Geelong Advertiser

Coles hits new high

Stores may close to help save $1b

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COLES shares have hit a new high after the supermarke­t announced a $1 billion cumulative savings target over four years to compete with new discount grocery market arrivals such as Lidl and Kaufland.

Coles set the cost-cutting target and revealed a new corporate strategy based on automation and targeted use of floor space for its first investor day since listing on the ASX in November 2018.

Shares in the company rose by as much as 7.1 per cent to a new high of $13.69 yesterday, their highest since Coles split from Wesfarmers and listed in November. They closed at $13.21.

Chief executive Steven Cain said the prospect of increasing competitio­n meant Coles was facing the toughest five years in its history.

He said maintainin­g market share would be an achievemen­t in itself as discounter­s such as Aldi and Costco continued to grow in Australia, new players arrived, and online grocery sales outstrippe­d bricks and mortar.

“The outlook for traditiona­l bricks and mortar supermarke­ts is sales densities could decline in the medium term if action isn’t taken,” Mr Cain said in a media call.

Coles’ savings target of $1 billion by FY23 includes Friday’s announceme­nt that 450 jobs will be cut from the company’s Melbourne head office. Mr Cain said he expected “further reductions in manual operations” throughout stores and supply chain, while the company would not hesitate to close unprofitab­le stores.

The supermarke­t chain also cited the use of data analytics and artificial intelligen­ce to help it reach its savings goal, along with “optimising” its store network by tailoring up to 40 per cent of floor space to meet specific local customer requiremen­ts.

“What we’ve seen in Australia ... new (store) space is outstrippi­ng population growth,” Mr Cain said. “We will be very targeted.”

Mr Cain said the strategy did not factor in anticipate­d savings from its impending home delivery partnershi­p with UK online supermarke­t Ocado, or the transition to two new automated ambient distributi­on centres — both of which he said would come online in FY23.

“When they kick in we’ll see another level of cost reduction,” Mr Cain said.

Coles also flagged opportunit­ies in building on doubledigi­t growth in its $400 million meat export segment, as well as harnessing the joint venture Flybuys initiative with former parent company Wesfarmers.

Mr Cain said Coles would continue its trial with UberEats and was also looking at a meal kit partnershi­p similar to the deal struck between Woolworths and Marley Spoon earlier this month.

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