Belfast Telegraph

Tesco shares down despite its solid Christmas performanc­e

- BY RAVENDER SEMBHY

SHARES in Tesco, which has around 50 stores in Northern Ireland, fell towards the bottom of the FTSE 100 yesterday, despite reporting a solid rise in sales over the critical Christmas trading period.

The supermarke­t giant said UK like-for-like sales rose by 1.9% in the six weeks to January 6, driven by a strong grocery performanc­e.

The four weeks leading up to Christmas Day delivered record sales and volumes in the UK, Tesco said, which helped it notch up a 2.3% rise in third quarter comparable sales.

But the figures fell short of analysts’ expectatio­ns, leading to Tesco shares falling over 4% to 203.3p in midday trading.

James Grzinic, analyst at Jefferies, said: “Tesco’s update confirmed a solid third quarter and Christmas, but not quite the dominant display expected by some.”

Neverthele­ss, Tesco chief executive Dave Lewis insisted that the results underscore his turnaround efforts.

Mr Lewis said: “We have continued to outperform the market throughout this period, particular­ly in fresh food, thanks to our most competitiv­e offer for many years.

“Our trading momentum accelerate­d across the third quarter and into December, with the four weeks leading up to Christ- mas Day delivering record sales and volumes in the UK.”

Tesco saw its biggest ever sales week in the UK over Christmas, with 58 million customer transactio­ns and 770,000 online grocery deliveries in one week.

Festive food sales grew 3.4% on a like-for-like basis and the only blot was a drag from general merchandis­e and lost tobacco sales, which the firm blamed on the collapse of wholesaler Palmer & Harvey.

General merchandis­e comparable sales fell 0.6%.

Mr Lewis added: “Incorporat­ing Palmer & Harvey volumes and complexity during this peak period was challengin­g, resulting in lost tobacco sales across December and putting further strain into our distributi­on network, particular­ly post-Christmas.

“Whilst I am pleased to say these challenges have now been resolved, they took the shine off an otherwise outstandin­g performanc­e for the period as a whole.”

Supermarke­ts are battling rising costs linked to the Brexit-hit pound, falling consumer confidence and fierce competitio­n in the sector as Lidl and Aldi continue their relentless march.

But Tesco said it is working with suppliers to mitigate inflation and Mr Lewis said consumers are still “cautious” about how they are spending their money.

Clothing sales grew 5% and Mr Lewis said Christmas was the “coming together” of over three years of the turnaround strategy.

“Our (food price) inflation has been lower than our peers,” he said. “We are constantly improving our food offer and what I saw over Christmas was the coming together of that three-plus years of work.”

Tesco is experienci­ng strong momentum relative to its peers and in October Mr Lewis hailed a “significan­t milestone” after unveiling the first dividend payout for three years.

The grocery chain was further buoyed in December when its £3.7bn takeover of wholesale group Booker was given the final all-clear by the competitio­n watchdog.

 ??  ?? Tesco chief Dave Lewis (right) remains upbeat despite festive sales falling short of analysts’ expectatio­ns
Tesco chief Dave Lewis (right) remains upbeat despite festive sales falling short of analysts’ expectatio­ns
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