Botswana Guardian

Sitting pretty: Shoprite posts 8% rise in group sales as furniture brands make a mark

-

Grocery chain Shoprite saw group sales increase by 8.1percent to R155.4- billion in the year ended July 2021, with furniture sales up by a whopping 24.6percent while supermarke­ts also contribute­d, rising by nearly 10percent.

The group, however, announced that in addition to closing its operations in Nigeria and Kenya, it would now also shutter its shops in Uganda and Madagascar, only saying these would now be “classified as discontinu­ed”. Details are likely to come when Shoprite publishes its full- year results on September 7. The retreat from other African countries is hardly a surprise, as a combinatio­n of currency fluctuatio­ns leading to difficulti­es accessing foreign exchange, as well as inflation, and socioecono­mic conditions worsened by Covid- 19 have made trading a nightmare for the low- cost food seller.

Shoprite, South Africa’s largest grocer, operates nearly 3,000 stores in other African countries, including Angola, Democratic Republic of Congo and Ghana. The success of its push into the continent since the early 2000s has been patchy as it struggled to acclimatis­e to local conditions, weak economic growth and currency devaluatio­ns in Angola and Nigeria. That forced it to reconsider the strategy and rather focus on growing local market share against the likes of Pick n Pay, Woolworths and Spar. To that end, Shoprite last week announced plans to buy Massmart’s food assets for about R1.36- billion. The assets include Massmart’s lowcost Cambridge Food stores as well as Rhino and Massfresh. The transactio­n is set to be completed by early 2022.

In the trading statement, Shoprite said it saw adjusted headline earnings per share at between 850.6 cents and 924 cents, against the 733.6 cents it reported for the same period in 2020. Group sales did, however, take a small hit from the Covid- 19 enforced bans on alcohol sales. Shoprite’s LiquorShop saw sales increase by only 4.4percent over the 53- week reporting period. Alcohol sales declined by 21.8percent in the first half before bouncing back in the second, with a growth of 53.6percent, Shoprite said. Sales at the company’s OK Furniture and House & Home brands were the standout, together increasing by 26.5percent. Shoprite’s shares were lifted by the trading report, advancing 4.5percent to R17.72 on the JSE on the day. DM/ BM

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Botswana