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Bata India Limited (BATAINDIA) Q1 2026 Earnings Call Transcript

Bata India Limited (NSE: BATAINDIA) Q1 2026 Earnings Call dated Aug. 14, 2025

Corporate Participants:

Unidentified Speaker

Nitin BagariaCompany Secretary and Assistant Vice President

Amit AggarwalDirector Finance and Chief Financial Officer

Nitin BagariaCompany Secretary and Assistant Vice President

Gunjan ShahManaging Director and Chief Executive Officer

Analysts:

Unidentified Participant

Gaurav JoganiAnalyst

Sameer GuptaAnalyst

Sandip SabharwalAnalyst

Tanuj P.Analyst

AvinashAnalyst

Nirav SavaiAnalyst

Rajiv BharatiAnalyst

Prerna JhunjhunwalaAnalyst

Presentation:

operator

Ladies and gentlemen, good day and welcome to the Bata India Limited Q1FY26 earnings conference call. As a reminder, all participant lines will be in the listen only mode and there will be an opportunity for you to ask questions after the presentation concludes. Should you need assistance during the conference call, please signal an operator by pressing Star then zero on your touchstone phone. Please note that this conference is being recorded. I now hand the conference over to Mr. Gaurav Jogani from GM Financials. Thank you. And over to you sir.

Gaurav JoganiAnalyst

Hello everyone. On behalf of JM Financial, it’s my. Pleasure to welcome you all to Bata’s. Q1FY26 earnings conference call. Today we have with us Mr. Gunjan Shah, Managing Director and Chief Executive Officer, Mr. Amit Agarwal, CFO and Mr. Nitin Bagadia, AVP and Company Secretary. Thank you. And over to you Nitin.

Nitin BagariaCompany Secretary and Assistant Vice President

Thank you. And over to you Nitin. To all of you, we have Gunjan Shah MD and CEO. We also have Amit Agarwal, Director of Finance and CFO joining us. We have shared the presentation with the stock exchanges earlier today. We will be taking you through the same. We will navigate the slides as well as the page numbers. On page number two we have the disclaimer. I’m sure you have gone through the same. I’ll now request Gundian to take over and thank you once again for joining.

Gunjan ShahManaging Director and Chief Executive Officer

Hi everyone. Pleasure to be back on this call for this quarter.

While overarching, the quarter was a relatively tough one. It seemed a little better than what we had seen in the previous quarter of 10 to March, but still it resulted in only flattish kind of a growth. While we managed to have the operational efficiencies reasonably working for us. And it just goes on to show that the backbone of the PNL is strong enough and hopefully once we start seeing growth led by the initiatives that we have talked about and hopefully pushing ahead, we should see this translating to much better profit growth. Also moving forward, I will try and keep consistency with what I have shared with you.

On slide number three, I’m going to talk about three large initiatives. I’ve talked about them in the past and I will give you progress updates on all three of them going forward. Also, and some of them I will hint towards the kind of plans that we have for the balance of the year in the next few quarters. So store growth, same store, store growth portfolio, evolution from a product portfolio and inventory agility. These are three things moving forward. Slide number five. Talking about slide number four. Sorry, talking about store growth There were two large initiatives, the ZBM project zero based merchandising that we are now scaling up pretty large and the Value Proposition project for driving sales to store growth in zero based merchandising for enhancing customer experience.

The key metrics are now we are at close to 200 stores end June 2025 plus 50 stores in the quarter gone by. So the pace is picking up. We would like to have it much larger provided we are able to make sure that the inputs that go into making a successful transition to a ZBN and the kind of output metrics that you see on the chart on the right side, they fall into place. We hope to maintain this progress of about 50 stores a quarter and if things work out well then maybe a little more accelerated line reduction and hopefully.

Now these are all Pareto stores so they should be a larger contribution to the overall store network. From a turnover perspective these stores have seen a line reduction of 33%. That’s reduced the clutter piece. They have also seen an inventory reduction of almost 22%. So significant return on invested capital for these stores and are much better from an availability perspective or size sets etc. For the lines that we have kept there at almost 450 basis points, what does that result in is a much better consumer experience. The NPS scores are better, the Google ratings are better.

Of these stores, the unit per transaction is much better. The turnover is better in terms of same store growth versus control stores as well as the volume pairings throughput is much better. So we are able to display our merchandise, display our proposition to consumers much better and the stores are run more efficiently from a store manager perspective which I have talked about for now the last two three quarters. We hope to continue this projection going forward and maybe even consolidate even better. The second big initiative slide number six is on driving value proposition. We do sense stress even now in the mass segment, the middle and mass segment and there have been concerted efforts.

They are gaining significant momentum. Now we see some signs of success on it. Some of the examples I put here bata ladies, a very large volume contributor as well as value contributor to the stores turnover. We have introduced key price points both in open and closed and there is significant success in terms of checkout rates. They have also improved as far as checkout rates go. As you can see some of the data points. I’ll just take you one of them and then we can extrapolate for the rest. Opening price points of 399 and 499 were introduced at scale across almost 800 doors.

Those price points resulted in checkouts going from 3.5 to 8%. The meaning of checkout and the better reference would be the average checkout or the full portfolio of our network is about 4% roughly that’s basically equivalent to 2 turn. So anything about 4 is better than average portfolio showed a checkout of 8% and at a large volume base of almost 15,000 pairs per month per week. And which is also significant from an overall growth perspective. So we now plan to expand this to almost a full network which is close to 1200 stores. A similar data point for 799,999 checkouts moving up to 6.4 price points clearly demarcated and then the network getting expanded and obviously then backed up with now communication to consumers outside the store.

In terms of the value proposition, depending on what’s the proposition in the stores. One example has been shown similarly is on the power side and the price points of 16991999 first time introduced at scale. Some initial signs of success are a checkout of 6.6. We would like to now expand this across the network and with additional lines also. So four more lines coming through in addition to the seven lines. So there should be a significant portfolio that we built there. So these are just a couple of examples. There are many more that are being worked upon under value proposition and hopefully allowing us to have a little more optimism going forward.

On the portfolio evolution. 3 large levers casualization driven by floats power driving the athleisure portfolio and hush puppies on the premium side. On floats slide number eight significant progress momentum continues 30% plus kind of growth. It is significantly indexed from a price point perspective. It is 1.2x of the average ASP of the store. So it adds on to the ASP of a store while driving significant volumes. We build the quarter that went by as you can see on the wrong on the right side did see a significant addition of new portfolio. What we have been very conscious of is that as the new one comes in there is the existing one which is now faded out also.

So standardized merch packs have been done for various clusters of stores of Alpha beta gamma. And as you can see some of these are collabs with Disney properties. Some of them are technology introductions and some of them are just pure design and color introductions. But to great response and obviously the checkouts are showing up out there. We also launched in this quarter some of our largest campaign for the quarter was around clothes. Comfort never looks so good along with A mega influencer. Great response. Also the second being second piece on slide number nine on Power portfolio investment.

These are on the premium side. Price points of 2,500 to almost 4,000 plus these again saw significant traction. Checkouts mind you at this level are relatively lower at these price points. Even there if you’re getting four and a half, it’s extremely good because it results in significant turnover and there we plan to obviously extend this whole power EV Slide connection to the full network now and with a significant widening of the range. And we are now wanting to also insert this property of EV slide in some other product categories of ours that I will talk to you as we go by in the subsequent quarters.

Power Stamina on the premium side for running shoes. Good response at 4,000 plus checkout of 4% at 9 at 6 lines. So that continues to invest on democratizing technology. The last but not the least on driving premiumization. Hush Puppies continues to expand. We are now close to 150ebos. As you can see in the graph. Both Coco as well as franchise combined. We will want to see a reasonable split of almost let’s say about 6040 in terms of expansion going forward forward of Coco as well as franchise in this and this was backed with obviously a large campaign that we continued on the east please along with vividas, the brand ambassador for Office sneakers to great response.

That was the first major departure that we have done from the core categories of Hushpuppies of formal dress shoes as well as informal dress shoes which are mocassins as well as loafers. That’s the centerpiece of Ashpubi sales. Office sneakers has been a significant addition to that portfolio. In addition, as you can see in slide 11, we have been also investing significantly on driving a refresh of the entire Hushpuppies brand. The new concept as you can see in before after much more brighter it does have a very premium codes. The category is displayed in a far more focused manner as well as the fixtures are reduced to make it easy for consumers to navigate and give them better comfort and accessibility.

So 36 of those stores that I showed you have been already converted and that progress will continue to keep investing on this channel for that consumer segment. Moving to slide number 12. Inventory agility is very critical. I think this is some area that belatedly we have gotten to the task. Now we are on it for almost about 3/4 and the progress is there in the subsequent 2,3 charts. Slide number 13 the lines overall while I showed you for the ZBM stores dropped by 33% overall for the full network has dropped by 25%. And the clutter at the stores also including aged lines has also dropped by almost 23%.

