2. Safe Harbor Statement
Some of the statements in this presentation constitute “forward-looking
statements” within the meaning of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act
of 1995. All statements other than those of historical facts included herein,
including those related to the company’s financial outlook, goals, business
strategy, projected plans and objectives of management for future operations
and liquidity, are forward-looking statements. These forward-looking
statements are based on the company’s plans and expectations and involve a
number of risks and uncertainties that could cause actual results to vary
materially from the results and events anticipated or implied by such forward-
looking statements. Please refer to the company’s Annual Report on Form
10-K and its other filings with the SEC for a discussion of significant risk
factors applicable to the company. In addition, the forward-looking
statements included in this presentation are based on the company’s
estimates and plans as of the date of this presentation. While the company
may elect to update these forward-looking statements at some point in the
future, it specifically disclaims any obligation to do so.
1
3. Our Business
Leading independently operated
convenience store chain in the
Southeast and 3rd largest in the U.S.
1,660 stores located across 11
states
Primarily branded Kangaroo Express
Last twelve months as of June 26,
2008 sales of $8.5 billion and LTM
EBITDA of $218 million
Stores offer a broad selection of
merchandise, motor fuel and food
service offerings designed to meet
convenience needs of consumers
2
4. Key Investment Highlights
Leading market positions in attractive Southeastern markets
Significant scale advantages vs. primary competitors
Benefiting from consumer trends toward convenience formats
Leveraging infrastructure to drive profitability and future growth
Attractive sector growth and consolidation potential
Strong Cash Flow Generation to Reinvest in Our Business, De-lever and Drive Earnings Growth
De-
3
5. Attractive Industry Fundamentals
U.S. C-Store Sales and Growth (1)
C-
Large and rapidly growing sector
c te d
roje 5.9%
($ in Billions)
Defensive growth characteristics P $727
R=
C AG
$700
$577
.6%
600
R = 11 $524
l CAG R = 7.0%
Increasing consumer demand for $475
rica
500 $169
Histo CAG
Total Historical
$160
$395
$145
400
e
r $337
smaller-box, fill-in convenience In-Sto $290
$269 $283 $132
300
$234 $116
$186 $109
shopping $174 $112
$166 $104 $409
200 $154 $100 $364
$330
$86
$81 $263
$77
$75 $221
100 $181
$171
$165
$134
$100
$89 $93
$79
Relative to hypermarkets, large
0
1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2011E
supermarkets, etc. Gasoline In St ore
5-Year In-Store Sales CAGR vs. Other Sectors (1)(2)
In-
Increasing amount of food
consumed away-from-home and 7.4%
on-the-run 6.0% 6.0% 6.0%
Highly fragmented market with 2.9%
ample consolidation opportunities
(1.3%)
Co venience Drug Sto res Restaurants To tal Retail Gro cery Disco unt
_____________________
Sto res Sto res Department
(1) Source: NACS 2007 NACS State of the Industry Report and Retail Forward, Inc.
Sto res
(2) Source: Retail Forward, Inc. CAGR for 5-year period from 2001-2006.
4
6. Leading Convenience Store Retailer Concentrated in
the Southeastern United States
1,660 Stores Located in Eleven Southeastern States as of June 26, 2008
Indiana
Indiana
Arlington
Arlington
Indianapolis
Indianapolis
Covington
Covington
Hampton
Hampton
Richmond
Richmond
Frankfort Norfolk
Norfolk
Frankfort
Virginia
Virginia Chesapeake
Chesapeake
Kentucky
Kentucky
PA0021GM_1.WOR
Bowling Green
Bowling Green Durham
Durham
Paducah
Paducah Raleigh
Raleigh
North Carolina
North Carolina
Nashville
Nashville
Tennessee
Tennessee
Columbia
Columbia Wilmington
Wilmington
South
South
NY0010DP_1.WOR Carolina
Carolina
Atlanta
Atlanta
Mississippi
Mississippi
Georgia
Georgia
Clinton
Clinton Montgomery
Montgomery
Vicksburg
Vicksburg
Meridian
Meridian
Alabama
Alabama
Jackson
Jackson
Jacksonville
Jacksonville
Louisiana
Louisiana Tallahassee
Tallahassee
Daytona Beach
Daytona Beach
Gulfport
Gulfport
Baton Rouge
Baton Rouge
Orlando
Orlando
St. Petersburg
St. Petersburg Tampa
Tampa
Pantry Store Locations
Florida
Florida Boca Raton
Boca Raton
Miami
Miami
_____________________
Note: Map as of fiscal year ended September 27, 2007.
5
7. Key Markets Possess Highly Attractive Growth
Characteristics
Core Markets Projected to Experience Rapid Growth Throughout Next Several Years;
Next
High Degree of Fragmentation Provides Continued Consolidation Opportunities
Opportunities
Population Growth CAGRs (2005-2015) (1) Market Fragmentation (1)
25.0%
Florida North Carolina
21.1% (7,356 stores) (5,447 stores)
Pantry
20.0 Pantry >50 Store
Operators
>50 Store
6% 14% 7%
1 Store
Operators 1 Store
Operators Operators
31%
15.0% 2-50 Store
21%
Operators
15.0
54% 58%
9%
2-50 Store
Operators
9.5% 9.1%
9.0%
10.0
South Carolina Tennessee
(2,872 stores) (3,697 stores)
5.0
Pantry Pantry
>50 Store >50 Store
Operators Operators
17% 10% 3% 1 Store
1 Store 17% Operators
0.0 Operators
Florida North South Tennessee U.S. 21%
2-50 Store 20%
Carolina Carolina 2-50 Store 52% 60%
Operators
Operators
(2) Pantry Stores: 455 388 282 104 1,660
_____________________
(1) Source: U.S. Census Bureau and 2007 NACS State of the Industry Report.
(2) Note: Pantry’s store counts as of quarter ended June 26, 2008.
6
8. Strong Track Record of Top Line Growth…
Merchandise Revenue Retail Gas Gallons Sold Total Revenue
($ in mm) (Gallons in mm) ($ in mm)
$9,000
2,500
$2,000 .9 % $8,502
25
.0 % =
1.8% = 15 ’07
=1 ’07 2,129 –
’07 – 8,000 ’03
’03
3– $1,640
R ’0 R 2,033
CAG GR
CAG $1,576 CA $6,911
2,000
7,000
1,758
1,500 $1,386 $5,962
$1,229 6,000
1,497
$1,170
1,500 1,372
5,000 $4,429
$1,010
1,161
1,000
$3,493
4,000
1,000
$2,750
3,000
500
2,000
500
1,000
0
0
0
2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 LTM
2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 LTM
2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 LTM
Fiscal Year Fiscal Year Fiscal Year
_____________________
Note: Fiscal year ends in September. Last twelve months as of June 26, 2008.
7
9. …And Substantial EBITDA Generation
Gross Profit Reported EBITDA
($ in mm) ($ in mm)
’03-’07
$900 $300
CAGR $279
$826
$811
$779
800
250
11.6%
$663 $218
$220
700 $225 $214
$214
$281
$591
600 200
$173
$511 $214
$165
500
$136
150
$145
400
$606 12.5%
300 100
$586
$518
$425 $449
200 $366
50
100
0 0
2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 LTM 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 LTM
Fiscal Year Fiscal Year
Merchandise Gasoline
_____________________
Note: Fiscal year ends in September. Last twelve months as of June 26, 2008.
8
10. Strong Growth in Merchandise Sales Per Store
Improved Store Portfolio and Stronger Consumer Offering
Have Driven Increased Average Merchandise Sales per Store
Average Merchandise Sales per Store
($ in Thousands)
.0 %
6
-’07:
R ’0 3 $999
CAG $996
$1,000
$954
950
$898
900
$857
850
$792
800
750
700
2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 LTM
Fiscal Year
Stores 1,258 1,361 1,400 1,493 1,644 1,660
_____________________
Note: Fiscal year ends in September. Last twelve months for the quarter ending June 26, 2008.
9
11. Consistently Strong Merchandise Margins
Superior Merchandise Offering Leads to Above Average Margins
Merchandise Gross Margin
Proprietary branded offerings 40.0%
37.4% 37.2% 37.0%
36.6%
36.3%
36.2%
Private label products in high velocity 35.0
categories Industry
Avg.(1):
30.6%
30.0
Selective expansion of nationally branded
quick service restaurants (QSRs)
25.0
Leveraging scale with merchandise
vendors 20.0
2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 LTM
Fiscal Year
Merch. Comps 2.1% 3.4% 5.3% 4.9% 2.3% N/A
_____________________
Note: Fiscal year ends in September. Last twelve months for the quarter ending June 26, 2008.
(1) Industry average for 2007 based on the 2008 NACS State of the Industry Report.
10
12. Proprietary Merchandise and Food Service Concepts
Drive Revenue and Margins
Celeste Candy Lane
Bean Street Coffee Grilling Depot & Chill Zone
11
13. QSR Food Service Offering Differentiates Our
Stores and Drives Traffic and Margins
We Currently Operate 236 Nationally Branded and
Proprietary Quick Service Restaurants
12
14. Gasoline Strategy Maximizes Fuel Gross Profit Dollars
We Balance Average Gallons Sold Per Store and Gasoline Margins
to Maximize Overall Gross Profit Dollars
Retail Gasoline Gross Profit $
Average Gallons Sold per Store
(Gallons in Thousands) ($ in mm)
1 1 .6 %
%
8 .3
’0 7 = 07 =
–’
–
1,400 R ’ 03 $300 R ’0 3 $281
CAG CAG
1,309
1,306
1,300
250
1,242
$225 $220
$214
1,200
200
1,118
$165
1,100
$145
1,026 150
1,000
941
100
900
50
800
700 0
2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 LTM 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 LTM
Fiscal Year Fiscal Year
(1)
Comps 0.7% 2.0% 4.7% 3.1% 1.0% N/A CPG 12.5¢ 12.0¢ 14.3¢ 15.9¢ 10.9¢ 10.7¢
_____________________
Note: Fiscal year ends in September. Last twelve months for the quarter ending June 26, 2008.
