Convenience Store Sales, Profits Showed Gains in 2008, According to NACS
Posted on: Tuesday, 7 April 2009, 10:30 CDT
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Overall convenience store industry profits rose 54 percent in 2008 to reach
The growth of in-store sales defied the overall trend in U.S. retail sales, which fell 0.6 percent based on U.S. Department of Commerce data. It also came despite a rare decline in the number of convenience stores. For only the third time in the past 15 years, the industry store count dropped - 1.0 percent to 144,875 - as many stores closed because of the punishing economic conditions and record-low motor fuels margins the industry faced during the first three quarters of 2008.
The convenience store industry sells an estimated 80 percent of the fuels purchased in
Credit card fees continue to be the industry's top pain point, surging another 10.5 percent in 2008 to reach a record
Although unemployment levels nationwide were souring in 2008, there was good news with respect to the convenience store industry's employment figures. The industry saw a modest 0.8 percent gain in number of employees, which rose to 1.73 million. Annual turnover numbers were even more impressive. For non managers, annual turnover was down to 109.0 percent; turnover for managers was down to 29.0 percent.
There were several significant differences between the industry's top performers and bottom performers. Top quartile performers sold more than twice as much motor fuels as the bottom quartile (187,932 versus 84,369 gallons per month). The top quartile performers significantly outperformed the bottom quartile inside the store as well - with merchandise sales of
Once again, cigarettes dominated in-store sales, accounting for nearly one in every
Nearly 75 percent of in-store sales were from the top five categories:
- Cigarettes (32.7 percent of in-store sales)
- Packaged beverages (14.1 percent)
- Foodservice (13.9 percent)
- Beer (10.2 percent)
- Other tobacco products (3.9 percent)
Nearly 70 percent of gross margin dollars were from the top five categories:
- Foodservice (23.9 percent of gross margin dollars)
- Packaged beverages (16.6 percent)
- Cigarettes (16.0 percent)
- Beer (6.9 percent)
- Candy (4.8 percent)
The industry's 2008 metrics are based on the NACS State of the Industry survey powered by CSX, the industry's largest purpose-designed business development tool, and based on data from 156 firms representing more than 20,000 stores. Complete data tables and analysis will be released in June in the NACS State of the Industry Report of 2008 Data.
Founded in 1961 as the National Association of Convenience Stores, NACS is the international association for convenience and petroleum retailing, representing more than 2,200 retail and 1,800 supplier member companies. The U.S. convenience store industry, with nearly 145,000 stores across the country, posted
SOURCE National Association of Convenience Stores
Source: PR Newswire
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