By Radhika Anilkumar
(Reuters) -Premier Inn owner Whitbread (LON:WTB) resumed dividends on Thursday and said profit at its UK business could return to pre-pandemic levels this year despite inflationary pressures.
Shares in the company were up 3.4% at 1140 GMT as Britain's largest hotel chain also reported annual revenue that beat market expectations after UK accommodation sales surpassed pre-pandemic levels during the summer and autumn seasons last year.
"As we move through the year in the UK, we expect international inbound demand to increase, alongside recovering office-based corporate demand, complementing the already high levels of leisure and business trade demand," Whitbread said in a statement.
The London-listed company, which started out as a brewery in the eighteenth century, said UK accommodation sales for the year ended March 3 had nearly trebled from the previous year when pandemic restrictions were still in place.
Whitbread, which also owns steakhouses Beefeater and Bar+Block, said annual statutory profit before tax was 58.2 million pounds ($72.8 million), versus a loss of 1.01 billion pounds a year earlier.
It proposed a final dividend of 34.7 pence per share, its first since suspending payments in 2020.
"With (the dividend) back on the table, it sends a clear message to markets that sentiment is vastly improved and the return to profitability ... adds weight," Hargreaves Lansdown (LON:HRGV) analyst Matt Britzman said.
"The recovery is by no means complete and there's still a way to go before the group's out of the woods," he added.
Whitbread said its German business had been recovering at a slower pace as coronavirus curbs in the country lasted longer, but it was confident business there would return to strong levels this year.
It also warned industry-wide cost inflation would reach 8%-9% this financial year, higher than initially thought, as British households and businesses bear the brunt of inflation reaching its highest in three decades.
($1 = 0.7990 pounds)