slides (PDF 1.5 MB)
Transcription
slides (PDF 1.5 MB)
Roadshow Presentation September/October 2006 Home Retail Group’s competitive strengths ` Market leading position ` Strong retail brands with large customer bases ` Choice and value-led product offering ` Purchasing, sourcing and supply chain scale ` Integrated multi-channel capability ` Shared infrastructure and logistics expertise ` Experienced management team delivering a long-term track record of growth 1 The leading home and general merchandise retailer in the UK Sales (£bn) c. 10% share of a £55bn+ market 5.5 4.9 4.9 4.2 2.9 2.4 1.9 1.5 1.4 1.4 Halfords MFI WH Smith Kesa Woolworths John Lewis Next Kingfisher Boots DSGi Home Retail 0.7 Operating profit before exceptionals (£m) 426 Product market Housewares1 Furniture1 Home improvement2 Horticulture, garden furniture and outdoor living1 Home Sold by Sold by Retail Argos Homebase position 9 9 #1 9 9 #1 9 9 #2 Small domestic appliances3 Consumer electronics3 Large domestic appliances3 Market size £8.6bn £8.2bn £11.0bn 9 9 #2 £3.2bn 9 9 9 9 #1 #3 £1.3bn £13.8bn 9 9 #3 £4.0bn 385 338 38 30 19 MFI 60 Woolworths 89 WH Smith John Lewis DSGi Kingfisher Home Retail Boots Next 111 Kesa 215 Halfords 235 Jewellery4 Toys5 Sports & leisure equipment6 Source: Last financial year UK sales and profit of continuing retail operations as per annual report/prelims; MFI includes Howden Source: 1 Verdict, 2 Verdict/Mintel, #1 by vol £3.2bn £1.9bn #1 9 9 9 3 Verdict/GfK, #1 4 Mintel/EDR, 5 £1.2bn Mintel/NPD, 6 Mintel 2 Strong retail brands with large customer bases Homebase Argos ` Leading UK general merchandise retailer ` 2nd largest home improvement retailer with strong brand stretch ` Reputation for choice, value and convenience ` Recognised for choice, style and customer service ` Unique integrated multi-channel model ` Positioned as a leading home enhancement retailer ` 73% of UK households shopped at Argos in last 12 months ` 4 million Spend & Save loyalty card holders ` Core customer: Hard Working Families ` Core customer: ABC1 Home Enhancers ` 130 million store transactions and 4 million remote orders a year ` 70 million transactions a year Home Retail Group ` Each business strong in distinct consumer segments ` Purchasing scale ` Shared infrastructure ` Outperforming in a tough market 3 Argos highlights Unique retail store format at the heart Argos overview ` Leading general merchandise retailer in the UK ` 2 in 3 UK households collect an Argos catalogue from stores every year ` Publish a twice-yearly 1,700 page catalogue ` Customers choose at home ` Stores act as fast and efficient pick-up points ` Two main types of store: ` Over 650 stores ` Selling around 17,000 product lines ` ` ` ` Longstanding reputation for value for money ` Fully integrated multi-channel model 2nd most popular UK internet retail site Five years of sales growth averaging over 10% ` – Fully stocked-in ‘Extra’ – Smaller store ‘ordered-in’ Technology enables better shopping experience – Kiosks – Stock checker – Call forward Cost effective formula in a highly competitive environment 4 Homebase highlights Homebase overview ` Second largest home improvement retailer in the UK ` High brand awareness ` Positioned as a leader across the wider home enhancement market ` Successfully outperforming in a tough market ` Leveraging product overlap, infrastructure and expertise of Home Retail Group Homebase proposition Comprehensive offer Loyalty programme and promotions ` Over 30,000 products ` 6 main departments – DIY, Decorating, Garden, Homewares, kitchens/bathrooms, Furniture ` 4 million Spend & Save members ` 10% days ` c. 300 out of town stores Conveniently located stores ` High quality service Style Mezzanines supporting range expansion ` High levels of in store service ` Reliable home delivery service ` Known for offering stylish products ` Branded and own brand products 5 Financial Services highlights Credit penetration Storecard loan book (gross) 30% £378m Revolving 3 mth BNPL 25% Credit penetration £349m £252m £155m £105m 6 mth BNPL 9 mth BNPL 20% 15% 10% 5% 0% <£95 2002 2003 2004 2005 £95 - £195 £195 - £295 Spend 2006 Argos £295+ Homebase Growth in moving annual total Argos sales, grouped into card penetration bands Number of active customers >1m 180.0% >1m 160.0% 140.0% % Growth since Dec-01 120.0% 458k 100.0% 80.0% 60.0% 40.0% 20.0% 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 0.0% Jan-02 Apr-02 Jul-02 Oct-02 Jan-03 Apr-03 Jul-03 Oct-03 Jan-04 < 10% Penetration Apr-04 Jul-04 Oct-04 Jan-05 Apr-05 > 10% Penetration Jul-05 Oct-05 Jan-06 Apr-06 6 Key components of growth strategy ` Strengthen and grow market leading positions ` Grow market share in targeted large product markets, capitalising on the strength and flexibility of Home Retail Group’s businesses ` – Consumer electronics – Sports and leisure equipment – Furniture – Large domestic appliances – Fitted kitchens and bathrooms Expand Argos and Homebase store networks to provide enhanced customer convenience ` Extend and exploit multi-channel leadership ` Leverage shared product pool and purchasing scale to deliver excellent value to customers 7 ‘Own the Home’ Small Consumer Large Furniture Kitchens Bathrooms What Jewellery Toys Sports & House DIY / wares leisure garden domestic Electronics domestic Customers appliances appliances equipment Want Different Ways to Order Large range of products Stock Availability Core: Strengthen through world class low cost sourcing capability Value for money Financial Services Home Delivery Headroom: Grow through service and infrastructure investment Installation Other services 8 Expand and develop store networks ` Argos and Homebase new store openings meet our hurdle rates ` Plan to open c. 30 Argos stores per year ` Plan to open c. 15 Homebase stores per year ` Potential to grow to over 1,200 stores ` Rollout and rollback of proven home enhancement proposition in Homebase ` Investing in format development – Argos – Extra; 'High Tech'; 'Display' – Homebase – Mezzanines; Furniture Extra; small store format 9 Extend and exploit multi-channel leadership ` Product selection options – ` ` Catalogue/Specialogue – Website – In store display Order channel options – Receipt Channel On the internet – Over the phone – In store Order Channel Internet Pick-up in Store Total 2004 2006 2004 Delivered to Home 2006 2004 2006 6% 12% 2% 6% 4% 6% Telephone 11% 8% 5% 4% 6% 4% In-Store 83% 80% 73% 68% 10% 12% 100% 100% 80% 78% 20% 22% Total Ways to receive products – Pick up in store ` Pre-order facility – Home delivery ` All Argos products ` Selected Homebase ranges 10 Purchasing scale and opportunity Scale and product overlap driving buying benefits Strategic sourcing – potential benefits 5-10% 50 Other General Merchandise 16% Home Enhancement 51% Savings potential % 45 Electricals 33% Argos and Homebase combined sales FY05/06 £5.5bn 10-15% 30-50% eprocurement 40 35 30 5-10% 25 One agent vs multiple 20 10-15% 15 10 5 0 Direct sourcing Cumulative potential Import vs domestic Stage 1 Stage 2 Stage 3 Stage 4 Importing 2005/6 ` Significant move towards importing with substantial further benefits still achievable ` Argos >30% of sales directly imported ` Homebase >20% of sales directly