Tesco sees sales surge as consumers splash out for Christmas

over 4 years in The Irish Times

Retailer Tesco followed rivals in reporting buoyant Christmas trading, as pandemic restrictions meant people splashed out on celebrations at home.
Sales in the Republic of Ireland were 11.7 per cent higher in the third quarter to November 28th, with that figure rising to 12 per cent when the Christmas trading period was included.
The strongest contribution came from the company’s large stores, Tesco said.
Online sales surged 70 per cent as record demand drove Tesco to increase capacity.
The group said UK like-for-like sales growth was 6.7 per cent in the third quarter accelerating to 8.1 per cent in the six weeks to January 9th.
“We delivered a record Christmas across all of our formats and channels,” said CEO Ken Murphy, who succeeded Dave Lewis in October.
Tesco’s update follows strong Christmas trading reports from Sainsbury’s, Morrisons and Lidl.
Industry data published last week showed Britain’s supermarket sector benefited from unprecedented Christmas demand, with shoppers spending £11.7 billion on groceries in December.
Restrictions to contain the virus mean many people are working from home and the hospitality sector is closed.
Adding to the demand for food and drink, many of the five million or so Britons who normally travel abroad for Christmas had to stay at home.
Tesco estimated additional Covid-19 costs would be £810 million in its 2020-21 year, up from £725 million forecast in October.
But it still maintained its guidance for 2020-21 retail operating profit before exceptional items of “at least” the same level as 2019-20’s, excluding the repayment of £535 million of business rates relief.
Tesco also continues to expect to report a loss for Tesco Bank of between £175 million and £200 million for the year. – Additional reporting: Reuters

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