Business Day

Supermarke­ts waive tax relief, return £1.74bn

- James Davey London

Sainsbury s, Asda and Aldi will forgo UK property tax relief during the pandemic, as did rivals Tesco and Morrisons, taking the total saved by the government from supermarke­t groups to £1.74bn.

Sainsbury s said on Thursday

it would now pay £440m of business rates, while Walmartown­ed Asda will pay £340m and German-owned Aldi will pay £100m.

In March, the British government and devolved administra­tions exempted all retailers from paying the tax on their stores for the 2020/2021 financial year to help them through the crisis. Britain s supermarke­t groups

have seen sales soar during the pandemic, but have been criticised by MPs and media for paying shareholde­r dividends while receiving tax relief.

However, on Wednesday, market leader Tesco said it would repay the £585m it had claimed because some of the risks of the crisis were now behind it, and returning the money is the right thing to do ”.

That stance put pressure on rivals to do the same. Morrisons followed, saying it would pay £274m.

Sainsbury s said it had per

formed ahead of expectatio­ns, particular­ly since the start of the second national lockdown in England in November. With

regional restrictio­ns likely to remain in place for some time, we believe it is now fair and right to forgo the business rates relief,” CEO Simon Roberts said.

Asda CEO Roger Burnley said the group recognised there were other industries for which the effects of Covid-19 would be much more long lasting. Tesco CEO Ken Murphy denied its decision to pay was a calculated one to damage competitor­s who do not share its financial strength.

When we made the decision, we didn t really think about

the competitio­n at all,” he told Sky News.

Murphy also said the move is unconnecte­d to Tesco s plan to

pay shareholde­rs a £5bn special dividend when the sale of its Asian business is completed.

Analysts said that the pressure is now on other food retailers to also forgo the relief. Discounter­s Lidl and B&M declined to comment.

The Co-operative Group said it plans to review its position at year-end. M&S and Waitrose owner, the John Lewis Partnershi­p, have said that they will not forgo it.

A spokespers­on for British Prime Minister Boris Johnson told reporters that the government welcomed any decision to repay support where it is no

longer needed ”.

Taking account of the business rates it will now pay, Sainsbury s forecast underlying

pre-tax profit of at least £270m in its 2020/2021 year, and more than £586m in 2021/2022.

It will prioritise dividend payments to shareholde­rs over cutting debt in 2020/2021, which will push back its timetable for debt reduction. Sainsbury s share price was

up 4.1% at 1.08pm GMT.

Morrisons was down 0.3% and Tesco was up 1%. Sainsbury s also repeated its

call for the government to review the business rates system to create a more level playing field between physical and online retailers.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa