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The pension-related costs for the quarter had been announced in December, when the company said that four of the union pension funds to which it contributes were merging into a new fund as of the start of this year. Kroger contributed $650 million to the new fund in January as part of the agreement, but the company said the move is expected to reduce costs over the long term. Kroger also recorded a $73.4 million "LIFO" charge during the quarter, compared with $18.8 million a year ago. LIFO, or last-in, first-out, is an accounting practice that assumes that a company sells its newest products first. If a product is sold for less than it was bought for, the difference is taken as a loss. For the full year, Kroger's adjusted net income excluding one-time items was $1.2 billion, or $2 per share, which beat Wall Street expectations of $1.77 per share. Looking ahead to 2012, Kroger said it expect net earnings of $2.28 to $2.38 per share, taking into account the benefit of an extra week in the year, lower-than-expected accounting charges and aggressive stock buybacks during 2011. "All of the data we are seeing suggests the overall economy and customer sentiment are improving," CEO Dave Dillon said in a conference call with analysts. "Both give us reason to be optimistic." But he added that consumer sentiment is fragile and subject to change from a variety of factors.
[Associated
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