The top articles availability has also gone up by 7%. But however this area we still have significant headroom to progress and there is a concerted project called customer first which is in this complete zone of end to end. How do we improve this entire agility? Total inventory moving to slide number 14. Total inventory has dropped year on year significantly. I’ve showed this last quarter also this quarter also it’s dropped by 16%. And despite the fact that we are building up inventory sequentially for the season, upcoming season and year on year, it’s still almost at the lowest level that we have ended June at for several years now.

Despite that our stock turns are better and our age and inventory has been significantly reduced to less than half which should also, you know, which should also portend well in terms of full price sales going forward into the season. Customer first project is on track. As I mentioned, it’s a large scale project which is dedicated for end to end improvement in terms of how do we not only forecast for inventory but also the lead times as well as the way we store inventories upstream versus downstream. And the best in class benchmark that we have is that the stock turn improvement that you see to 2.1 which is on a trailing twelve month basis, it’s not an easy metric to move.

We want to see it in the next about 12 months to move to almost 2.5 plus moving to slide number 15. Other highlights 644 franchise stores. Expansion on franchise store continues. We were a little less than required in 20 stores. Largely the first half of the quarter was disturbed because of the geopolitical situation of IndoPark etc. And that disrupted the momentum. But then onwards it has picked up and we are hopeful of maintaining the momentum of about 30 to 40 stores a quarter. NPs keeps on moving ahead. We have now introduced a significantly more stringent metric which is on Google Ratings which is visibly outside to consumers as well as externally validated and that’s at about 4.6.

KROs are now from a multi brand outlet. We have now significantly invested on Kros and that’s at about 1500 for 300 more than last year. And we’ve been awarded a few awards, best workplace culture, et cetera. We also launched three large campaigns. I talked about the floats one, I talked about HP for Bata. We had launched under the make your way platform, the Tropical Police Collection which was under the comfort police moving to financials. So therefore this is a summary financials. The growth was flat at minus 0.3 and 942 crores. Gross margin however took a slight toll at minus 133 basis points.

The EBITDA margin was at about 22.9 and the PAT landed up at about 5.5% before exceptional by 112 basis points. There were two exceptional items as I mentioned below in the fine print. One was a VRs cost that we incurred towards a partial relieving of some workers in one of our factories in line with our longer term plan of trying to get an efficiency on fixed costs. And the second one was in the base year of last year where we had got an exceptional item of realization of Faridabad 9 at 134 crores. That brings me to the end.

There are a few slides in the appendix which you can go through.

Nitin BagariaCompany Secretary and Assistant Vice President

Thank you. Yes, we can now move to Q and A. Moderator please.

Questions and Answers:

operator

Thank you very much, sir. We will now begin the question and answer session. Anyone who wishes to ask a question may press star and one on their touch. Don’t telephone. If you wish to remove yourself from the question queue you may press star and two participants are requested to use handsets while asking a question. Ladies and gentlemen, we will wait for a moment while the question queue assembles. We have our first question from the line of Gaurav Jogani from JM Financials. Please go ahead.

Gaurav Jogani

Hi Gunath. My first question is with regards to the gross margin. We are seeing improvement in the contribution from the premium part of the portfolio. We are also seeing the quality of the merchandise etc improving. However, still we see that you know, the gross margins have declined. So if you can highlight, you know what has really led to this.

Gunjan Shah

Okay. Hi Gaurav. Thank you. No, your observation is right. Partially the reason that has been there especially in the last couple of quarters would be on the lines of clearance of some of the inventory not only aged but also what we call as basically discontinued. And that’s a process that we are now putting in much more stringency as part of what I have talked about as customer first. But effectively answering your question, I think a large part of is done now. We are in a situation wherein we actually don’t carry as much aged inventory or discontinued from that front and especially compared to last year.

So now we should be able to basically realize a lot of that benefit from a gross margin perspective. However, there is some part of it which we will realize. Some part of it will get redeployed. Where we are doing the value proposition initiatives, some of the categories.

Gaurav Jogani

Okay, sure. And my second question, you know is with regards to the multiple steps that you have been taking even, I mean is that the zero based merchandising, the portfolio revamp, even on the tech front when you’re doing multiple initiatives, however, somehow the revenue growth has been hard to come by. If you can dissect, you know that what it is that despite a very low base, we are not able to take the revenue growth to even mid single digit. So what apart from the slow macro consumption would help you to drive it to double digits.

Gunjan Shah

Okay, if I have understood your question right, it’s basically in terms of what is it that is causing the roadblock to revenue growth, right? In whatever in various segments or any commentary on that front. It is. I mean while we leave aside the environment, Gaurav, the piece that is I think in our view is going to be at the lower price points. And that’s where basically the level revenue growth is most critical to come through from. And that’s the piece that we are focused significantly on. While this quarter we did see a significant, you know, how do you say sluggishness on the mbo that is the distribution business front, we did see encouraging signs from a store’s perspective on the lower price point.

And we are hopeful that the initiatives that I talked about will only gather momentum as we go forward. So the lower price point, less than 1,000 is where the stress is and that’s where we want to basically keep accelerating ourselves while we push the premium part separately that I’ve talked about.

Gaurav Jogani

Sure. Thank you. That’s all from you.

operator

Thank you. A reminder to all participants, if you wish to ask any questions you may press star and 1. The next question is from the line of Sameer Gupta from India Infoline. Please go ahead.

Sameer Gupta

Hi Gunjan and thanks for taking my question. First question is on the margin front. Now in the peak Barta, if I just look at a pre index basis including the rental as part of other expenses, Bata made a 16% EBITDA margin few years back and last year is finished at around 11%. There is some benefit of that royalty accounting here. Now the company is hinting it’s focusing more on the value part and that might be margin dilutive for some of the years Internally as an organization. Is there a guardrail in terms of margin that this is the bottom and we will not allow the margin to go down from here? Is there a thought process around that?

Gunjan Shah

Okay, Sameer, so a couple of things, right? While you’re talking on the. I’m assuming what you’re talking is at an EBITDA level, right? But there are, I mean in a very simple way there are three large pieces towards this margin, right? One is obviously gross margin. The second one is, you know, let’s say store related fixed costs, right. Which leverage coming from a same store growth. And the third one is corporate fixed costs, right? Including manufacturing as well as corporate overheads. Are you with me till now?

Sameer Gupta

Yes.

Gunjan Shah

Yeah. Okay, so now I’ll try and give you some commentary on it.

While we don’t get forward looking guidance on margins but the way we are approaching for it and let’s see whether it addresses your question, right? One is in terms of bras margin, I gave a commentary just prior to this question that was asked and therefore we are very hopeful that that should come through. We will redeploy some part of it of the screener, inventory, etc. Towards price point value. But I don’t think that dilutes margins too much and especially once we start driving scale because that gives us economic scale from a cost of product perspective.

So that’s on the gross margin piece. On the piece which is to do with the leverage on same store growth which is anyway super critical. And that comes through, I think our cost structures have been reasonably tightly run and once we are able to. And that’s why if you saw my presentation, the focus is on sales store growth, right. We should be able to get that realized and transferred from a leverage perspective from an ebitda. The last piece is on corporate. There we have done obviously a significant amount of work both in terms of in house manufacturing over the last two, three years as well as from a productivity perspective of corporate staff and which I am very hopeful we should be able to see the realization as we see the top line improve.

Sameer Gupta

Okay, let me put it in another way. See I understand that the efforts are towards driving same store sales growth and that in turn will drive leverage. But those are not entirely in our hands as if it would have been, we would have had a good history of SSS growth in the past few years also. So my question is that then there is a level after which if margins drop the business doesn’t make a very good return on investment. It will be sub 10% beyond a point. So do we have a thought process in the organization that okay, now it’s time to do more cost cutting or we need to get more optimum levels of efficiencies Something on those lines.

I’m asking.

Gunjan Shah

Yeah, that’s what I meant by the third piece because the second and third piece is where you can leverage your fixed cost. So obviously I think while on one end is leverage coming from top line, otherwise you can make sure that you tighten up your fixed cost as much. As you can see, the manpower line has been much tighter even for the last couple of quarters and that’s what we will see going forward. Amit, you want to add in some more?

Amit Aggarwal

Yeah, and thanks for that opportunity. If you look at in terms of beyond gross margin, so there is a gross margin erosion of about 130 pips as a percentage of sale versus last year same quarter. The all the other cost item, if you add up, there is a benefit of losing close to about 45 to 50 bips which has emerged now. This is emanating from all the structural initiatives on fixed cost which Gunjan talked about. So we are very aware in terms of top line challenges because of various factors which Gunjan also captured. Therefore we are very tightly running the ship in terms of all the structural costs they have.

They are continued to be hard loop and wherever we are finding access, we are ruthlessly cutting it out so that endeavor continues.

Sameer Gupta

Got it. This is very helpful. Second question is that if I just look at the channel, the feedback suggests that BATA stores are significantly understaffed which technically leads to lower conversion. And this is despite the flexi manpower initiatives. And now I’m sure this is a feedback you would have also received over the course of several calls. Any initiatives you are doing to tackle this. I know I asked the first question on margins but great to get your thoughts here.