(1) Net of credit card fees and repairs and maintenance. Last twelve months excludes per gallon loss on hedging operations in Q2 and Q3 of 1.6¢ and 0.3¢, respectively.
13
15. Recent Inflation and Volatility in Oil and Gas Prices
$146.65
$150.00 $5.00
% 3 Months Since
Prior to Peak Peak
$124.47
125.00 Oil +33% (25%) $109.71
Gas +23% (12%)
Avg. Retail Price per Gasoline Gallon
4.00
Avg. Crude Oil Price per Barrel
$97.59
100.00
$90.61
$75.13
$70.89 $60.74
$60.13
$70.95
75.00 3.00
$65.44
$63.34 $63.82
$58.74
$53.58
$50.03
50.00
2.00
25.00
0.00 1.00
Q2 Q3 Q4 Q1 Q2 Q3 Q4 Q1 Q2 Q3 Q4 Q1 Q2 Q3 7/11/08Current
(Peak)
FY2005 FY2006 FY2008
FY2007
Avg. Crude Oil Price per Barrel Avg. Retail Price per Gasoline Gallon
Note: Fiscal year ends in September. Graph updated through September 2, 2008.
Source: FactSet. Data represent average futures contract price per barrel of light sweet crude and national average retail price per gasoline gallon.
14
16. Gasoline CPG Can Be Volatile on a Quarterly Basis…
Recent Margins Impacted by Higher Credit Card Fees and Fuel Maintenance Expenses,
Maintenance
As Well As Losses on Fuel Hedging Activities in Q2 and Q3 2008
Our Quarterly Retail Gasoline CPG (Net of Credit Card Fees and Repairs and Maintenance)
22.5¢ 21.2¢
19.4¢
20.0
17.3¢
17.5
14.6¢
15.0 14.0¢
12.8¢
12.3¢
12.5 11.4¢
11.1¢ 11.0¢
10.6¢ 10.6¢
10.5¢
9.9¢ 0.3¢
10.0 1.6¢ 10.7¢
8.6¢
9.0¢
7.5
5.0
Q1 Q2 Q3 Q4 Q1 Q2 Q3 Q4 Q1 Q2 Q3 Q4 Q1 Q2 Q3
(1)
FY2005 FY2006 FY2007 FY2008
Hedging Loss (1)
Net CPG
_____________________
Note: Fiscal year ends September.
(1) Q2 and Q3 include per gallon loss on hedging operations of 1.6¢ and 0.3¢, respectively.
15
17. …But Annual CPG Tends to Remain Relatively Stable
Annual Net CPG Margins Typically Range from 10¢ – 13¢
10¢ 13¢
20.0¢
17.0
15.9¢
14.3¢
13.4¢
14.0 13.2¢
12.5¢
12.5¢
12.8¢ 12.3¢
12.0¢
10.9¢
10.4¢
11.0
8.0
5.0
1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007
Fiscal Year
_____________________
Note: Fiscal year ends in September. Shaded area represents average historical CPG range.
