Western Daily Press

Supermarke­t sales surge but minimal signs of any panic buying

- SIMON NEVILLE Press Associatio­n

THE end of the Eat Out To Help Out scheme and new Covid-19 restrictio­ns introduced last month saw shoppers flock to supermarke­ts in huge numbers although without the same panic buying seen in March, according to new data.

The surge came in the four weeks to October 4, with sales increasing 10.6 per cent – above the 9.4 per cent recorded across the 12-week period to October 4, according to Kantar.

With the new 10pm curfew on bars and pubs also coming into effect, alcohol sales in supermarke­ts rose to £261 million during the past month.

Fraser McKevitt, head of retail and consumer insight at Kantar, said: “Shoppers are moving a greater proportion of their eating and drinking back into the home.

“This is likely a response to rising Covid-19 infection rates, greater restrictio­ns on opening hours in the hospitalit­y sector, and the end of the Government’s Eat Out To Help Out scheme.”

Despite an increase in Covid-19 transmissi­ons and tightening restrictio­ns, there is only limited evidence of consumers stockpilin­g goods at a national level in the past month, he added.

Some supermarke­ts had been concerned that, with a second wave, panic-buying could set in.

However, Mr McKevitt said: “The seven days from Monday 21 to Sunday 27 September were the busiest since March, with 107 million trips recorded, but that number was nowhere near the 175 million seen just prior to the first national lockdown.”

There were some signs of concern, with toilet roll and flour sales up 64% and 73 per cent during the final week in September, but this is thought to have been because there were more shoppers in stores, rather than because of stockpilin­g.

Kantar added that online sales in the past month were up 76 per cent on a year ago, with one in five households ordering groceries via the internet.

The proportion of sales made digitally remains unchanged from last month at 12.5 per cent, suggesting that many shoppers are choosing to stick with deliveries as the pandemic develops.

Ocado continues to be the big winner from the pandemic, with sales jumping 41.9 per cent in the 12 weeks to October 4, with Marks & Spencer’s partnershi­p winning over customers.

But Sainsbury’s, Asda and Aldi all lost out – losing customers to rivals and seeing their market share fall compared with a year ago.

All three increased sales during the 12-week period, but it at a slower pace than their rivals.

Morrisons, Lidl and Iceland all grew their market share, while Tesco, Co-op and Waitrose all saw theirs flat compared with a year ago.

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