Daily Express

Aldi plans huge store expansion after high sales

- By Kalyeena Makortoff City reporter

ALDI has confirmed plans to open 130 new stores in the UK over the next two years after sales hit a record high in 2017.

The German grocer said the move will create 5,000 jobs, while helping it move towards a previously set target of 1,000 stores by 2022.

The network will be supported by plans for three warehouses in Sheppey in Kent, Sawley in Derbyshire and Bedford, as well as the extension of existing distributi­on centres in Darlington and Bathgate in West Lothian.

The store expansion announceme­nt came as Aldi revealed that sales grew 16.4 per cent across the UK and Ireland to a record £10.2billion in 2017.

Full-year operating profit rose 26 per cent to £265.9million.

Giles Hurley, chief executive of Aldi UK and Ireland, said the supermarke­t’s investment signalled its “continued commitment to growing responsibl­y in the UK”.

“That means having a positive and lasting impact on the economies where we operate and improving the lives of British people,” he added.

“In 2020, Aldi will have been serving British shoppers for 30 years. In that time, we’ve become part of the fabric of British life. We’re proud to be reaffirmin­g our commitment today.” The grocer also outlined plans to boost its range of British suppliers, who already account for its core range of meat, eggs, milk, butter and fresh meat.

Aldi said it currently spends more than £100million each week with more than 1,000 local suppliers.

The discounter is now Britain’s fifth largest supermarke­t with 775 stores, having attracted a further 1.1 million shoppers last year. It now accounts for 7.6 per cent of all UK grocery store spending, according to Kantar Worldpanel data.

The results come as UK grocer Tesco tries to take on discounter Aldi and its German peer Lidl with the launch of its new store format Jack’s.

Aldi and Lidl have eaten into the market share of Britain’s so-called “big four” supermarke­ts. Tesco plans to open up to 15 Jack’s branches over the next year.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom