Sport & Entertainment
| Nov 10, 2022

UK’s Domino’s counting on FIFA World Cup to boost pizza sales

/ Our Today

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(Reuters)

Domino’s Pizza Group Plc said today (November 10) that sales in the key holiday quarter were off to a positive start and the fast food chain is pinning hopes on the FIFA World Cup to drive revenues further, despite a squeeze on consumer finances.

The company, a franchisee of US-based Domino’s Pizza Inc, also reiterated its full-year profit expectation of £125-£135 million (US$142.3-US$153.6 million).

“I’m pleased that we have made a strong start to our important final quarter … . We’re looking forward to our busiest weeks of the year with the men’s football World Cup and the festive season to come,” Interim Chief Executive Officer Elias Diaz Sese said in a statement.

A Dominoes pizza delivery driver rides a motorbike in a residential street in West London as the spread of the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) continues, in London, Britain. (File Photo: REUTERS/Toby Melville)

Big-ticket sporting events have driven demand and sales for the company in the past – such as the Men’s Euro soccer tournament last year.

The 2022 World Cup, which begins on November 20, is expected to be watched by five billion people.

Like-for-like sales, excluding VAT rates, rose 10.4 per cent in the first six weeks of the fourth quarter, ending on December 25, the company said.

Its shares were up 2.8 per cent at 251 pence by 1020 GMT after falling as much as two per cent earlier.

FIFA World Cup 2022 branding is seen at Hamad International Airport. (File Photo: REUTERS/Hamad I Mohammed)

The firm added that current-quarter sales were partly buoyed by its initial rollout on the food delivery platform Just Eat, which would now be made widely available, helping it reach more customers at a time when they face a deepening cost-of-living crisis.

Third-quarter system sales across its stores in the UK and Ireland fell about eight per cent, hurt by higher value added taxes and as fewer people ordered in, but overall sales were still above pre-pandemic levels.

The London-listed firm also announced a share buyback of £20 million after it exercised an option to sell its investment in Germany and improve its cash position.

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