imported ` However <50% of import is direct sourced 11 Sales and gross margin record Homebase Argos (£ bn) 2.7 3.0 3.4 +12% +17% FY02 LFL Space Gross margin % +8% 3.9 (£ bn) 1.4 1 1.5 +7% +5% 1.6 1.6 +6% (1%) FY05 FY06 +13% FY03 FY04 13% 7% 4% 6% “firm” 3.7 FY05 FY06 5% 3% (1%) 7% 5% 8% “firm” “slightly “slightly “in line” ahead” ahead” Excludes Argos Additions and Jungle.com 1 FY03 FY04 LFL n/a 3% 3% (4%) Space n/a 2% 3% 3% Gross margin % n/a “in line” “slightly ahead” “in line” Pro forma results – Homebase acquired in December 2002 12 Operating profit before exceptionals record Homebase Argos UK GAAP1 (£ m) 212 241 297 IFRS 326 320 291 UK GAAP1 (£ m) 102 110 114 52 +8% +10% +24% 102 IFRS +1% (9%) +14% +26% (54%) FY02 FY03 FY04 FY05 Op. margin 7.8% 8.0% 8.8% 8.9% 1 FY05 FY06 8.8% 7.5% FY03 Op. margin 7.2% FY04 FY05 6.9% 7.0% FY05 7.2% FY06 3.3% UK GAAP operating profit is also before goodwill amortisation Excluding Argos Additions 13 Home Retail Group financial highlights ` Track record of delivering growth ` Well invested asset base ` Financial discipline in investment appraisal ` Strong cash flow generated from operations 14 Home Retail Group summary Routes to growth Competitive strengths ` Market leading position ` ` Strong retail brands with large customer bases Strengthen and grow market leading positions ` ` Choice and value-led product offering Grow market share in targeted large product markets ` ` Purchasing, sourcing and supply chain scale Expand Argos and Homebase store networks ` ` Integrated multi-channel capability Extend and exploit multichannel leadership ` ` Shared infrastructure and logistics expertise Leverage shared product pool and purchasing scale to deliver excellent value to customers ` Experienced management team delivering a long-term track record of growth 15 Supporting data 1. Financials Home Retail Group Income Statement £m FY05 FY06 Sales 5,313 5,548 Cost of sales (3,493) (3,687) Gross profit 1,820 1,861 Net operating expenses (1,398) (1,523) Operating profit before exceptionals Exceptionals Operating profit after exceptionals 422 (22) 400 338 (25) 313 16 Home Retail Group sales £m FY05 FY06 Variance Argos 3,652 3,893 +7% Homebase 1,580 1,562 (1%) 81 93 +15% 5,313 5,548 +4% Financial services Total 17 Home Retail Group – cost of sales and gross profit £m FY05 FY06 Sales 5,313 5,548 4% Cost of sales (3,493) (3,687) 6% Gross profit 1,820 1,861 2% Gross profit - % sales 34.3% 33.5% Variance ` Cost of sales comprise both the cost of merchandise and the cost of the National and the Regional Distribution Centres (“NDC” and “RDC”) ` Distribution costs amount to approximately 5% of sales ` Merchandise gross margin in FY06 was “in line” with supply chain benefits being re-invested in lower prices to customers ` Distribution costs increased slightly due to a new warehouse opened to support strategic growth initiatives together with the effect of underlying cost inflation 18 Home Retail Group – net operating expenses £m FY05 FY06 Sales 5,313 5,548 Selling costs (1,139) (1,252) 10% (259) (271) 5% (1,398) (1,523) 9% 21.4% 22.6% 4.9% 4.9% 26.3% 27.5% Administrative costs Net operating expenses Selling costs - % sales Administrative costs - % sales Net operating expenses - % sales Variance 4% 19 Home Retail Group – operating profit before exceptionals £m FY05 FY06 Argos 320 291 (9%) Homebase 114 52 (54%) 0 6 434 349 Financial Services Total reported Central Costs1 Operating profit before exceptionals (12) 422 (11) 338 Variance n/a (20%) 8% (20%) Sales % ratios Operating profit before exceptionals EBITDA before exceptionals 1 7.9% 6.1% 10.2% 8.5% The Central Costs are a “carve out” allocation of the GUS plc Central Costs of £22m reported in May 2006. They are NOT intended to be an estimate of the central costs for Home Retail Group plc 20 Home Retail Group – exceptional items £m FY05 OFT fine (16) Homebase Head Office relocation Impairment charges TOTAL FY06 - (6) (12) - (13) (22) (25) ` GUS plc previously reported Homebase Head Office relocation costs of £18m in their results for the year ended 31 March 2005 Complies with different presentation required for Home Retail Group plc 21 Home Retail Group Balance Sheet - assets £m FY05 Actual FY06 Actual Goodwill 1,834 1,879 1,879 Property, plant, equipment and intangibles 656 759 759 Inventories 889 881 881 Instalment receivables 427 399 399 Other assets 255 314 314 Group balances 525 1,064 - 93 131 24 4,679 5,427 4,256 TOTAL LIABILITIES (2,082) (2,652) (1,324) TOTAL NET ASSETS 2,597 2,775 2,932 Cash and cash equivalents TOTAL ASSETS FY06 Pro forma 22 Home Retail Group Balance Sheet - liabilities FY05 Actual FY06 Actual Trade and other payables (905) (893) (891) Other liabilities (269) (209) (209) Total trade and other payables and liabilities (1,174) (1,102) (1,100) (224) £m FY06 Pro forma Loans and borrowings - external (298) (224) Loans and borrowings - group (610) (1,326) Total loans and borrowings (908) (1,550) (224) (2,082) (2,652) (1,324) TOTAL LIABILITIES - 23 Home Retail Group – working capital £m FY05 FY06 Variance Stock 889 881 Debtors 142 164 (22) Creditors and accruals (905) (872) (33) Sub-total trade 126 173 (47) Loan book 427 399 28 TOTAL 553 572 (19) 8 24 Home Retail Group – working capital £m FY04 FY05 Stock 706 889 (183) Debtors 138 142 (4) (863) (905) Sub-total trade (19) 126 (145) Loan book 353 427 (74) TOTAL 334 553 (219) Creditors and accruals Variance 42 25 Home Retail Group Summary cash flow £m FY05 FY06 Operating profit (before exceptionals) 422 338 Depreciation and amortisation 121 135 EBITDA (before exceptionals) 543 473 Movements in working capital (219) (19) Movement in retirement benefit (43) (88) Other operational cash flows (40) (1) Cash generated from operations1 Percentage of EBITDA 1 Cash generated from operations is before incurring outflows related to capital expenditure, interest, taxation and dividends 241 44% 365 77% 26 Home Retail Group capital expenditure £m New stores FY05 FY06 62 80 103 81 Distribution and supply chain 50 63 Other 27 31 Total 242 255 Property, plant and equipment 217 232 25 23 242 255 Store enhancement and refurbishment Intangible assets Total 27 Home Retail Group store portfolio Property portfolio predominantly leasehold 796 834 879 287 954 297 Homebase 273 278 Argos 523 556 592 FY03 FY04 FY05 FY06 Argos Extra ‘Stocked In’ - 42 128 191 Homebase mezzanines 36 67 111 144 657 28 Home Retail Group infrastructure portfolio 22 22 7 6 19 16 Home Delivery RDC NDC Sq feet (millions) Home Delivery RDC NDC Total 6 4 7 7 8 8 5 6 7 8 FY03 FY04 FY05 FY06 1.7 2.4 1.7 5.8 2.2 2.4 2.4 7.0 3.0 2.7 2.2 7.9 2.8 2.7 2.7 8.2 29 Return on Capital Employed 1 2 3 4 5 £m FY05 FY06 Total assets1 4,061 4,2063 Total trade and other payables and liabilities2 (1,103)3 (1,100) Invested capital 2,958 3,106 Capital employed (excludes goodwill) 1,124 1,227 Operating profit before exceptionals4 422 338 Pre-tax ROIC4,5 14.3% 10.9% Pre-tax ROCE4,5 37.5% 27.5% Excludes Group loan balances, cash and cash equivalents, and pension asset Excludes pension liability 31 March 2006 pension asset excluded was £26m 31 March 2005 pension liability excluded was (£71m) Operating profit for Financial Services includes the interest cost of