Choppies plans expansion

The Johannesburg Stock Exchange. File picture: Siphiwe Sibeko

The Johannesburg Stock Exchange. File picture: Siphiwe Sibeko

Published Oct 15, 2015

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Johannesburg - Choppies Enterprises, the Botswanan supermarket chain that listed in South Africa in May, plans to open about 30 stores in the year through June and may also expand via acquisitions as the retailer seeks to increase market share in the region.

“We will open stores through organic growth in Botswana, South Africa, Zimbabwe and Zambia,” CEO Ram Ottapathu said by phone on Thursday. The Gaborone, Botswana-based retailer is also seeking to purchase companies and may enter Tanzania and Kenya, he said.

Choppies, which was founded in 1986 and had 129 stores at the end of June, is expanding in sub-Saharan Africa to take advantage of rising household incomes, economic growth, a switch by shoppers to stores from outdoor markets and an increasing demand for fresh food.

The company competes with South African retailers such as Shoprite Holdings, Wal-Mart Stores-owned Massmart Holdings and Pick n Pay Stores, which are also opening stores across the continent. Choppies has no plans to expand beyond sub-Saharan Africa, Ottapathu said.

“In South Africa, it’s very competitive,” he said. “But we have been competing in Botswana with these other chains, so we are used to it.”

Profit in the year through June rose 21 percent to 202.8 million pula ($19.8 million), Choppies reported on September 22. The stock, which started trading in Johannesburg on May 27, has climbed 16 percent to R5.70, valuing the company at R7.2 billion.

Choppies trades at 26 times estimated earnings, according to data complied by Bloomberg. That compares with 18 times estimated earnings at Shoprite, South Africa’s biggest grocer, which has a market value of R89 billion.

BLOOMBERG

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