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Wet summer hurts Greene King's sales in new financial year

Greene King said profits for the year to the end of April had been hurt by growing costs
Greene King said profits for the year to the end of April had been hurt by growing costs

Britain's Greene King today reported higher-than-expected annual profit, boosted mainly by last year's football World Cup.

But the company said that the unseasonable wet summer had hurt the pub operator's sales in the first eight weeks of the year. 

The brewer of Greene King IPA, Old Speckled Hen and Abbot Ale, said today its adjusted profit before tax rose 1.6% to £246.9m for the 52 weeks ended April 28.

This was higher than company compiled estimates of £243.9m. 

Total comparable sales for Greene King's Pub Company, through which it manages its chain of about 2,900 pubs, restaurants and hotels, rose 2.9%. 

Reported pretax profit fell 12.5% to £172.8m in the year, hurt by growing costs. 

Greene King, like most restaurant chains in the UK, has been battling increased costs due to a minimum wage hike, higher property prices and power bills, as well as a move away from pub drinking by younger Britons. 

Rival JD Wetherspoon said last month its costs were significantly higher than last year, mainly stemming from labour costs hurt by very low unemployment. 

"Political and consumer uncertainty is likely to continue to weigh on confidence and the cost inflationary environment persists," chief executive Nick Mackenzie said in a statement.