Latest article on YUM from the Motley Fool:
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A Profitable, Low-Risk China Stock
Thursday April 21, 3:12 pm ET
By W.D. Crotty


Check out this investment. It has China's best-known international brand. China is the company's biggest market outside the U.S. In the latest reporting period, revenue and operating profits each grew 25% in the Chinese division (which includes Thailand and Taiwan). The stock sells for 20 times trailing earnings and there is an 0.8% dividend.

Welcome to KFC, the fast-food company also known as Kentucky Fried Chicken, the operation that is spicing up the results at its parent Yum! Brands (NYSE: YUM - News) -- home to other well-known brands such as Pizza Hut, Taco Bell, and Long John Silver's.

KFC entered China in 1987, and it has more restaurants there than fast-food giant McDonald's (NYSE: MCD - News). Last quarter, Yum! opened 84 KFC restaurants in China; 87% of its restaurants in China are KFCs (there are 1,758 in all).

What should catch investor attention is the operating margin in China, where the company also has 261 Pizza Huts and four Taco Bells. Last quarter, it was 22.6%, up 0.3 percentage point from last year's comparable quarter. For another comparison, the U.S. margin was 12.1%, and the international one, which excludes the China division, was 19.4%. Not only is China booming, it also produces Yum!'s best operating margins.

The good news (or, if you are a pessimist, the bad news) is that the China division represents 11.4% of sales. That leaves plenty of room for growth with the proven KFC growth engine -- and a budding Pizza Hut operation.

The worldwide news at Yum! is good, too. The number of restaurants grew 2%, same-store sales (the key measure for any retail operation) were up 3%, and earnings per share before special items were up 14%, in spite of higher commodity costs dampening operating margins.

With 74% of the new restaurants in China company-owned, it might be expected that net debt (debt minus cash) would be growing, particularly given the fact that the company opened 111 restaurants in the past quarter. In fact, net debt decreased slightly to $1.53 billion.

The company is promising 10% or higher earnings growth for the future. Analysts expect earnings of $2.90 a share for 2006 -- pricing the stock at 16 times forward earnings. That's a very reasonable valuation for a company with a strong Chinese growth market and an improving balance sheet.

Fool contributor W.D. Crotty owns shares in Yum! and McDonald's -- and plans a KFC lunch today. Click here to see The Motley Fool's disclosure policy.
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rffrydr
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PostPosted: Sun May 15, 2011 7:42 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

I had a hard time getting my chinese friends to eat lamb on easter. Went to the one "taliban chinese" restaurant in town (home of the "bagel") but otherwise got the sense that lamb was not so popular. The one other dish I had included dates, heavy ginger and a long stewing to a "neutralize" the taste. But, I suppose, this is part of the new colonialism.
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HenryTo
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PostPosted: Sat May 14, 2011 2:35 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

I have not had the fortune to patron Little Sheep but it sounds yummy (no pun intended). Following is courtesy of Morningstar:

Quote:
Yum Brands YUM has formally offered to acquire the shares of China restaurant chain Little Sheep that it did not already own for $586 million, or HKD 6.50 per share. We do not find this news surprising, as Yum already owned a 27% stake in the company and indications of a formal offer had been circulating in the market for a few weeks. Little Sheep is a 450-unit chain specializing in Mongolian-style "hot pot" cuisine characterized by a proprietary soup base and lamb specialty dishes. We view this acquisition positively as it adds diversity to Yum's leading market position in China, which already includes almost 4,000 KFC and Pizza Hut locations as well as East Dawning, a Chinese fast food concept. In addition to incremental revenue, the combination could create potential cost-saving synergies through Yum's established distribution system and local real estate and personnel development teams. The purchase price--roughly 30 times Little Sheep's trailing earnings per share--strikes us as bit steep, but not egregious based on comparable valuations for other Chinese-based restaurant operators. This transaction does not materially affect our $56 fair value estimate, and we find shares modestly undervalued at about 17 times our 2012 earnings per share forecast and an enterprise value/EBITDA multiple around 10.
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rffrydr
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PostPosted: Thu Jan 27, 2011 9:35 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

A rose by any other name....

Quote:
Pizza Huts in China bear even less resemblance to their Western counterparts. While a KFC in the People’s Republic still looks like a Western-style fast-food restaurant, Chinese Pizza Huts are marketed as sophisticated venues for the legion of increasingly affluent and status-conscious Chinese. Seated in comfortably cushioned booths, customers can choose from a 106- item menu that includes wine and Chinese-influenced dishes such as scallop croquettes with crushed seaweed and even French- inspired escargot.


A rose by any other name?..... Time to pause and think, what does it mean when all we have left is our logo? More than you would believe. One of the key aspects of "brand" is quality and consistency; in china that includes cleaniless, bathrooms, and speed and a whole background of elements we don't even realize constitute our brands.

Luv that sizzilean hamburger A&W in Maylaysia! --NOT.
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