Gunjan Shah

Yeah. So it will be great Sameer, if you are able to pass on that feedback because we do our checks on this front and it is actually a very. It is a template that is run centrally as well as empowered into the regions which then gives a store the right to manpower and obviously correlated to their conversion metrics and stuff on that front. And I think broadly, while it is fine, there will be pockets where fluctuations do happen for whatever reasons. The system can be far more agile in terms of reacting to it, but should work in that manner.

So if there are specific gaps, more than happy to tackle them. Does that answer your question?

operator

Sameer, are you there? Sameer?

Gunjan Shah

I think we’ve lost him.

operator

We’ll move on to the next question, sir, but before we do that, a reminder to all participants if you wish to ask any questions, you may press star and 1. Anyone who wishes to ask A question may press star and one on their touchstone telephone. The next question is from the line of Sandisk. Sandeep Sabarwal from Ask Sandeep Savarwal. Please go ahead.

Sandip Sabharwal

Hi. I’ve been attending your calls for the last many quarters and each call the outlook seems to be very bullish when you present itself. But when we come to the end of the quarter, the top line virtually is stagnating and the brand Bata also doesn’t resonate so well with the young generation of today. And secondly, there are a lot of D2C brands which have come up which are doing reasonably well. So what is aiding the company that despite so many initiatives there’s virtually no growth?

Gunjan Shah

Okay, Sandeep, so two, three things, right? Obviously we also would like to see much better top line, I think on a couple of fronts that we, I mean that I would like to respond on a slightly more macro level. One is that I think the consumers, especially in our target consumers, which is the middle class, broadly the belly of the population, have obviously seen a certain pinch that is there in terms of the inflation that they’ve gone through. Now making sure that they see value for money in our products, which we were known for, is something that we want to make sure that the consultants strengthen ourselves and more importantly also make sure that these are presented to consumers in the right way.

And which is why this whole piece of zbm, et cetera is being worked upon. Now that’s one big piece. The second piece that’s there is that the online piece. You’re absolutely right. There is a significant amount of traction that is there online, obviously a far stronger traction that was there, let’s say, you know, the immediate period post Covid etc. But there is a shift that is structurally there in terms of consumers having moved online and a lot of the D2C brands are from there. Now we have reinforced basically on two fronts. Obviously our E commerce business is our fastest growing business for some time.

The dot com business is obviously now getting significant investment. We have just launched our app, let’s say about 10 days back. There is already about 10,000 downloads that have already happened. So there is going to be significant impetus that we will continue to keep plugging there. However, the conscious piece is that we want to make sure that this is consistently a profit accretive kind of a channel and we don’t want to land up buying up sale which is not going to sustain down the line. The last piece that’s there is on product design itself and we are now working not only in India but also globally in terms of getting our significant amount of effort going behind product design and which means the technology as well as making sure the trends in the materials are rightly captured.

Now one right example of this is let’s say for example the floats. Now very clearly it’s at least the average consumer profile of floats is almost about 10 years, 8 to 10 years younger. Right. It is a product line that has been started only about three and a half years back and it’s already hitting a run rate of about 200 crores annualized. So there is where you put this together. It does work out. So that’s where the endeavor is. Sandeep. But yes, I agree with you. We can do much better top line.

Sandip Sabharwal

Thank you and thanks for your detailed answer. The only point being like as all of us know, footwear is sort of essential. Like you can’t do without it. So how much you can capture out of the market, that’s the whole question. So and once the brand loses mind share then taking it back becomes difficult. So wishing you the best and let’s hope things will be better going forward.

Gunjan Shah

Thank you.

operator

Thank you. A reminder to all participants, if you wish to ask any questions you may press Star and one. Anyone who wishes to ask a question may press star and one. Now the next question is from the line of Tanuj from JM Financials. Please go ahead.

Tanuj P.

Hi sir, two questions from my side. First one will be so we have. Slowed down our pace of implementing the zero based merchandising like as much I remember you guided to implement this in. 300 stores by end of this Q1. But we are now to 194 stores. So any kind of hindrance which we are facing that you want to highlight.

Gunjan Shah

Okay, and what’s your next question?

Tanuj P.

Next question will be on margin sir. As our franchise mix in E commerce penetration is increasing. So how is this going to impact both the gross and EBITDA margins? How much dilutive?

Gunjan Shah

No, at an EBITDA level it is not dilutive. At a gross margin it can play a little mix because of the way the business model is structured for it. And I have mentioned this in the past also. In fact our franchise business actually is exceptionally accretive from an EBITDA business. So I hope that addresses that it should be net accretive from a profitability perspective as they grow the ZBM piece. In a way you’re right. I would have expected this to accelerate much better because all performance metrics from a consumer experience from a throughput productivity of the stores, revenue per square foot as well as from, as I said, roic, they are all better.

