National Post

Metro warns inflation could eat into profits

Accelerati­on ‘too fast, too high,’ CEO says

- Jake edmiston

Metro Inc., Canada’s third-largest grocer, is bracing for another wave of cost increases from suppliers as surging food inflation threatens to cut into the company’s profit margins.

In an earnings update on Thursday, Montreal-based Metro reported a 5.3-per-cent increase in quarterly profit but warned more inflation and labour shortages could force the company to make tough decisions on whether to trim margins or charge more.

Since last year, grocery chains have been facing a flood of requests from suppliers looking for more money to make up for increases in ingredient, transport and packaging costs.

“We’re hearing noises that there will be more coming,” Metro CEO Eric La Flèche told financial analysts on a conference call. “It looks like inflation will be here for a little while longer. How long? I don’t know.”

When suppliers ask for more money, Metro meets with them to determine whether the new price is “justified,” La Flèche said.

If the request is fair, the next decision is whether Metro should pass those cost increases onto the consumer, and when. The risk, he said, is that too many increases too quickly will drive sales volume into the arms of Metro’s rivals in Canada’s competitiv­e grocery market. So the company is under pressure to absorb increases with slimmer margins.

“The accelerati­on of inflation is not something we like at all. Too fast, too high, is not good,” he said. “We have to manage the cost increases the best we can to protect value for the customers and protect volumes at retail.”

Metro, which also owns Food Basics and the Jean Coutu chain of Quebec pharmacies, decreased gross margin by 10 basis points to 20.1 per cent in the second quarter, from 20.2 in the same period last year.

“We continue to face higher than normal inflationa­ry pressures and labour shortages which, if prolonged, could put pressure on margins,” Metro said in an update on the company’s outlook.

Metro booked quarterly profits of $198 million, up from $188.1 million in Q2 2021, on sales of $4.3 billion. Adjusted earnings per share grew 7.7 per cent to 84 cents, ahead of forecasts of 83 cents, according to a report from Bank of Nova Scotia analyst Patricia Baker. Metro’s samestore sales in food retail — a metric that gives a clearer year-over-year picture by removing results from recently opened or closed stores — grew by 0.8 per cent. Samestore sales in pharmacy grew by 9.4 per cent.

Operating expenses dropped 5.5 million year over year, mainly due to an easing in pandemic-related expenses — though the company distribute­d $8-million in store gift cards to staff.

Baker expected Metro to take slightly thinner profit margins in the quarter, passing on “some, but not all, cost increases to consumers to remain competitiv­e.”

The volume of products sold at Metro stores decreased slightly year over year, but the decline was offset by price inflation, leading to the rise in food revenues, Royal Bank analyst Irene Nattel said in a note to investors.

Metro shares fell 2.6 per cent to close at $70.27 in Toronto trading.

Metro’s second-quarter update comes amid the worst food inflation in 13 years, with grocery bills up almost 9 per cent in March compared to the previous year, according to Statistics Canada’s latest consumer price index. Metro’s internal gauge on food-basket inflation for the quarter was just below 5 per cent.

La Flèche said inflation continues to force consumers to switch to cheaper options, choosing private label over brand names or discount stores, like Food Basics, over more traditiona­l, “full-service” banners like Metro.

“There is a search for value happening,” he said. “Our discount banners are growing nicely.”

The focus on value has created pent-up demand among shoppers, which is obvious any time Metro starts a promotion for a product that has been acutely impacted by inflation, La Flèche said. For example, beef prices are up 14.1 per cent year over year, according to Statistics Canada’s April 20 report. And whenever ground beef is on sale in the Metro flyer, “volumes are very, very high.”

But inflation is also driving up labour costs, he said. This month, Metro settled a weeklong strike with more than 900 workers at its Toronto distributi­on warehouse. The deal includes an average pay bump of $2.25 per hour in the first year, up more than 8 per cent, according to Unifor, the union representi­ng the Metro staff. Over four and a half years, the deal will increase wages by almost 16 per cent and boost premiums for workers in freezers.

La Flèche said the extra $2.25 in the first year of the agreement was “higher than usual, mainly because of the current high-inflation environmen­t.” But the union said the deal will “raise the bar for warehouse workers across Ontario.”

Metro is also paying higher salaries in general, as a way to retain staff and attract talent in the middle of a labour shortage.

“Everybody is looking for labour,” he said. “It puts added pressure and that contribute­s to the inflationa­ry picture.”

The strike cost Metro roughly $10 million, including costs for spoiled food, transporta­tion and security at the picket line. The shutdown at the distributi­on centre in Toronto also meant Metro stores in Ontario were missing products in the leadup to the Easter holiday.

“A strike is not good. Being short on product is not good,” La Flèche said. “Clearly we lost some sales in a big week.”

 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada