The Malta Business Weekly

Aldi reports record sales but profits drop amid price war

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Aldi has reported record sales in the UK and Ireland for last year but its profits have fallen sharply amid a fierce price war among supermarke­ts.

The German discounter said sales rose 13.5% to £8.7bn in 2016, but operating profit dropped 17%.

The chain blamed the fall on its "continued investment in prices and infrastruc­ture".

Aldi chief executive Matthew Barnes said its strategy was to offer "the lowest prices in Britain".

"We're doing everything we can to insulate customers from those cost increases, making sure our prices are the lowest in the UK, every day of the year," he said.

Aldi, which currently has 726 stores in the UK, said it planned to open a further 70 this year and would invest a further £459m.

The German chain currently has a 6.9% share of the market, according to the latest industry figures from Kantar Worldpanel.

This figure makes it the fifthbigge­st supermarke­t in the UK after Tesco, Asda, Sainsbury's and Morrisons.

"We have seen discounter­s' growth slow down over the last four years and we expect that slowdown in growth to continue," said Tom Wharram, analyst at Bernstein.

He said Aldi had been hit by rival Tesco's introducti­on of a budget range of own-label "farm" brands last year.

Aldi's "Project Fresh" initiative - aimed at creating more store space for fresh food and wider aisles - had also weighed on profit, he said.

"These are features we would more traditiona­lly associate with a supermarke­t than a discounter and suggests they are expanding growth by moving away from a pure discounter model," he added.

Aldi said that its future investment plans were unaffected by the UK's decision to leave the EU.

It plans to continue its rapid expansion and has said it will have 1,000 stores in the UK by 2022.

"The fact that more and more customers walk through our doors every day of the week gives us the confidence to carry on investing," said Mr Barnes.

While the majority of consumers in the UK still shop at the big four supermarke­t chains - Tesco, Asda, Sainsbury's and Morrisons - Aldi and its low cost rival Lidl have had a huge influence on the sector.

Their presence has sparked a prolonged supermarke­t price war and changed consumers' attitudes towards no-frills shopping, eroding snobbery towards discount retailers.

Yet Aldi continues to sell a fraction of the products its bigger supermarke­t rivals stock.

Aldi has around 1,700 products, compared with the 20,000 to 30,000 items you find in a typical big supermarke­t.

The vast majority (94%) of these are private label. Not being beholden to the big brands enables Aldi to buy products more cheaply and pass on that saving to customers.

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