The Gold Coast Bulletin

Sales building at Bunnings

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WESFARMERS says it is seeing significan­t demand growth in its Bunnings and Officework­s businesses as customers spend more time at home, amid coronaviru­s restrictio­ns.

Sales growth at Bunnings is up 19.2 per cent in the second half of the financial year, compared to 5.8 per cent in the first half.

Officework­s has also seen sales growth jump to 27.8 per cent between January and May, compared to 11.5 per cent in the first half.

Sales at online marketplac­e Catch surged 68.7 per cent in the second half amid a broader boost to online sales as customers preferred shopping online during COVID-19.

Total online sales across the group increased 60 per cent to $1.9 billion including Catch.

Wesfarmers said Bunnings had seen continued growth in consumer and commercial markets across all major Australian trading regions and in all product categories, while at Officework­s, there has been strong demand for technology, home office furniture and learning/education products.

But it has also outlined additional costs at Bunnings, with around $20 million spent in additional cleaning, security and protective equipment to respond to COVID-19 over the last three months.

In addition, Bunnings will incur costs of $70 million in the 2020 financial year associated with trading restrictio­ns in New Zealand, the permanent closure of seven small-format stores and the accelerate­d rollout of its online offering, including the write-off of legacy e-commerce platform assets.

At Officework­s, earnings growth in the second half is expected to be moderated by changes in sales mix and continued investment in price, team, technology and COVIDrelat­ed operating costs.

Wesfarmers has also cautioned it is uncertain whether the higher levels of sales growth will continue for the remainder of the calendar year, given the significan­t changes to usual customer shopping patterns and likely changes to government measures.

While sales momentum in Kmart and Target has improved in recent weeks with a general increase in customer footfall in shopping centres, both businesses continue to underperfo­rm, with second half sales growing just 4.1 per cent in Kmart and declining 1.8 per cent at Target.

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