The piece, however, that is making sure that we are a little more consolidated. The way we go about it has been when the stores are made so lean that you have to have the complete system running really smoothly to service those stores. Now, ideally, once we do that, we want to make sure that we sustain it and we don’t want to have a hiccup. Now we’ve had a situation where the team went a little too eagerly and we actually had to take a toll on turnover for a couple of weeks. And which is why now we want to make sure that we don’t have these blackout periods in between because they can be very damaging to the store’s performance.

And that’s the reason why it’s getting a little modulated. As I mentioned in my presentation, while we see our comfortable with the 50 stores getting transformed into this network progressively every quarter, hopefully, I think with the various other initiatives falling in place, we should be able to accelerate it to about 65, 70.

Tanuj P.

Okay, sure, sir.

Gunjan Shah

Thank you.

operator

Thank you. A reminder to all participants, if you wish to ask any questions, you may press star and 1. The next question is from the line of Avinash from Modi Laloswal financial Services. Please go ahead.

Avinash

Good evening, sir. So my question is relating to the sneakers. So at one point we have introduced something like a sneaker studio. There was a lot of focus on there. So what happened to that? I mean, for the last few quarters, we’re not seeing any kind of growth there. So what exactly is happening there?

Gunjan Shah

Okay, Avinash. So sneaker studio continues. I think we are now, at last count, close to almost about 800 stores out of the network with a SNKR studio. Now, the endeavor at that point in time, just to give you a context, was to make sure that the sneaker proposition from within the store is brought out, and which is why we put up the panel and therefore the sneakers studio concept was brought in.

Now, the point is that now we see that we need to take this to the next level and which is why the initiative is now under portfolio that we are displaying under sneaker studio, and which is what now I’ve been focusing a lot more and that’s what the organization is working on also. But that doesn’t mean that the sneaker studio initiative is stopped. That still continues. And any store that undergoes a renovation or a new store opening does have a distinct sneaker studio concept. But the driver is now going to be portfolio going forward for the next level of growth that we need from this category.

And that’s why I focused on what I talked about both from a power perspective as well as value proposition.

Avinash

Okay, okay, go on Data. I mean I just, I don’t need an exact number but what would be the ASP of the speakers that we are doing? What’s the kind of growth rate in the last to a couple of quarters that we are seeing in this category? Because they account for like a substantial 20% of the top line rate if I’m not wrong.

Gunjan Shah

Sorry, can you just repeat the last point?

Avinash

I mean sneakers account for like 20% of the top line last time and we spoke out.

Gunjan Shah

Yeah, yeah, yeah, right. So it’s about, it’s about a 20% contribution to top line of the stores is an ASP which is about 1.2x of our store ASP overall sneakers power is much higher.

We do sell sneakers under Bata also and we do sell sneakers under North Star.

Avinash

Any view on the like how the growth being there in the last couple of quarters because obvious everything was done with and other players are reporting like their inventory position are getting better in the sneaker portfolio.

Gunjan Shah

Can you just repeat that?

Avinash

No, what I’m trying to say is not dramatically different, but

Gunjan Shah

It’s been slightly better than the overall growth rate over the last say about last six months or so.

Avinash

No, that’s it. Thank you.

operator

Thank you. The next question is from the line of Nirav Savai from Abacus Investment managers. Please go ahead.

Nirav Savai

Hi, my question is on the COCO format now it’s been more than two years. Expansion is extremely, you know, very slow and I understand there has been a lot of store closures. So how do we see this year as far as Cocoa format expansion is concerned and what kind of store closures are we looking at?

Gunjan Shah

Right. So I mean it’s a continuous process neerav that happens in the retail world and obviously modulating based on basically same store growth in the environment that we see then the net additions are an outcome of that in a way. But we still go on doing about roughly in my view about 70 to 80 gross additions that happen every year in Cocoa Gross right now depending on some of the consolidation initiatives that we are on. Let’s say for example in the Last, about last 2, 3/4 there has been an accelerated effort towards that that will result in the net numbers that we are talking about.

But we have still been largely, I would say flattish, maybe a few stores addition year on year and that should only Accelerate as we see the environment improving hopefully. There has been obviously a lot of expansion that has happened through the franchise format, especially in the smaller towns where obviously the benefit comes through in terms of new town additions which are obviously grabbing new consumers simultaneously. A lot of effort has been towards not only zero based merchandising expansion but also towards bettered 2.0 which is renovating the stores and that reaches at about I think about 60% of the network now.

Nirav Savai

Basically at net level we should look at minimal 10, 15 kind of stored e xpansion.