CPG is net of credit card fees and repairs and maintenance
16
18. Current Operating Initiatives Intended to Address Challenging
Environment and Improving Strategic Flexibility
Challenge Key Initiatives / Action Taken
Increasing vendor-supported promotional activity
Consumer
Focusing promotions on high-velocity, high-return categories
Headwinds
Accelerated ethanol roll-out
Margin / Profitability Fuel price strategy maximizing total gross profit dollars
Pressure
Meaningfully reducing store level and corporate overhead
Bolstered liquidity by accessing delayed draw on term loan
Substantially reduced non-essential capex
Financial Flexibility
Temporarily suspended share repurchases
Return to Growth Focus
Collectively, We Believe These Actions Have Better Positioned Us to Leverage Our Operating
Model and Drive Top-line and Earnings Growth when the Market Environment Improves
Top-
17
19. Focus on Reducing Operating Expenses
Initiative Maximizes Operating Expense Leverage and Better Positions Us for Profitable Growth
Positions
as Market Conditions Improve
Reorganized field management structure to streamline operations
Improved overall quality / efficiency of staffing
Improved store-level controllable expenses
Reduced bad check expense
Lowered cash over and short by moving to prepaid on gasoline
Tangible financial results achieved, more expected throughout the year
Reduced store operating expenses in Q3 by $6.4 million or 4.8%
Reduced corporate overhead spend in Q3 by $4.8 million or 17.6% despite adding 16
stores
Lowered FY08 OG&A guidance by $28mm-$33mm from our original FY08 guidance
18
20. Lease Finance Obligations Cause Valuation and
Leverage Confusion
Adjusting EBITDA by Treating Sale-Leasebacks as Operating Leases and Subtracting Sale-
Sale- Sale-
Leaseback Rent Allows for Better Comparison to Other Retailers
Balance Sheet Data as of 6/26/08
Reported Adjustments Adjusted
Total Debt (ex. Lease Finance Obligations) $848 $848
Cash ($162) ($162)
Net Debt (ex. Lease Finance Obligations) $686 $686
Lease Finance Obligations $462 ($462) –
Total Net Debt $1,148 ($462) $686
Market Cap 8/19/08 $408 $408
Enterprise Value $1,556 ($462) $1,094
LTM EBITDA as of 6/26/08 $218 ($46) $173
EV / EBITDA Multiple 7.1x 6.3x
Total Net Debt/EBITDA 5.3x 4.0x
19
21. Meaningful Liquidity / Financial Flexibility
Meaningful liquidity
$162 million in cash-on-hand
$225 million revolver – $0 drawn, over $142 million available after LOCs
Long-term debt profile; earliest maturity is the convertible debt in November 2012
Covenant-light bank facility – financial flexibility (1)
6.5x Adj. Net Debt / EBITDAR Leverage – Currently 5.8x
2.25x Interest Coverage – Currently 2.53x
_____________________
Note: Balance Sheet data as of June 26, 2008.
(1) Per credit facility covenant calculations (8x rent methodology).
20
22. Fiscal 2008 Financial Outlook Unchanged
Full Year Impact of 2007 Acquisitions Driving Revenue Growth in 2008;
Continuing Discipline on Expenses Should Lower OG&A and Drive Earnings
Earnings
Merchandise revenues expected to grow to $1.62 – $1.65 billion
Merchandise gross margin expected to be between 36.8% and 37.0%
Retail gas gallons sold expected to be approximately 2.1 billion gallons
Retail gas margin expected between 10 and 12 cents per gallon
Operating, general and administrative expenses expected between $605 –
$610 million
Capital expenditures expected to be $90 million
21
23. Key Investment Highlights
Leading market positions in attractive Southeastern markets
Significant scale advantages vs. primary competitors
Benefiting from consumer trends toward convenience formats
Leveraging infrastructure to drive profitability and future growth
Attractive sector growth and consolidation potential
Strong Cash Flow Generation to Reinvest in Our Business, De-lever and Drive Earnings Growth
De-
22
24. Reconciliation of Non-GAAP Measures
Adjusted EBITDA/EBITDA Reconciled to Net Income
LTM
Jun-08 2007 2006 2005 2004 2003
($ in mm)
Adjusted EBITDA $173 $178 $254 $189 $150 $127
Payments made for lease finance obligations 46 36 25 24 23 13
Cumulative effect adjustment - - - - - (3)
Reported EBITDA $218 $214 $279 $214 $173 $136
Interest expense, net and loss on extinguishment of debt (88) (74) (56) (54) (87) (60)
Depreciation and amortization (108) (96) (76) (64) (61) (56)
Provision for income taxes (8) (17) (57) (37) (9) (9)
Net income $15 $27 $89 $58 $16 $11
_____________________
Note: Fiscal year ends in September. Last twelve months as of June 26, 2008.
23
25. Reconciliation of Non-GAAP Measures
Adjusted EBITDA/EBITDA Reconciled to Cash Flows
LTM
Jun-08 2007 2006 2005 2004 2003
($ in mm)
Adjusted EBITDA $173 $178 $254 $189 $150 $127
Payments made for lease finance obligations 46 36 25 24 23 13
Cumulative effect adjustment - - - - - (3)
Reported EBITDA $218 $214 $279 $214 $173 $136
Interest expense, net and loss on extinguishment of debt (88) (74) (56) (54) (87) (60)
Provision for income taxes (8) (17) (57) (37) (9) (9)
Non-cash stock based compensation 3 4 3 - - -
Changes in operating assets and liabilities 8 8 (13) (7) - (20)
Non-cash loss on extinguishment of debt - 2 2 - 23 3
Other 6 4 (3) 19 17 19
Net cash provided by operating activities $140 $141 $154 $134 $117 $69
Net cash used in investing activities ($150) ($529) ($219) ($166) ($227) ($24)
Net cash provided by (used in) financing activities $94 $339 $74 $36 $145 ($14)
_____________________
Note: Fiscal year ends in September. Last twelve months as of June 26, 2008.
24