servicing its loanbook Calculated on 31 March year end balances 30 Pro forma assumptions ` It is anticipated that Home Retail Group will be allocated net debt effective at 31 March 2006 of about £200m, in addition to its substantial leasehold obligations ` Subject to any changes in legislation, it is expected that the effective tax rate based upon Benchmark PBT for Home Retail Group will be in the low 30%s ` The dividend policy will be a matter for the Home Retail Group Board to consider following demerger. However, at this stage, it is anticipated that Home Retail Group will have a cover of no less than two times ` The central costs of Home Retail Group plc are expected to be in the range of £20m–£25m of which approximately £5m are already incurred by, and will be transferred from, Argos ` Anticipate underlying cost inflation remains at approximately 4% for FY07 ` Loanbook expected to grow in FY07 with growth in storecard offset partially by continued, but slowing, personal loans run-off ` Home Retail Group FS is trading in line with expectations. However, its response to the recommendations of the recent OFT enquiry in respect of late payment fees is expected to impact current year reported profit from early in the second half by about £3-4m. The impact is expected to annualise in the following year 31 Pro forma assumptions – one-off costs ` Additional costs will be incurred in respect of a number of one-off demerger incentive schemes: ` – Share Grant to approx 50,000 employees – Reinvestment scheme for approx 100 senior staff It is expected that these costs will amount to approximately £45 million spread over a 3 year period commencing at demerger and will be accounted for below Benchmark PBT ` Home Retail Group will incur one-off demerger related costs of approximately £15 million. These will be treated as exceptional and charged in the first half of FY07 32 Bank facilities On demerger Home Retail Group will operate with the following facilities: ` £225 million existing GUS facility with Citibank repayable in January 2008 ` £700 million multi-currency revolving loan facility with syndicate of banks – Term 5 + 1 + 1 – Two tier structure comprising 10 banks – Facility includes a financial covenant of 1.5 times in respect of: (Benchmark PBT + DA + Rent + Interest) / (Rent + Interest) 33 Financial measures Data Points (£ millions) Benchmark PBT 303 Proforma Net Debt Depreciation & Amortisation 135 Capitalised Leases (@8) Rent 285 Interest (31 + 15) 200 2,280 46 Performance Metrics (Benchmark PBT + DA + Rent + Interest) / (Rent + Interest) = 2.3 times Adjusted Net Debt / EBITDAR = 3.2 times Benchmark PBT is defined as profit before amortisation of acquisition intangibles, store impairment charges, exceptional items (i.e. gains or losses on disposal, demerger or closure of businesses and goodwill impairment charges), financing fair value re-measurements, one-off demerger incentive costs and taxation. 34 Pension schemes Defined Benefit Defined Contribution ` Already operates as a standalone Home Retail Group scheme ` Approx 10,300 members – closed to new members ` Members contribute: − 8% salary for 1/60ths accrual − 6% salary for 1/80ths accrual ` Special contributions of £100m, £50m and £70m in FY06, FY05 and FY04 respectively ` 31 March 2006 : balance sheet position − Assets 605 − Liabilities (579) − Surplus 26 ` Approx 3,600 members ` 2,000 members in GUS scheme and 1,600 members in Home Retail Group scheme ` Open to new members ` Members contribute: − 3% + 3% − 4% + 4% − 5% + 5% 35 Supporting data 2. Argos The Argos proposition Unique retail store format at the heart Argos overview ` Leading general merchandise retailer in the UK ` ` Twice yearly 1,700 page catalogue published 2 in 3 UK households collect an Argos catalogue from stores every year ` Customers choose at home ` Over 650 stores ` ` Selling up to 17,000 product lines Stores act as fast and efficient pick-up points ` Longstanding reputation for value for money ` Two main types of store: ` Fully integrated multi-channel model ` ` 2nd most popular UK internet retail site Five years of sales growth averaging over 10% ` – Fully stocked-in ‘Extra’ – Smaller store ‘ordered-in’ Technology enables better shopping experience – Kiosks – Stock checker – Call forward Cost effective formula in a highly competitive environment 36 Leading market positions and growth record Sales mix1 Market positions * ` Small Domestic Appliances #1 ` Consumer Electronics #3 ` Large Domestic Appliances #3 ` Housewares #1 ` Furniture #1 ` DIY / Garden #5 ` Jewellery #1 ` ` Other General Merchandise 23% Electrical 45% Home Enhancement 32% Argos sales and total growth2,3 12% #1 Toys Sports and leisure equipment 13% 17% 7% #1 11% 8% £3.7bn 7% £3.9bn £3.4bn £3.0bn £2.7bn £2.3bn £1.9bn 1999 £2.1bn 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 Well positioned in large and/or growing markets with scale * Source: Verdict, Mintel, company data 1 Year ended 31 March 2006 2 Excluding discontinued Additions operations 3 Year to March 37 Argos competitive strengths ` Convenience: Unique way to shop that integrates stores, internet and telephone channels ` Choice: Information-rich catalogue of 17,000 products with capacity for continued expansion ` Value: History of reinvesting cost and buying efficiency in lower prices ` Proposition attracts large, loyal customer base of ‘hard working families’ ` ` Supported by extensive infrastructure capabilities – Store portfolio – Distribution network – Home delivery The Argos values and how we deliver against our vision 38 Convenient multi-channel shopping Order & Pay Comprehensive Product Range In-store… …by telephone… …or on the internet Check & Reserve for store pick-up Delivery channels National Coverage A Unique Model Search & Select Pre-pay for home delivery Our fully integrated multi-channel operation consistently delivers a good customer experience 39 Excellent breadth and depth of choice “Breadth of a department store, depth of a specialist” ` Around 17,000 lines, including 4,000 delivery only and 3,000 Argos Extra ` Range from “the ordinary to the extraordinary” – breadth and depth of choice ` Argos Extra range available to all stores since summer 2005 ` Structured and informative presentation to make choosing easy Range breadth brings greater flexibility ` Breadth of range brings benefits to Argos as well as to our customers – – Argos catalogue - number of product lines 16,400 9,300 2002 11,600 2003 Argos 17,000 17,500 13,000 13,300 2004 2005 17,200 – Around 50% of lines are new in each same season catalogue vs. the previous one (e.g. Cat 63 to 65) ` Enables product market innovation (eg Hard Disc recorders, HD ready TV) Around 40% range is changed from one catalogue to the next (e.g. Cat 64 to 65) ` Enables us to maximise seasonal opportunities (eg jewellery/ toys and garden furniture/outdoor living) Enables efficient use of infrastructure 2006 Argos Extra Breadth of a department store, depth of a specialist 40 Longstanding reputation for value for money EPP range 'Wow' deals ` ` Price drops July sale Reputation for offering extremely good value for money – Long history of lowering prices on reincluded lines – Supported by buying scale – Highly