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Birmingham Post
Birmingham Post
Business
Anna Wise, PA Business Reporter & Tamlyn Jones

Halfords profits set to decline as shortage of mechanics hits sales

Investors in Halfords will be hoping the retailer has made progress in repairing holes in its workforce as it is set to unveil its full-year financial results. The bike and car parts seller warned over its profits earlier in the year amid a shortage of mechanics.

The Redditch-headquartered firm, which also services cars and bikes and offers MOTs, said it was struggling to recruit enough skilled technicians to meet higher levels of demand.

Chief executive Graham Stapleton said the firm was having to look at its staff pay and flexible working policies because "people want to work less, and more flexibly".

He also said it would focus in the short term on recruiting skilled workers from rival motor service centres. It comes amid a push to become a services-led business, with its autocentres business now making up nearly half of sales across the group following "unprecedented" demand.

Halfords is set to make a profit of almost £54 million for the latest full year, according to a consensus of analysts.

It compares with a profit of nearly £100 million last year, and marks a downgrade from previous market guidance which predicted its pre-tax profit would sit somewhere between £65 million and £75 million.

The profit warning sent Halford's share price tumbling by more than a fifth. It recovered but shares have declined by about seven per cent so far this year.

The listed business is also expected to report sales of around £1.6 billion for the full year on Thursday.

Looking further ahead, Halfords predicted its pre-tax profit will swell to more than £100 million as the challenging trading conditions improve.

The retailer also flagged a slump in sales of higher-priced items in its retail business, as tighter budgets have led people to tighten their belts.

Some consumers are deciding to delay buying bikes because of weaker confidence, which is impacting the business, Halfords revealed.

Furthermore, it has been knocked by a "massively declining" consumer tyre market, but said it may start to recover in the first half of the new financial year.

Derren Nathan, head of equity research for finance firm Hargreaves Lansdown, said: "The company's recent update focused on the medium-term outlook over which the board expects to grow pre-tax profits towards £100 million. Forecasts don't suggest any progress towards this target in the current financial year.

"So, investors will be zoning in on the shorter-term outlook, particularly for wages and other cost inflation, as well as checking how demand is holding up."

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