Geelong Advertiser

Profits lift, but bag ban a drag on sales

- NET SALES FULLY LILLY VITOROVICH

profit up 12.5 per cent to $1.72 billion.

up 3.4 per cent to $56.73 billion.

franked final dividend of 50 cents/share, unchanged, plus special dividend of 10 cents a share, fully franked. WOOLWORTHS has delivered a 12.5 per cent jump in annual net profit to $1.7 billion but says supermarke­t sales in the new financial year have been hampered by its ban on single-use plastic bags.

Chief executive Brad Banducci said sales for the first seven weeks of 2018-19 slowed as customers adjusted to the removal of single-use plastic bags from Woolies checkouts in June.

Rival Coles ended singleuse bags in July but backflippe­d on a plan to charge for bags after public pressure and continued to give them away for free.

Woolworths’ new financial year sales have also been affected by falling prices for meat, fruit and vegetables.

The group’s Australian Food unit, which includes nearly 1000 Woolworths supermarke­ts, reported a 1.3 per cent rise in comparable sales, which excludes new store openings, in the first seven weeks of 2018-19.

That compares with a 3.1 per cent rise in comparable sales in the fourth quarter to June 24, and 4.3 per cent growth for 2017-18.

Mr Banducci said full-year figure was the “strongest sales growth in a number of years”.

Woolworths’ ban of singleuse bags from June 20 led to a “slowdown” in customer visits and slightly different items in customer baskets, he said.

“Our experience when we did our pilot stores is that it does take somewhere around eight to 10 weeks for customers just to adapt to the new rules and we’re starting to see that happen,” Mr Banducci said.

The company has added more staff at checkouts since the ban and customers are starting to remember to bring their reusable bags, he said.

Woolworths’ full-year net profit was $1.72 billion while sales across the group — which includes supermarke­ts, beverages, department stores, hotels and the New Zealand arm — were up 3.4 per cent to $56.73 billion.

Its drinks operations — which includes Dan Murphy’s, BWS, Cellarmast­ers and Langtons — booked a 2.8 per cent rise in pre-tax earnings to $516 million.

Woolworths says there has been early progress in the turnaround of its budget department store chain BIG W, with losses dropping 27 per cent to $110 million in 2018-19.

BIG W’s comparable sales rose 0.9 per cent, the first increase since 2008-09, driven by price cuts and an overhaul of the majority of its 186 stores and product ranges. “However, financial performanc­e will continue to be driven by the key Christmas trading period,” Mr Banducci said.

Woolworths’ pubs and poker machines business lifted earnings 11.1 per cent to $259 million and sales by 3.7 per cent to $1.6 billion.

Woolworths will pay a final dividend of 50 cents a share, unchanged from a year earlier, plus a special dividend of 10 cents a share.

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