competitive EPP range – breakthrough pricing on “Wow” lines Continued promotions and permanent price reductions during the life of the catalogue – Non-stop price drop – Promos/flyers ` Lowest prices regardless of purchasing channel ` Supported by – Low cost store format – Single pick distribution capability (6 RDCs, 4 NDCs) – Common infrastructure leverage Offer greater value for money 41 Large and loyal customer base ` Very broad overall penetration – 2.5m customer transactions per week – 68% of UK households have catalogue – 73% make at least one purchase a year – Typical frequency 6 times per year ` High levels of customer satisfaction ` Core customer group of ‘Hard Working Families’ – ` Limits on their time and money Customer growth potential – ‘young professionals’ – Time poor, attracted by multi-channel convenience ` Nearly 1 million active store card holders ` c.2.5m e-mail database, grown 160% in past year Opportunity to grow beyond our core customer base 42 Routes to growth 1. Strengthen and drive market leadership in core markets 2. Continue to take share in large and growing markets 3. Expand the store network and format development 4. Extend and exploit integrated multi-channel offering 5. Leverage scale and infrastructure 43 Strengthen and drive Long-established leader Market leader in surprising areas Take share and grow Product opportunities in ‘core’ and growth markets Growth driven by new technology Opportunities in bigger ticket fragmented markets 44 Strengthen and drive leadership in core markets ` ` ` Choice – Leading range breadth and depth – “Good, Better, Best” architecture – Exploit ‘old technology’ as well as new – Selection via rigorous ‘Page & Options’ process "Good” EPP "Better” own label "Best” top brands Value – Constant drive to reduce catalogue prices – Leverage buying scale and sourcing expertise – Rapidly ‘popularise’ to increase affordability – Competitive benchmarking at ‘final pricing’ and ongoing – Heavyweight promotion plan and ‘non-stop price drop’ Convenience – Improving store process – Adding speed and convenience through multi-channel innovations 45 Take share in large, fragmented markets Grow share by improving awareness ` Already leading positions, but with "high headroom" to grow ` Share Landline phones Higher price points, larger Toys products ` Home delivery and point of sale Sports credit are key advantages Photo ` Sports equipment info pages DIY/ Garden Pre-pay mobiles CE Furniture Increasing awareness drive sales, via catalogues and in-store SDA Floorcare/ Microwaves Office White goods Awareness Source: Mintel, Verdict, GfK, Argos internal data ` Investing in product presentation to reinforce ‘stature’ ` Furniture market offers significant potential Garden furniture ‘specialogue’ Grow in fast-growing markets ` Technology driven customer demand ` Accelerate maturity curve – More space in catalogue – Enhanced information to make choosing easier – Leverage supplier relationships e.g. in MP3 to create affordable own label ` Financial services can add further value 46 Opportunity for further store growth New stores deliver excellent returns on investment ` ` ` ` Potential to increase store network above 800 Routes for new store growth ` Estimated 30 store openings per year Additional site out of town – Complementary to in-town offer – Potential to add Extra – Typical total average store size 15,000 – 20,000 sq ft with stock room mezzanine – Average OOT store turnover £8m per annum Low cost format – Space efficient – Operating costs ` Strong returns on capital and payback ` Smaller towns – Driven by breadth of offer – Typical small non-Extra store size 9,000 – 12,000 sq ft – Average small non-Extra store turnover £3m - £4m Format developments – In-store technology – Expanded furniture display 47 Example of taking larger share in town through the opening of a 2nd store Ipswich Market Share Jan 2006 Ipswich Market Share Jan 2005 A14 A14 Market share by area Nov 2005 Suffolk Retail Park Carr Street Over 8% 6.0%-8.0% 4.0%-6.0% 3.0%-4.0% 2.5%-3.0% Car r Stre e t 2 2.0%-2.5% 1.5%-2.0% 1.0%-1.5% 0.5%-1.0% under 0.5% 2 single store Ipswich (Sales £m) Ipswich (Sales index) original store post impact mature sales at new store Total Argos 6.4 4.5 7.9 12.4 100 70 123 193 48 Extend and exploit integrated multi-channel offering Channels ` >130m visits last 12 months Receipt Channel Order Channel ` >£250m Direct sales last year 2004 Internet ` Direct sales up 35% last year 3 tesco.com 130 4 euro.dell.com 121 5 play.com 120 6 next.co.uk 64 7 comet.co.uk 51 8 marksandspencer.com <50 9 currys.co.uk <50 Source: Hitwise, July 2005 to June 2006 2004 2006 2% 6% 4% 6% Telephone 11% 8% 5% 4% 6% 4% In-Store 83% 80% 73% 68% 10% 12% 100% 100% 80% 78% 20% 22% <50 550 14% 500 450 12% 400 350 10% 8% 300 250 6% 200 150 100 50 0 4% 2% % of total company sales 133 Online orders (£m) Hits (m) 606 argos.co.uk johnlewis.com 2006 argos.co.uk orders 2 10 2004 12% Britain's top Internet retailers Retailer amazon.co.uk 2006 Delivered to Home 6% Total Rank 1 Pick-up in Store Total 0% 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 Year to March Direct Reserved % Total Company Sales 49 Adding new stores complements the multi-channel offer ` Stores and new channels work “in conjunction” not “in competition” ` Internet feeds store sales ` – Check and Reserve sales via the internet up 85% last year – 68% of stocked in lines ordered on the internet for collection in store Stores feed home delivery growth – ` ` 50% of home delivered sales ordered in store last year Over 3 years, stores have grown both ‘stocked-in’ and ‘home delivered’ sales – Average ‘stocked-in’ sales per store up 4% – Average ‘home delivered’ sales per store up 24% Integration of our channels is major competitive advantage 50 Leverage Home Retail Group scale and infrastructure ` Scale synergies within Home Retail Group – Better buying and sourcing – Multi-channel infrastructure – Financial services – Shared operations (Property, ISO) ` More capability at lower cost ` “Operational Excellence” programme drives efficiency ` Better value for customers 51 Argos summary Routes to growth Competitive strengths ` Convenience: Unique way to shop ` ` Choice: Information-rich catalogue of 17,000 products Strengthen and drive market leadership in core markets ` Value: History of reinvesting cost and buying efficiency in lower prices Continue to take share in large and growing markets ` Supported by extensive Home Retail Group infrastructure capabilities Expand the store network and format development ` Proposition attracts large, loyal customer base of hard working families Extend and exploit integrated multichannel offering ` Leverage scale and infrastructure ` ` ` ` The Argos values and ‘How we deliver’ against our vision 52 Supporting data 3. Homebase The Homebase proposition Homebase overview ` Second largest home improvement retailer in the UK ` High brand awareness ` Positioned as a leader across the wider home enhancement market ` Successfully outperforming in a tough market ` Leveraging product overlap, infrastructure and expertise of Home Retail Group Homebase proposition Comprehensive offer Loyalty programme and promotions ` Over 30,000 products ` 6 main departments – DIY, Decorating, Garden, Homewares, kitchens/bathrooms, Furniture ` 4 million Spend & Save members ` 10% days ` c. 300 out of town stores Conveniently located stores ` High quality service Style Mezzanines supporting range expansion ` High levels of in store service ` Reliable home delivery service ` Known for offering stylish products ` Branded and own brand products 53 The changing home enhancement customer and market ` Historic long-term growth market ` Current consumer slowdown having a disproportionate effect, primarily driven by housing market conditions; remain cautious on short-term outlook for DIY ` ` Traditional DIY sheds will need to adapt – Underlying structural shifts in willingness and ability to carry out DIY – Consumers still interested in updating and improving their living environment – More focus on the products that are stylish and useful within the home – More project-related products – More products across the broader home enhancement categories Expect that in the medium term the market will return back to growth rates that are above the average for the retail sector as a whole Homebase is well positioned to benefit in the changing market 54 Competitive strengths ` Scale player: 2nd largest home improvement retailer ` Large, loyal customer base ` Strong and differentiated store portfolio ` Balanced mix of products: one stop shop for the home and garden ` Strongly positioned as a leading home enhancement retailer ` Home Retail Group scale and expertise enhances competitive position – Joint purchase scale – Operational capability 55 Second largest home improvement retailer Retailer key data Year end Number of stores Total sales Total sales growth LFL growth B&Q Jan 06 322 £3.9bn -4% -8% Homebase Feb 06 297 £1.6bn -1% -4% Wickes1 Dec 05 176 £0.8bn -6% -8% Focus2 Oct 05 255 £0.7bn -12% -9% 03/04 04/05 05/06 Market growth3 +9% +3% -6% Homebase growth +5% +6% -1% Scale player and outperforming a difficult market 1 Figure calculated as year end December 2005 revenues derived from Note 29 in Travis Perkins PLC annual report 2005, divided by year end October 2004 revenues from Travis Perkins PLC Circular for the acquisition of Wickes as of January 2005. LFL sales for Wickes as disclosed on page 21 of annual report 2005 2 Source: Focus DIY Holdings Limited bondholder document; Numbers include combined Focus companies 3 Source: GfK 56 Large and loyal customer base ` 11 million customers visit Homebase every year ` Over 70 million customer transactions ` Customer base; slightly more upmarket and more likely to be female Homebase has one of the largest loyalty programmes in the UK – Spend & Save Customer base ` Two key customer groups together represent 70% of the spend in home improvement market ` Spend & Save loyalty programme drives value for money and a high degree of loyalty ` Home and Garden Enhancers: more affluent families; female bias. 40% of the market ` 4 million active users ` Account for 42% of sales DIY Enthusiasts: average income: high spenders on home improvement. Male bias. 30% of the market ` Tiered discounts ` Encourages repeat visits ` Targeted marketing to responsive customer base ` DIY Enthusiasts Home and Garden Enhancers Homebase aims to be Number 1 for the Home Enhancer and a credible destination for the DIY enthusiast Source: Verdict, How Britain shops DIY, 2006 57 Strong and differentiated store portfolio ` Large out of town superstores with garden display space and parking – 2nd largest space operator outside of supermarkets ` ` ‘Shop not a shed’ – Effective use of mezzanines – More department store – More female friendly – Easy to shop, easy to find things – Dynamic seasonal areas Product presentation and service differentiates Homebase from other DIY shed operators Strong store portfolio that positions Homebase as a ‘shop not a shed’ 58 Balanced mix and strongly positioned Positioning Sales mix Other 5% Other home enhancement 32% ` DIY and decorating 41% ` ` ` ` Positioning Homebase as the leader in the home enhancement market Enhanced shopping experience Improving the product offer Development of the proposition through mezzanines Leveraging Home Retail Group’s scale and expertise Gardening and outdoor living 22% Year ended 31 March 2006 ‘One stop shop’ for home and garden; substantial overlap with Argos product pool 59 Enhanced shopping experience and improved product offer Continuous measurement of shopping experience Availability Store service Staff engagement Initially Now Aspiration 89% 96% 98% 74% 19% 78% 53% Continually improving product ranges ` Over 100 range reviews completed since acquisition ` Improved process and implementation 80% 55% – Change sourcing – Sharpened EPPs – Establish structure of "Good, Better, Best" – Enhanced product display – Improve own branding and packaging ` New product introduction ` Jointly undertaken with Argos where there is overlap Dramatic improvements in shopping experience and product ranges Source: Availability - company data on all lines availability; store service - ABA Mystery Shopper research; staff engagement - company annual staff survey 60 Development of the proposition through mezzanines ` c.150 mezzanines, or about half the store portfolio ` Differentiates the shopping experience – ‘shop not shed’ ` Kitchen and bathroom displays key mezzanine feature ` Upgrade of furniture offer ` Bathroom accessories and lighting typically moved upstairs ` More space for core DIY and decorative products on the ground floor ` More space for new product ranges ` Sales uplift >15% in total across the store; sustained after first year ` Achieving investment hurdle rate Mezzanines have been a major enabler to positioning the business successfully across the wider home enhancement market 61 Leveraging Home Retail Group’s scale and expertise ` Supplier terms harmonisation ` Supplier reviews ` Leverage extensive product portfolio ` Increased importation of product ` Catalogue production ` Home delivery ` E-commerce ` Roll-out of financial services operation (store card / financial products) ` Transfer of people, cultural approach and best practise ` Enhance property pipeline ` Reduced cost of fixtures and fittings ` Media buying benefits ` Speed to market with new products and offers ` Enhanced ability to recruit senior retailers Leverage on sourcing, expertise, infrastructure, assets and capabilities 62 What do customers think? Improvement in customer feedback scores November 2004 v March 2006 up 40% % improvement in market research score up 35% up 38% up 33% up 26% Prices are good as competition Sell stylish items Rarely run out of stock Easy to shop First store I go to Improved customer perception across key performance measures is reflective of why we have gained market share Source: HPI Research Group; 660 customer telephone interviews carried out each quarter 63 Strategy for growth 1. Opportunity to roll out proven home enhancement formula 2. Expand the store portfolio 3. Take share in key categories 4. – Kitchens – Bathrooms – Furniture Leverage Home Retail Group purchasing scale, shared product pool and infrastructure 64 Core DIY Decorating Gardening Kitchens/bathrooms Furniture Other new product areas Development