Gunjan Shah

As of now in the short term. Yeah.

Nirav Savai

And understand the stores which we are shutting down are not very profitable stores or maybe some of them might be loss making stores. So what can be the incremental addition in margins which we can look at post closure of the stores because we have been doing this exercise for more than three years.

Gunjan Shah

Right. So normally a store we don’t allow it to be significantly negative. So as long as, as soon as it turns marginally negative from a four wall margin basis it gets into a scanner and then I think in another about three to four months is where then the decision is precipitated in case all other levers have been basically fructified. So that’s where the, the benefit alive. But I like, I like Amit answer in case of. He’s got a better number to answer you on this.

Amit Aggarwal

So typically the closures, what we have done, they should help us increase our operating costs or facilitate reduction of the operating cost because the stores were loss making. Right. So typically we see on an average is about, about let the 40 to 50 basis point improvement coming in the overall operating margin from the store closure.

Nirav Savai

Okay. So that is something which we can foresee for the rest of the year.

Amit Aggarwal

Yeah, but also what happens is that when you open a new store, which Khan also mentioned, it takes time to become profitable. So the year one generally the new stores are not profitable on year one. So therefore there is that compounding or let’s say impact which happens. So net net on account of store opening and closure, at best you see a 10 to 20 basis point improvement only which is largely coming from the store closure but gets offset because of the store opening. But year two, year three onwards, that delta of 50 basis, 40 to 50 basis point which I mentioned, that continues.

Nirav Savai

So we have been adding 70, 80 stores and this time for the last three years and the closures have been maybe let’s say 50 stores. Now the years, let’s say FY23, 24 those stores would have turned profitable now or is there any a time frame, let’s say a new store for let’s say two years doesn’t function or operate as per our expectations, we shut it down. So what is the criteria of store closure or these old legacy stores which have been burning cash for a long time?

Amit Aggarwal

See internally we have a stringent framework in terms of performance evaluation for any store like Gunjan mentioned, we look at stores which are closer to break even from that evaluation perspective. So one is a criteria on the bottom line. Second criteria is also the brand presence within that geographical space also. So there could be couple of stores which are marginally loss making. Let’s say from an operating cost perspective of that store, they are operating at a minus 2 minus 3% of our loss. But we do not have either our own store or present through franchise.

Given that the quantum of loss is significantly, it’s negligible. We may continue to operate, but any store which is significant, again that gets addressed irrespective of the duration minimum criteria. What we apply is to here from a store.

Nirav Savai

All right. And how many such stores would be still there which we are looking to close or do we see FY26 in the conclusive year for cutting down loss making stores? So this is ongoing process which will keep on continuing.

Amit Aggarwal

It’s an ongoing process, right. So every six months we refresh the store performance while the data is available on a monthly basis. But given that there are various factors which impact these store performance, the first intent is to fix those other levers which helps us driving either in terms of the merchandise refresh or the margin profile change or renegotiation with the landlord. Right? But when everything also doesn’t figure out and as I said based on the criteria which we follow till it doesn’t meet, then only we proceed for the closure.

Nirav Savai

So basically this closures of 50, 60 stores will continue FY26 and beyond that also we see that happening because it’s also something which is impacting you. Yeah, this was just a last question. I’m saying that also has been impacting the top line growth. So is this a final conclusive view of this? Will 50, 50 stores will. I mean this will continue to close every year.

Gunjan Shah

See, it’s an ongoing process which is what is always going to be there. And any diligent retailer will have it. However, the quantum of stores will be very difficult to project. We as of now see a significant reduction in the pipeline that we see. Right? I mean the, let’s say the red list that Amit was talking about which is refreshed every six months. That’s significantly lower versus let’s say one year back. Now will that expand going forward or will that reduce will also depend upon basically the store’s performance. So our objective is to make sure it becomes smaller and smaller because there is some amount of write off that you do a fixed cost costs.

Right. So you have built an equity, you have invested in a certain locality so you don’t want to do too many of them. It also predicates on the fact that how good you are at opening new stores, what is the right location, have you got the right commercials going, etc, etc. And there is obviously a bunch of things that people have done in terms of, you know, getting the right triangulation of various inputs into a potential of a store and therefore the commercials. So we have tied up with third party agencies that get us some kind of a consumption pattern and therefore potential demand.

Therefore, we hope that this pipeline will keep reducing going forward. If that’s the narrow question.

Nirav Savai

That’S it from us. Thank you.

operator

Thank you. We have our next question from the line of Prena Junjulwala from Elara Securities. Please go ahead.

