UPDATE: Sainsbury Leads Rivals As Snow Prompts One-Stop Shopping
12 Janeiro 2011 - 8:49AM
Dow Jones News
J Sainsbury PLC (SBRY.LN) is at the forefront of a consumer
shift towards one-stop shopping that has helped the group steal a
march on its supermarket rivals this Christmas.
The company overtook Wal Mart Stores Inc. (WMT)-owned Asda to
take the number two supermarket spot by market share in the U.K.
for the first time in seven years according to four-week data by
Kantar Worldpanel released Tuesday, although Asda will undoubtedly
reclaim second place when it gets the go-ahead to acquire the Netto
grocery chain.
Still, Sainsbury crowned its market share achievement by
reporting strong third quarter sales growth Wednesday that is
widely expected to be the best among the big four grocers. Tesco
PLC (TSCO) reports Thursday and Asda will update the market in
February.
In a trading update for the 14 weeks to Jan. 8, the company said
total sales rose 7.5%, well ahead of consensus expectations for a
rise of 5.5%, with same-store sales up 3.6% compared with market
expectations of 3% including Value Added Tax but excluding
fuel.
The cornerstone of Sainsbury's same-store sales outperformance,
which is almost 2% better than smaller rival Wm Morrison
Supermarket PLC (MRW.LN) which reported Monday, is its expansion
into non-food sales.
Sainsbury is rapidly expanding its stores as it builds non-food
areas to add onto its grocery departments. While new stores don't
count towards like-for-like sales until they have been open a year,
store extensions do.
Jefferies analyst James Griznic estimates the store extensions
are adding around 1% to the group's same-store sales, the key
industry benchmark for growth.
And this addition of non-food, which counts Sainsbury's TU
clothing brand, electricals, entertainment and home lifestyle
products in its stable, has tapped into a shift by consumers
towards one-stop shopping.
"The convenience of buying non-food whilst buying food is a long
term trend, and one we're driving with our store development
program," Chief Executive Justin King said Wednesday.
This trend was reflected in the pace of non-food sales growth,
which continued to grow at three times the rate of food in the
period.
Some of this growth will have come at the expense of high street
stores, many of which have reported a slump in Christmas sales
because of the severe weather.
Several victims of the cold snap, including HMV Group PLC
(HMV.LN), Mothercare PLC (MTC.LN) and Clinton Cards (CC.LN), have
issued profit warnings, in stark contrast with Sainsbury which
reported very strong sales in entertainment and clothing.
Kantar communications director Edward Garner said its
supermarket sales figures suggested the snow meant shoppers only
ventured out for essential groceries, but once at the supermarket
added non-food items like DVDs, toys and books to their basket
instead of going to high-street stores.
King agreed that grocers clearly got the best of the [snow], but
also pointed out that some "did a better job than others."
"In the weeks before Christmas we used 12,000 tons of salt, up
from 750 tons the year before," King said, adding "you didn't need
to be a victim of the snow if you prepared well enough."
At 0955 GMT, Sainsbury shares were down 1.3% or 5 pence at 385
pence in a slightly higher London market. Sainsbury shares have
risen around 17% in the last year, outperforming the market as it
grew ahead of its rivals and gained market share. Still, the shares
now trade at around a 17% premium to the sector, prompting a
general market view that the shares are relatively expensive and
may suffer some profit taking in the short term.
By Kathy Gordon, Dow Jones Newswires; 44-207-842-9293;
kathy.gordon@dowjones.com
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