areas Core areas of strength Homebase home enhancement offer 65 Opportunity to roll out and rollback ` Only part way through transformation process of consistent offer across stores ` Previous product range and mezzanine initiatives support roll out plan ` Trials to test two investment types later this year ` If successful, expect to roll out to 30-50 stores a year to bring consistency across the chain Stores % Space Attributes Latest format 99 35% Full Homebase range Latest fixtures/store environment Original format 82 33% Lacks full range Improved environment Uninvested 116 32% Lacks full range Sub optimal store environment TOTAL 297 100% Successful wider home enhancement proposition that we can deliver nationally 66 Expand store portfolio ` Plan to open around 15 net new stores per annum ` Larger locations where currently no presence ` Smaller (25,000 ft2) stores in smaller markets – Opens up new locations where Homebase can profitably trade ` Identified over 100 new locations Growth and leverage through additional new stores 67 Take share in key categories Market size Homebase CAGR growth 03/04-05/06 Market leader (share) Kitchens £1.9bn c.25-35% c.25% (MFI) Bathrooms £1.2bn c.10-15% Highly fragmented (c.75% trade and specialists) Furniture £8.2bn c.15-25% <10% (Argos) Large markets with headroom to grow in each Source: Verdict; company data 68 Leverage Home Retail Group capability ` Purchasing scale benefits still to be harvested ` Argos product pool offers further new product introduction opportunities over time ` Multi-channel infrastructure supports key targeted growth areas ` Catalogue and e-commerce capability increases speed to market and development ` – Larger catalogue in trial in 100 stores – Transactional web site driving incremental sales Financial services offerings enable more customers to buy high ticket items from Homebase Continue to leverage scale, infrastructure and expertise of Home Retail Group 69 Homebase summary Routes to growth Competitive strengths ` Scale player: 2nd largest home improvement retailer ` Opportunity to roll out proven home enhancement formula ` Balanced mix of products: one stop shop for the home and garden ` Expand the store portfolio ` Take share in key categories ` Leverage Home Retail Group purchasing scale, shared product pool and infrastructure ` Strongly positioned as a leading home enhancement retailer ` Large, loyal customer base ` Strong and differentiated store portfolio ` Home Retail Group scale and capability 70 Supporting data 4. Purchasing scale, expertise and infrastructure Purchasing scale and opportunity Scale and product overlap driving buying benefits Strategic sourcing – potential benefits 5-10% 50 Other General Merchandise 16% Home Enhancement 51% Savings potential % 45 Electricals 33% Argos and Homebase combined sales FY05/06 £5.5bn 10-15% 30-50% eprocurement 40 35 30 5-10% 25 One agent vs multiple 20 10-15% 15 10 5 0 Direct sourcing Cumulative potential Import vs domestic Stage 1 Stage 2 Stage 3 Stage 4 Importing 2005/6 ` Significant move towards importing with substantial further benefits still achievable ` Argos >30% of sales directly imported ` Homebase >20% of sales directly imported ` However <50% of import is direct sourced 71 Expertise Activities, services and processes ` Value Chain – analysis and review ` Continuous improvement ` – Supply base review – Supplier management Product standardisation – Source of supply – Technical specification ` Product specifications ` Quality control ` Packaging ` – Cube optimisation – Cost savings – Improved customer presentation Milestones 2001 Group Asia office opens in HK 2002 Homebase joins Group 2004 Group Asia office opens in Shanghai Group office in Shenzen Offshore warehousing and consolidation 2006 Eastern Europe sourcing team established More off shore warehousing and consolidation Ethical sourcing 72 Infrastructure Indexed growth in imported and directly sourced purchases ` Freight forwarding ` Off-shore warehousing and consolidation ` Off-dock storage ` Import warehouses ` – 600,0002 ft main Argos unit – New warehouse 2007 – Outsourced warehousing and break bulk Expertise leverage across Home Retail Group Indexed on 2001 directly sourced purchases Logistics and distribution 2600 2100 1600 1100 600 100 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 Directly sourced purchases US $m indexed Total imports (FOB) US $m indexed 73 Supporting data 5. Multi-channel infrastructure Home Retail Group’s multi-channel infrastructure and scale underpins profitability and competitive advantage E-commerce ` Scale and expertise from long-established, award winning, innovative and market leading internet operations Customer service ` Shared customer service operation for product orders, delivery enquiries and credit services online and over the phone ` Around 2,000 employees handling over 18 million enquiries a year Home delivery ` Large scale national home delivery operation, 7 million deliveries to customers each year ` Deliver to 1 in 7 UK homes ` Bigger than Next, JLP, M&S, DSGi, Comet ` Significant investment in home delivery infrastructure over the last four years ` Argos Direct unit sales grew by 58% in three years Catalogue production ` Largest print run in the UK; 20 million catalogues – twice a year 74 Home delivery scale and expertise ` Fundamentals to low costs 1. 2. 3. 4. Stem distance – Limit the distance between warehouse and customer – Three major regional distribution centres Vehicle Fill – Maximise the number of items you get on a vehicle – On average 30 customer orders per box Drop density – Shorten the journey between each customer delivery – Less than five miles on average Achieve delivery success – Three delivery slots, telephone ahead – >97% successful deliveries each day – Leveraging home delivery for Homebase, e.g. garden furniture; over 40% cost saving versus third party carrier The scale of operations translates into low costs, a flexible infrastructure and a competitive advantage that is difficult to replicate 75 Catalogue scale and expertise ` 33 years of catalogue production expertise ` 40 million catalogues produced each year ` Drives significant scale benefits ` – Image creation – Paper purchase – Print buying Provides speed to market – Argos ‘Home’ catalogue 2 million copies in 100 stores – Concept to market in four months The scale of operations reinforces competitive advantage through expertise, cost advantage and speed to market 76 Leveraging catalogue and home delivery for Homebase ` ` Furniture Extra trial (July 2004) – 12 stores, 3,000 sq ft displays – Supported by a collection from the Argos furniture range – Leveraging Home Delivery network, contact centres and catalogue products National rollout (completed December 2005) – 135 furniture display stores, remainder catalogue only stores – 5 million 80 page catalogues – Over 700 products ` Positive consumer response; positive sales growth ` New 200 page extended home furnishings catalogue now being trialled in 100 stores The benefits of full multi-channel operations have been leveraged for Homebase 77 Supporting data 6. Financial Services Financial Services operating model In House Commission / Profit Share Partnerships Retail Credit & Warranties Direct Insurances Consumer Lending NEW ` Argos Storecard ` Motor & Home ` Homebase Storecard ` (Lloyds TSB) ` Creditor Insurance ` Warranty Insurance ` Travel & Pet ` (Specialist providers) ` Future development of consumer lending propositions ` Joint venture with Barclaycard for new Argos credit card and Argos/Homebase personal loan products The business operates distinct models to suit the underlying products on offer 78 Financial Services’ scale and ability to support and grow retail sales Credit penetration Storecard loan book (gross) £349m £378m 30% Revolving 3 mth BNPL Credit penetration 25% £252m £155m £105m 6 mth BNPL 9 mth BNPL 20% 15% 10% 5% 0% <£95 £95 - £195 £195 - £295 £295+ Spend 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 Number of active customers >1m Argos Homebase Growth in moving annual total Argos sales, grouped into card penetration bands 180.0% >1m 160.0% 140.0% % Growth since Dec-01 120.0% 458k 100.0% 80.0% 60.0% 40.0% 20.0% 0.0% 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 Jan-02 Apr-02 Jul-02 Oct-02 Jan-03 Apr-03 Jul-03 Oct-03 Jan-04 < 10% Penetration Apr-04 Jul-04 Oct-04 Jan-05 Apr-05 Jul-05 Oct-05 Jan-06 Apr-06 > 10% Penetration Growing loan book and customer base 79 Multi-channel capability In Store & Kiosk Telephone E-Commerce Credit sales £387m £15m £38m Penetration 6.8% 7.7% 12.5% Applications 592k 140k 140k Ability to apply and use storecards across all channels 80 Disclaimer This presentation has been prepared and issued by Home Retail Group plc (the “Company”) solely for your information and for use at the presentation to institutional investors in connection with the proposed admission of the Company’s ordinary shares to the Official List of the Financial Services Authority and to trading on the London Stock Exchange plc's market for listed securities (together, the “Admission”). By attending the meeting where this presentation is made and/or by accepting this document, you agree to be bound by the following limitations. This presentation is an advertisement and not a prospectus and potential investors should not subscribe for or purchase any shares referred to in this presentation except on the basis of information in the prospectus to be published by the Company in due course in connection with the Admission. Copies of the prospectus will, following publication, be available from the Company’s registered office. This presentation does not constitute or form part of any offer or invitation to sell or issue, or any solicitation of any offer to purchase or subscribe for, any ordinary shares in the Company or any other securities, nor shall it or any part of it nor the fact of its distribution form part of or be relied on in connection with any contract or investment decision relating thereto. Any offer, invitation or solicitation shall be made solely by means of the prospectus and recipients of this presentation who are considering a purchase of shares in the Company following distribution of the prospectus in connection therewith are reminded that any such purchase should be made solely on the basis of the information contained in such prospectus and any supplementary prospectus(es). This presentation does not constitute a recommendation regarding the securities of the Company. This document and its contents are confidential and may not be further copied, distributed or passed on, directly or indirectly, to any other person or published or reproduced directly or indirectly, in whole or in part, by any medium or in any form for any purpose. The information contained in this document is being provided to you solely for the purpose of the preparation and publication of a research report in relation to the Company and may not be used for any other purpose. If such research is not published or Admission does not proceed, the information in this presentation and any draft research based upon such information must be kept confidential and not used for any other purpose. Neither this document nor any part or copy of it may be taken or transmitted into or distributed in or into, directly or indirectly, the United States, its territories or possessions, Australia, Canada or Japan. Any failure to comply with these restrictions may constitute a violation of US, Australian, Canadian or Japanese securities laws, respectively. The distribution of this document in other jurisdictions may also be restricted by law, and persons into whose possession this document comes should inform themselves about, and observe, any such restrictions. This document is not an offer of securities for sale in the United States or elsewhere. The Company's ordinary shares have not been and will not be registered under the United States Securities Act of 1933 (the “Securities Act”) and may not be offered or sold in the United States unless they are registered under the Securities Act or pursuant to an exemption from, or in a transaction not subject to, the registration requirements of the Securities Act. No public offer of the securities referred to herein is being made in the United States. The Company's ordinary shares have not been and will be not registered under the applicable laws of any state or jurisdiction of Australia, Canada or Japan and, subject to certain exceptions, may not be offered or sold within Australia, Canada or Japan or to or for the benefit of any national, resident or citizen of Australia, Canada or Japan. This document is intended for distribution in member states of the European Economic Area to persons who are “qualified investors” within the meaning of Article 2(1)(e) of the Prospectus Directive (Directive 2003/71/EC) (“Qualified Investors”). This document must not be acted or relied upon in any member state of the European Economic Area by persons who are not Qualified Investors. Any investment or investment activity to which this communication relates is available in any member state of the European Economic Area only to, and will be engaged in only with, Qualified Investors. This document is intended for distribution in the United Kingdom only to: (i) persons who have professional experience in matters relating to investments falling within Article 19(5) of the Financial Services and Markets Act 2000 (Financial Promotion) Order 2005 (the "Order"); or (ii) persons falling within Article 49(2)(a) to (d) of the Order or to those persons to whom it can otherwise lawfully be distributed (all such persons together being referred to as "relevant persons"). This document must not be acted upon by persons who are not relevant persons. Any investment or investment activity to which this communication relates is available only to relevant persons and will be engaged in only with relevant persons. The information in this presentation is given in confidence and the recipients of this presentation should not base any behaviour, in relation to qualifying investments or relevant products (as defined in the Financial Services and Markets Act 2000 (“FSMA”)) and the Code of Market Conduct (made pursuant to FSMA), which would amount to either market abuse for the purposes of FSMA, or insider dealing for the purposes of the Criminal Justice Act 1993 on the information