Cape Times

Retail giant Shoprite plans to exit from its Uganda and Madagascar markets

- DINEO FAKU dineo.faku@inl.co.za

SHOPRITE is planning to withdraw from the Uganda and Madagascar markets, it said yesterday after announcing an 8.1 percent increase in total merchandis­e sales from continuing operations to R168 billion for the 53 weeks ended July 2021.

Shoprite, Africa’s retail giant, is adding to its list of exits after selling its Nigerian business of 15 years and closing Kenyan stores in March.

“In line with the group’s non-RSA review process, our operations in Madagascar and Uganda have been classified as discontinu­ed,” said Shoprite.

The group operates 10 stores in Madagascar and has five branches in Uganda, employing 300 Ugandans.

Commenting on the exit, Peter Hirst, senior analyst at Euromonito­r Internatio­nal, said Shoprite was leaving Uganda in line with the company’s review of its long-term ventures across Africa over the past year as currency devaluatio­ns, lower commodity prices and high inflation have impacted household disposable incomes negatively.

Furthermor­e, the exit comes as footfall has decreased significan­tly in Shoprite outlets as Ugandans reverted to ”buying local” in 2020, resulting in under-performanc­e in the five outlets across the country.

“This trend benefited traditiona­l grocery retailers, which boast lower average unit prices, providing relief to a struggling consumer base,” Hirst said.

He said the rise of online shopping, which drove shoppers away from traditiona­l brick-and-mortar outlets like Shoprite, and the significan­t costs incurred by the company to adhere to the Covid-19 pandemic may have been the final nail in the coffin.

“Sources suggest operations will be acquired by Majid Al Futtaim, franchise holder of hypermarke­t chain Carrefour, which launched its first outlet in Uganda in late 2019 and has shown strong growth since,” said Hirst.

A year ago Shoprite began a review of its supermarke­t footprint outside South Africa, saying it would close stores and negotiate rent reductions as currency devaluatio­ns and tough trading conditions outweighed benefits from the continent.

Equity analyst at Noah Capital, Zinhle Mayekiso, is of the view that the company’s non-RSA operations are demanding a lot of management’s time, especially given the various challenges in frontier markets.

“In our view, Shoprite’s centralise­d and streamline­d capital allocation decisions will help it achieve a better operationa­l momentum as it increases focus on its core South African business and ensures a renewed focus on returning cash to shareholde­rs,” Mayekiso said.

Shoprite, which operates the Checkers, Usave and Shoprite retail outlets, said South African supermarke­ts, excluding LiquorShop, achieved sales growth of 9.7 percent during the period.

It said Checkers and Checkers Hyper reported sales growth of 10.9 percent, notwithsta­nding the high base reported for the second-half period last year.

Shoprite said the furniture segment, made up of OK Furniture and House & Home, increased sales by 24.6 percent.

Shoprite and Usave reported sales growth of 8.8 percent during the period and the group’s LiquorShop sales increased by 4.4 percent. Shoprite said growth in the liquor business was significan­tly impacted by the mandated liquor trade closures forming part of Covid-19 lockdown regulation­s.

South African supermarke­ts opened a net of 87 stores, while non-RSA supermarke­ts continued to operate in regions challenged by macro-economic and consumer affordabil­ity constraint­s, exacerbate­d by the impact of Covid-19 restrictio­ns.

 ?? KAREN SANDISON African News Agency (ANA) ?? SHOPRITE said yesterday that it was planning to close shop in Uganda and Madagascar. |
KAREN SANDISON African News Agency (ANA) SHOPRITE said yesterday that it was planning to close shop in Uganda and Madagascar. |

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