KEY POINTS
- Super Retail Group (ASX: SUL) wants to grow from about 790 stores to more than 900 by 2031, mostly in regional towns, across Supercheap Auto, Rebel, BCF and Macpac.
- An overhaul called “Ignite” aims to cut yearly costs by around A$75 million by FY29, though it carries about A$30 million a year in project costs over the first three years.
- Analysts see Ignite as medium-term margin support rather than a quick earnings boost, so the payoff is a few years out.
- In our view, it is an income-and-patience story: the dividend appeals, but wait for sales to pick up first.
Super Retail Group (ASX: SUL), the owner of Supercheap Auto, Rebel, BCF and Macpac, used its 11 June investor day to lay out a bold plan: grow its store network from around 790 to more than 900 by 2031, chasing a market it values at roughly A$65 billion. The ambition is clear; the timing is the puzzle. The bet arrives just as shoppers tighten their belts and the shares sit near 52-week lows, down about 16% over the past year.
Super Retail Bets Big on Regional Expansion
Most new stores will open in regional towns that the brands do not yet fully serve, going where competition is thinner.
Funding the push is “Ignite”, a program to modernise the business so it runs more cheaply. It sits inside the normal A$150 million yearly capex budget rather than adding debt and targets savings of around A$75 million a year by 2029. The near-term catch: Ignite will cost about A$30 million a year to run over the next three years before those savings arrive.
Our take: the logic is sound, but expanding stores looks more like a sensible retail playbook than a real edge. SUL’s stronger weapon is data: 13 million active club members drive about 85% of sales, a loyalty cushion most rivals lack. Execution will decide.
The Catch: Sales Slow Just as SUL Spends to Grow
Sales are still growing, with record half-year revenue of about A$2.2 billion, but profit is under pressure. The company has been guided to lower earnings, mainly because Rebel has been discounting heavily to shift stock and because a new warehouse and a new payroll system are adding temporary costs.
The bigger worry is the backdrop. With cost-of-living and interest-rate pressure squeezing budgets, people are spending more carefully on non-essentials. Expanding hard into a slowdown is the real risk: new stores only pay off if customers walk in.
The Investor’s Takeaway for Super Retail
So is Super Retail a buy? The bull case is decent: the shares are cheap near 52-week lows, the balance sheet carries no debt, and the runway is long. It pays two fully franked dividends a year, which income investors like.
The bear case is just as real: the consumer is weak, expansion adds risk, and the 2031 goals are years away. In our view, this is an income-and-patience play, not a momentum buy: cautious investors might take the dividend and wait, while others may want to see sales turn higher first.
The bottom line: the plan gives Super Retail direction, but the shares likely re-rate only once sales growth picks up again. The next year of sales is the real test.
