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Public Houses Market Report Plus 2006

Released on = April 16, 2007, 4:25 am

Press Release Author = Bharat Book Bureau

Industry = Marketing

Press Release Summary = Public houses went into 2006 anticipating more major changes
in their trading, with bans on smoking adding to the disruption caused by the new
Licensing Act in 2005.

Press Release Body = Public Houses Market Report Plus 2006

Public houses went into 2006 anticipating more major changes in their trading, with
bans on smoking adding to the disruption caused by the new Licensing Act in 2005.
Devolution means that Scottish pubs were entirely non-smoking from 27th March 2006,
while the debate in England continues over whether to ban smoking selectively (e.g.
only in pubs serving meals). Legislation is being formulated in 2006 which will ban
smoking in pubs in England, Wales and Northern Ireland during 2007.

In the UK, turnover for public houses grew only modestly (by 14.6%) in the 5 years
to 2005, reaching an estimated £16.33bn at retail selling prices (rsp). Competition
from cheap take-home drinks is fierce and the pub\'s strongest element has been their
foodservice. As a share of typical pub turnover, food has been rising for many
years, accounting for a forecast 23% in 2006 -double the share it held in the early
1990s. However, the number of pubs has started to decline gradually, falling just
below the peak of 60,000 in 2005.

Although this gradual decline is likely to continue in the later years of the
decade, research commissioned exclusively for Key Note in 2006 confirmed the
enduring nature of the pub as a social institution. In January 2006, two-thirds of
adults said that they meet friends and eat meals in pubs, and nearly as many agreed
that they use pubs for family occasions or celebrations.

The well-publicised right for pubs to stay open for 24 hours a day became reality in
England in November 2005, but very few took up this option and the media exaggerated
the negative impact on town-centre disorder. Of more significance was the continuing
change of ultimate ownership for thousands of pubs. The biggest takeover of the year
saw Punch Taverns buying Spirit Group to overtake Enterprise Inns in the pub league
table. The two leaders now have more than 18,000 pubs between them, or nearly a
third of the national total.

If the smoking ban experience in the Republic of Ireland is replicated in the UK,
publicans will lose some trade in the aftermath of the ban. However, the impact of a
`clean air\' policy is likely to be offset by other factors that affect the pub
trade: consumer confidence, the growth of eating out and entertainment in pubs, the
weather during the year and even sports events, such as the World Cup 2006.

Web Site = www.bharatbook.com

Contact Details = 207, Hermes Atrium,
Sector 11, Plot No.57
CBD Belapur

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