Daily Mail

Ratings agency sounds alarm over Asda debts

- By Archie Mitchell

ASdA suffered another blow after a ratings agency sounded the alarm over its mounting debt pile.

Fitch downgraded the outlook on the UK’s third-biggest supermarke­t from ‘stable’ to ‘negative’ after the business’s £600m swoop on Co-op’s petrol stations.

The ratings agency said the £200m borrowed to fund the takeover left Asda with higher debt levels than expected – adding that it would likely not return to a ‘stable’ level until 2024.

And the agency, which judges how well companies will be able to pay their debts, also slashed its forecast for Asda’s profit this year. A spokesman said Asda will make an £850m profit this year, down from an earlier prediction of £1.1bn.

The cut comes after Asda saw profit fall by a quarter in the first half of the year. The supermarke­t group suffered a drop in sales as it pushed up prices faster than rivals.

Fitch’s downgrade is the latest setback for Asda since being snapped up for £6.8bn in 2020 by the billionair­e Issa brothers ( pictured) and London private equity

house TdR Capital. The firm has been consistent­ly losing market share and has been rocked by an exodus of senior management.

As well as the negative outlook, Fitch held its rating for Asda’s debt at ‘BB-minus’, which means that there is an ‘elevated’ risk of the business defaulting. Asda confirmed last month it would buy the petrol retail arm of Co-op in a deal valuing it at £600m. It will take on the 130 forecourts, adding to the 320 it already owns.

The deal will accelerate Asda’s launch into the convenienc­e market, which has so far eluded it.

The retailer opened its first On the Move store last year and will open its 50th this month.

Fitch said that this is a ‘positive’ as the convenienc­e market is growing faster and comes with higher profit margins than larger supermarke­ts.

An Asda spokesman said: ‘We remain focused on our long-term strategy to become the UK’s number-two grocery retailer by delivering value to customers and giving them more opportunit­ies to shop with us. The acquisitio­n of the Co-op sites gives us a meaningful position in a growing convenienc­e market.’

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