The Star Malaysia - StarBiz

Tesco shines in home market, beats annual profit forecast

-

LONDON: Tesco beat expectatio­ns with a 28% rise in full-year profit yesterday, helped by a strong end to the year in its home market, underlinin­g the recovery of Britain’s biggest retailer under chief executive Dave Lewis ( pic).

The supermarke­t group, which is expanding to provide food to restaurant­s, bars and smaller rivals with a £4bil (US$5.7bil) purchase of wholesaler Booker, made an operating profit of £1.644bil in the year to Feb 24.

That compared to Tesco’s guidance of “at least” £1.575bil and £1.28bil made in 2016-17.

Shares in Tesco were up 3.6% at 0715 GMT.

“We are generating significan­t levels of cash and net debt is down by almost £6bil over the last three years,” Lewis said. “All of this puts us firmly on track to deliver our medium-term ambitions.”

Lewis joined Tesco in 2014, tasked with turning around a market leader which was battling a fall in sales and profits due to changing shopping habits and the rise of German discounter­s Aldi and Lidl.

An accounting scandal, uncovered shortly after his arrival, then plunged the group into the worst crisis in its near 100-year history.

Lewis first stabilised Tesco, then got it growing again with a focus on more competitiv­e prices, new and streamline­d product ranges, better customer service and much improved supplier relationsh­ips.

Buying Booker is the boldest move yet by Lewis, providing Tesco with access to the faster growing catering segment of Britain’s £200bil grocery market.

The group, which competes with Sainsbury’s, Walmart’s Asda and Morrisons, said it was firmly on track to deliver its medium-term targets which include cutting costs further and improving operating margins to between 3.5% and 4% by 2019/20. It had a margin of 2.9% in

2017/18.

Like-for-like sales in its home market were up 2.2% for the year, with the key figure up 2.3% in the fourth quarter.

“A laser-like focus on the core UK food business continues to deliver impressive gains,” said Richard Lim, chief executive of analysis group Retail Economics.

“Deeper price investment, a more focused range and further asset disposals have slowed the loss of market share and boosted further improvemen­ts in profitabil­ity.”

The only weakness appeared to be in its Asia division where it operates in Thailand and Malaysia. Sales there fell by 14% in the fourth quarter as it cancelled previous practices of bulk selling and the use of shortterm coupons to drive sales.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia