Business Day

Aldi supermarke­ts to expand in UK

• German discount chain targets having 1,200 outlets in Britain, muscling in on Tesco’s, Sainsbury’s, Asda’s and Morrisons’ territory

- James Davey London

The British arm of German discount supermarke­t Aldi aims to have 1,200 stores in Britain by the end of 2025 as it seeks to grab more market share from its bigger listed rivals.

Aldi UK, which reported its first rise in annual operating profit for four years on Monday, now has about 775 stores and had been aiming to exceed 1,000 by 2022.

Aldi UK is Britain’s fifthbigge­st supermarke­t chain, with a 7.6% market share, trailing market leader Tesco, which has more than 3,400 stories, Sainsbury’s, Asda and Morrisons.

The new stores add pressure on establishe­d chains to respond. Sainsbury’s is seeking to buy Walmart-owned Asda, arguing that the rise of discounter­s opens new fronts in competitio­n, while Tesco launched a budget chain, Jack’s.

Aldi UK CEO Giles Hurley said the firm opened 70 stores in Britain in 2017 and was on track to open 70 more in 2018 and 130 from 2019 to 2020. Aldi planned to open 50-60 stores a year to reach 1,200, focusing on towns where it was not present.

“As a business we tend to be pretty conservati­ve with our targets,” Hurley told reporters. “It wouldn’t surprise me if we actually achieved more than we said by 2025.”

He said Aldi would be interested in buying some Sainsbury’s and Asda stores that the regulator could force them to sell as a condition for approving their proposed merger.

Aldi UK said last year it would invest £1bn in 2017 and 2018 in store openings and converting existing sites to its “Project Fresh” format. Some of the cash would also be spent improving and opening new distributi­on centres.

“We will continue to maintain this rate of investment over the coming years,” Hurley said, adding Aldi UK was “powering up, while others pare back.”

The investment would create 5,000 jobs over the next two years and 20,000 by 2025.

HSBC analyst David McCarthy said Aldi UK’s plans stepped up the challenge for its listed British rivals.

“There is no let-up in either Aldi’s expansion or its sales growth. That it is growing its fresh and premium range and expanding nationwide means its market share growth looks set to continue,” he said.

Aldi UK and Ireland made an operating profit of £265.9m in 2017, up 26%, with sales rising 16.4% to £10.18bn. The company attracted 15.8-million up 1.1- million.

Britain’s food retailing sector has been transforme­d in the past decade by the rise of privately owned Aldi and Lidl, which has customers, driven down returns of the big four players.

They have fought back by cutting prices and improving service, chasing greater purchasing power through mergers. Tesco bought wholesaler Booker for nearly £4bn. Sainsbury’s wants to take over Asda while Morrisons has struck wholesale deals with Amazon and McColl’s.

A key aspect of the Competitio­n and Markets Authority’s probe of the Sainsbury’s-Asda deal will be whether it includes the effect of the discounter­s on the overall grocery market.

“While other grocers introduced more complexity into their businesses in their struggle to win back customers, we stuck to our guns and focused on doing what Aldi does best — buying smart, staying lean, improving quality and keeping prices low,” said Hurley.

The big four are still losing market share to Aldi and Lidl, who are also attracting customers with more premium ranges.

Aldi’s Specially Selected range now generates over £1bn annually, with products such as Oliver Cromwell Pink Gin.

Hurley said Aldi UK was talking to suppliers to better understand the challenges and obstacles to the supply chain it envisaged from Britain’s departure from the EU in March 2019.

“The good news is that around 77% of what we sell is sourced from suppliers who are based in the UK,” he said.

“Whatever Brexit looks like, our expansion and growth plans will be unaffected.”

 ?? /Reuters ?? Rapid expansion: German discount supermarke­t Aldi plans to increase its number of outlets in the UK to 1,200 by the year 2025, from 775 presently.
/Reuters Rapid expansion: German discount supermarke­t Aldi plans to increase its number of outlets in the UK to 1,200 by the year 2025, from 775 presently.

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