Price cuts and better service helped Tesco win back shoppers in its latest quarter, Britain's biggest retailer said on Friday, suggesting new boss Dave Lewis's turnaround plan is starting to have an impact. Tesco has had a horrendous 18 months, with competition from fast-growing discounters Aldi and Lidl, compounded by an accounting scandal, driving it to a record annual loss. But former Unilever executive Lewis has cut prices on popular grocery brands, improved product availability and put more staff in stores.
Tesco said sales at British shops open for more than a year fell 1.3 percent in the 13 weeks to May 30, its fiscal first quarter, partly reflecting a drop in food prices across the industry. But that was better than analysts' forecasts for a fall of 1.6-3.0 percent, an improvement on the previous quarter, and also better than recent figures from major rivals Asda, Sainsbury's and Morrisons.
Tesco also said 180,000 more customers shopped at its UK stores in the quarter, with the volume of goods sold up 1.4 percent on a like-for-like basis and transactions up 1.3 percent. "Stemming the defection of consumers is the first, and arguably the most important, battle to be won," said Neil Saunders, managing director of retail researchers Conlumino.
Tesco's shares, down 21 percent over the last year, rose as much as 4.4 percent to a six-week high of 227.35 pence, as investors welcomed the improvements. "Lewis and (finance chief) Alan Stewart have the correct strategy in place and are managing the company very well. Fixing the UK business is at the heart of their strategy," Chris Watt, fund manager of Jupiter Growth and Income Fund, one of Tesco's top 45 shareholders, told Reuters. However, others cautioned Tesco faced a battle to continue its recovery in the teeth of a brutal industry price war.
"The price driven competition we are seeing across UK food retailing has made a tough business tougher," said Richard Marwood, senior investment manager at AXA Investment Managers, one of Tesco's 30 largest shareholders. All of Britain's big four grocers are trying to recover ground lost to Aldi and Lidl with hundreds of millions of pounds of price cuts. They are also dealing with commodity-led deflation and are having to rethink strategies as customer habits shift from big weekly shops at large out of town stores.
Lewis is cutting costs and selling assets as he seeks to reduce Tesco's debts, regain its investment-grade credit rating and rebuild its credibility. Prices are coming down, with 300 products reduced in the first quarter, part funded by a shake-up of its supplier base and a focus on best sellers. "Whilst the market is still challenging and volatility is likely to remain a feature of short-term performance, these ... results represent another step in the right direction," said Lewis, who took the helm in September.
After decades of dominance, Tesco in April reported a 2014-15 trading profit of 1.4 billion pounds ($2.2 billion), down nearly 60 percent on the year before, and warned it might not match that level this year. Lewis told analysts on Friday the consensus forecast for a 1.4 billion pound trading profit this year was an "aspiration", pointing to expectations for deflation to continue alongside short-term disruption as Tesco changes its trading approach.