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Retail & Consumer

Pub and brewery group Liberation Group says inflated energy, wage and food costs ‘beginning to calm’

The Jersey-based parent company of West Country beer and hospitality brand Butcombe has reported an ‘encouraging’ set of financial results

The Liberation Group is the parent company of West Country beer and hospitality brand Butcombe(Image: The Liberation Group)

Pub and brewery firm The Liberation Group has reported an “encouraging” start to the year, with the impact of the energy crisis and inflation on its finances “beginning to calm”.

The Jersey-based parent company of West Country beer and hospitality brand Butcombe oversees an estate of around 140 pubs, made up of managed and tenanted sites, with accommodation of more than 400 rooms.

The firm previously warned its utility bills were set to double and slammed the government and suppliers over the handling of the energy crisis. In a trading update, the company said while it had taken a "significant" hit from rising energy costs, which was "not sustainable" to pass on to customers, it could see “a route to a lower cost level” towards the end of this year and next year.

Read more: Heineken supporting 600 new jobs with £40m pubs upgrade

Bosses said wage costs had been “significantly improved” and it had “almost entirely” stopped employing agency kitchen staff. They added that inflated prices for ingredients such as butter and oil were beginning to fall.

The board said it had seen 4.7% like-for-like growth at the group’s managed portfolio of around 80 pubs on the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ mainland, which stretches across the South West to London, during the first quarter of its current financial year. This was driven by a 13.9% like-for-like rise in its accommodation business.

Growth levels were similar for the nine months to January, while directors said average earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation, and amortization at the firm’s 58 tenanted venues was almost £95,000 per pub during the full year to January - up from pre-pandemic levels of around £90,000.

The company added that volume levels for its brewing business were also rising, up by more than fifth during its last full-year, with one of its signature drops Butcombe Original now a top 10 º£½ÇÊÓÆµ cask ale, and number two in the South West.