Prerna Jhunjhunwala

Yeah, thank you for the opportunity, Sir. Wanted to understand the volume growth in this quarter and ASP performance given all the initiatives taken and hurdles faced.

Gunjan Shah

Yeah, that’s the second. Yeah. Okay. Broadly, I think both of them have been flattish. Zaina. Right. Largely driven by basically the fact that we had disproportionate amount of impact in the first half of the quarter, especially in the Ind business because of the conflict etc. That we talked about. So it’s been broadly splattish on that front, allowing for the mix change, etc.

Prerna Jhunjhunwala

Okay, so sir, with all the initiatives taken, whether it is zero base for EBOs as well as focus on power and floats and stuff, when do we see volume growth and revenue growth picking up and how do we see internally on the growth that can be achieved at an overall level in the company?

Gunjan Shah

Yeah, yeah. So I answered that question earlier. Our endeavor is towards making sure that despite, you know, demand conditions remaining soft, some of these initiatives help us drive the growth. And we are hopeful that this comes sooner rather than later that we can get the full bang of all these efforts coming together at the storefront.

Prerna Jhunjhunwala

Okay, okay, understood sir. And any color on how much stores can be added at a net level in this year.

Gunjan Shah

We should be looking at, you know, broadly. While the longer term guidance has been to basically add about 130 to 150 stores a year with a ratio of about 80:20 franchise to cocoa. But so we should be in that ballpark, maybe a little lower because of I think the slower last year couple of quarters. But we should see acceleration going forward primarily driven through franchise as I mentioned in my presentation earlier also.

Prerna Jhunjhunwala

Okay, sir, so thank you for the answers. All the best.

Gunjan Shah

Thank you Vena.

Prerna Jhunjhunwala

Thank you.

operator

Thank you. A reminder to all participants, if you wish to ask any questions you may Press Star and 1. The next question is from line off Rajiv Bharti from Nuama wealth. Please go ahead.

Rajiv Bharati

Thanks for the opportunity. So with regard to your franchising network which used to be close to 150 odd stores around Covid period and now 650, what is let’s say the throughput.

Gunjan Shah

Number.

Rajiv Bharati

How has it moved over the years and has there been a repeat the franchisee has come come back or what proportion of these franchises have come back to open, let’s say another store with you just just to give this success here. And, and the related question is in terms of your hush Puppies arrangement is isn’t there a mandate to let’s say get to a certain milestone number of stores in the next two, three years out? Yeah. These are two questions.

Gunjan Shah

Okay. All right. Thanks Rajiv. Quickly on the franchise piece, franchise contributes to roug around about 12% of turnover on retail sales price level. Right. Realization turnover obviously is a little lower because of the way we realize full price on the dos side. Right. On the cocoa side, the ease on repeat franchisees, we see more and more of it right now. If I last recollect, I think on an average partner of US has about 1.7 or 1.6 stores with us. But let’s say, you know, the last the additions that we are doing, about 60% of our additions are coming from existing partners.

So when we want to propagate that further. So we are encouraging franchisees to open more and we are seeing that happening much easier, much faster because obviously they understand our systems and portfolio much better and vice versa. Also on the Hushpuppies front, we will basically the point is that we do have some kind of an arrangement on the brand. We have long since crossed that from a relationship perspective because it’s been well established, it’s been there for a long time. But however, we are ahead of client on that front so we don’t see a constraint from that perspective.

Does that answer your question, Ravi?

Rajiv Bharati

Yes. Just to follow up on the first part, the 12% contribution you mentioned, it’s a pre Covid what was the contribution? Because you mentioned that this is margin accretive as compared to the remaining business. Right. But on the EBITDA side. But overall EBITDA hasn’t moved. So something else is eating in into. Let’s say if this channel is growing better.

Gunjan Shah

Yeah. So what is the question? Alif?

Rajiv Bharati

No. So has the contribution changed material? This 12% number was in the same ballpark earlier also. Is it in terms of contribution?

Gunjan Shah

Franchise contribution was much lower earlier. I mean that is the whole reason that it’s expanded, right? It was less than. I mean I can’t recollect immediately but my sense is it was less than 3%.

Rajiv Bharati

Sure, sure. That’s all for difference. Thanks a lot sir.

Gunjan Shah

Thank you. Thank you Radish.

operator

Thank you. As there are no further questions from the participants, I now hand the conference over to the management for closing comments.

Nitin Bagaria

So thank you everyone for joining. It was lovely interacting over to you moderator and JM Credential.

operator

Thank you sir. On behalf of Bata India limited and JM Financials. That concludes the conference. Thank you for joining us. And you may now disconnect your lines.

Gunjan Shah

Thank you.

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