in this presentation until after the information has been made generally available. Nor should the recipient use the information in this presentation in any way which would constitute “market abuse” or “insider dealing”. UBS Limited and Merrill Lynch International (together the “Joint Sponsors”) and their respective affiliates are each acting exclusively for the Company and GUS plc (“GUS”) and for no one else in connection with Admission and will not be responsible to any other person for providing the protections afforded to their respective clients, or for providing advice in relation to Admission or any other transaction or arrangement referred to in this presentation. This presentation has been prepared by, and is the sole responsibility of, the Company. Some of the information in this presentation is still in draft form and has not been legally verified by the Company, GUS, their advisers, the Joint Sponsors or any other person and may be subject to updating, completion, revision and amendment and such information may change materially. It will only be finalised at the time of Admission. This presentation speaks at the date hereof. No representation or warranty, express or implied, is or will be made by or on behalf of the Company, GUS, their advisers, the Joint Sponsors or any of their respective directors, officers or employees, or any other person as to the accuracy, completeness or fairness of the information or opinions contained in this presentation and any reliance you place on them will be at your sole risk. In particular the market data has been obtained by the Company and GUS from third party sources. Neither the Company nor GUS has independently verified such data and whilst the Company and GUS have compiled and extracted the market data, they can provide no assurances of the accuracy and completeness of such information and take no responsibility for such data. Neither the Company nor GUS is under any obligation to update or keep current the information contained in this presentation or to correct any inaccuracies which may become apparent, and any opinions expressed in it are subject to change without notice. None of the Company, GUS, their advisers, the Joint Sponsors or any of their respective members, directors, officers or employees nor any other person accepts any liability whatsoever for any loss howsoever arising from any use of this presentation or its contents or otherwise arising in connection therewith. Statements, beliefs and opinions contained in this presentation, including those related to Admission, particularly those regarding the possible or assumed future or other performance of the Company or the Group, industry growth or other trend projections, are or may be forward looking statements, beliefs or opinions and reflect the Company’s or, as appropriate, the Company’s directors’ current expectations and projections about future events and are subject to risks and uncertainties that may cause actual results to differ materially. By their nature, forward-looking statements involve a number of risks, uncertainties and assumptions that could cause actual results or events to differ materially from those expressed or implied by the forward-looking statements, beliefs, or opinions. These risks, uncertainties and assumptions could adversely affect the outcome and financial effects of the plans and events described herein. These risks and uncertainties include, among other factors, changing business or other market conditions and the prospects for growth anticipated by the management of the Company. These and other factors could adversely affect the outcome and financial effects of the plans and events described herein. As a result, there can be no assurance that projected results or developments will be attained and you are cautioned not to place undue reliance on such forward-looking statements. Forward-looking statements contained in this document regarding past trends or activities should not be taken as a representation that such trends or activities will continue in the future. The Company, its advisers, the Joint Sponsors and each of their respective directors, officers and employees disclaim any obligation to update the Company's view of such risks and uncertainties or to publicly announce the result of any revision to the forward-looking statements made herein, except where it would be required to do so under applicable law. By attending the presentation to which this document relates and/or by accepting this document you will be taken to have represented, warranted and undertaken that: (i) you have read and agree to comply with the contents of this notice, including, without limitation, the obligation to keep this presentation and its contents confidential, and (ii) you will not at any time have any discussion, correspondence or contact concerning the information in this presentation or Admission with any of the directors or employees of the Company or GUS or their respective subsidiaries nor with any of their suppliers, customers, sub-contractors or any governmental or regulatory body without the prior written consent of the Company. Disclaimer ` The information, and any opinion contained in this document does not constitute a public offer under any applicable legislation or an offer to sell or a solicitation or an offer to buy any securities or financial instruments or any advice or recommendation with respect to such securities or other financial instruments. The information contained in this document is subject to, and must be read in conjunction with, all other publicly available information, including, where relevant, any fuller disclosure document published by Home Retail Group plc. Any person at any time acquiring the securities must do so only on the basis of such person's own judgement as to the merits of the suitability of the securities for its purposes and only on such information as is contained in public information having taken all such professional or other advice as it considers necessary or appropriate in the circumstances and not in reliance on the information contained herein. The information contained in this document is not tailored for any particular investor and does not constitute individual investment advice. ` Any information in this document of the price at which investments have been bought or sold in the past or the yield on investments cannot be relied upon as a guide to future performance. ` This document is being distributed by Home Retail Group plc only to, and is directed only at (a) persons who have professional experience in matters relating to investments who fall within Article 19(1) of the Financial Services and Markets Act 2000 (Financial Promotion) Order 2005 and (b) persons to whom it may otherwise lawfully be communicated (together "relevant persons"). Any investment or investment activity to which this document relates is available only to and will be engaged in only with, relevant persons. Any person who is not a relevant person should not act or rely on this document or any of its contents.
Similar documents
slides (PDF 3.7 MB)
Our fully integrated multi-channel operation consistently delivers a good customer
More information