Unwanted gifts spoil Tesco's Christmas
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[January 11, 2018]
By Paul Sandle
LONDON (Reuters) - Tesco's <TSCO.L>
Christmas trading missed forecasts as strong food sales were offset by
weak demand for items such as DVDs and computer games, showing that even
Britain's biggest supermarket chain is feeling the strain as consumers
curb their spending.
Market research this week had identified Tesco as a festive winner, but
the group said lower sales of general merchandise and the collapse of a
tobacco supplier cast a shadow over a record week of trading before Dec.
25.
Britons, whose spending power has been squeezed by inflation,
prioritised food this Christmas and cut back on nearly everything else,
industry data has shown.
Tesco Chief Executive Dave Lewis agreed that shoppers were tightening
their belts, echoing comments from rival Sainsbury's <SBRY.L> on
Wednesday.
"There is definitely some caution in the way customers are talking about
the year ahead," Lewis said. But there were signs that higher inflation
was "abating a little".
Tesco, which has a 28 percent share of the British grocery market,
reported a 1.9 percent rise in like-for-like revenue in the six weeks to
Jan. 6.
However, analysts had expected a rise of between 2.4 and 3.2 percent.
Sainsbury's, Britain's second largest supermarket group, and
fourth-ranked Morrisons <MRW.L>, both this week beat forecasts for
Christmas trading.
Shares in Tesco were trading down 4.2 percent at 1250 GMT, the second
worst performer after Marks & Spencer <MKS.L>, the high street retailer
which reported a fall in like-for-like Christmas sales on Thursday.
FOOD, GLORIOUS FOOD
Lewis said food, and particularly fresh food, were driving growth across
all the company's stores and online, with the company selling over
600,000 turkeys and half a million kilos of fresh salmon.
"In the Christmas week itself (...) we sold more food than ever before
at Tesco as we made our offer the most competitive it's been for many,
many years," he told reporters.
Lewis's strategy to rebuild Tesco following an accounting scandal in
2014 has been based on increasing food sales.
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A company logo is pictured outside a Tesco supermarket in Altrincham
northern England, April 16, 2016. REUTERS/Phil Noble/File Photo
Tesco has tightened its hold on the nation's food market after the competition
regulator last month cleared its 3.7 billion pound ($4.95 billion) takeover of
wholesaler Booker <BOK.L>.
Lewis is scaling back in general merchandise areas such as entertainment, where
customers are turning to digital alternatives, while focusing on categories like
clothing.
However, competition is intense in the food market, driven by German discount
chains Aldi and Lidl, which increased total sales by 15 percent and 16 percent
respectively over Christmas. [L8N1OZ0QR]
Lewis said Tesco had passed on fewer price rises than the "big four", which also
includes Wal-Mart owned Asda, and discounters Aldi and Lidl in the year to date.
Food sales grew by 3.4 percent, and fresh food specifically by 3.7 percent in
the six weeks before Christmas, Lewis said, but weaker sales in general
merchandise were a 0.6 percent drag and the disruption in tobacco supplies took
a 0.5 percent toll.
Lewis said the collapse of the Palmer & Harvey tobacco supplier had taken "the
shine off an otherwise outstanding performance for the period as a whole".
Tesco had to rebuild its supply chain for tobacco and some other products for
its smaller stores in the middle of its peak trading period because of the
failure.
Broker Bernstein said Tesco's like-for-like food numbers were "very strong", but
its Christmas overall could disappoint due to tobacco and general merchandise.
(Editing by Keith Weir)
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