Showing posts with label Tesco. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Tesco. Show all posts

Tuesday, 16 December 2014

Argos meets online challenge this Christmas with 'click and collect'


IBTimes UK: Argos-meets-online-challenge-this-christmas-click-collect

IBTimes UK Video Link: Argos Meets Online Retail Challenge This Xmas


Christmas present spending has hit an even greater excess this year, an estimated £350 per person and £604 per household in total, by far the largest of any European country (Figure 1).

Black Friday, yet another US consumer import of dubious merit to these shores, has fuelled a high street spending frenzy akin to that of Amazonian piranhas swarming to feed on a hapless victim.

1: British Spend Big At Christmas



Source: ING



While this might sound like the best of times for the retail sector, in reality this is far from the truth.

One only has to look at the ongoing woes of supermarket giant Tesco (LSE code TSCO), now 50% down for the year after four successive profit warnings (Figure 2).

2. The Fall and Fall of Tesco



Source: Bloomberg

Surviving the internet's deflationary effect


But why is that? As always, UK shoppers are demanding ever-better prices on food and non-food goods alike – and we have become savvy as to the price-cutting powers of online price comparison sites like PriceRunner and Kelkoo, allowing us to sniff out the cheapest prices for all manner of goods, electrical or otherwise.

Equally well, access to online shopping sites while at work in front of our computer screens is very tempting for time-poor employees, and a boon for online retailers such as Amazon, eBay and Boohoo.

This shift in shopping patterns has evidently boosted online shopping to the detriment of traditional high street footfall, with online shopping posting 12% growth and hitting over £70bn this year, according to eMarketer (Figure 3).
 
3. Online Ecommerce Sales Over £70bn in 2014



Source: eMarketer.com

Of course, this has not been bad news for all retailers – some traditional high street chains have in fact evolved quickly to meet the online challenge head-on.


One such successful shift in business model towards the "Click and Collect" online shopping paradigm has been Argos, whose listed mother company is Home Retail (code: HOME), with a total of 44% of sales at Argos are now ordered online (Figure 4).

4. Argos Reaps the Benefits of Click and Collect Shopping


Source: Home Retail Group

Fashion retailers bounce back on colder weather?


A second retail subsector that could see better times ahead are clothing chains, who suffered up to November from unseasonal warm weather, slowing sales of their higher-ticket winter items such as coats and boots.

With the current cold snap and the threat of sub-zero temperatures and snow to come, warm weather clothes sales should pick up sharply, with better like-for-like sales expected in January as a result.

This could fuel a bounce in the share prices of high street chains like Next (code: NXT), Marks & Spencer (MKS) and Associated British Foods (ABF; the owners of Primark) and also in smaller, fashion-oriented retailers such as French Connection (FCCN).

Bargains aplenty even before January sales


At this time of year, with Christmas fast approaching and retailers worrying more and more about shifting their inventory sitting on shop shelves, we can play a game of retail chicken.

We the consumers need to buy Christmas presents before Christmas, while the retailers are increasingly worried that they will be stuck with lots of unsold goods post December 25. Who blinks first?

Generally, shops tend to lose this game and discount goods to reduce inventories, increasingly offering discounts even before Christmas to reduce their risk of having to offer even larger discounts in the January sales.

Which of course is good news for those of us who wait until the last minute to complete our present buying.

This year looks likely to be a good one for last-minute bargain hunters, particularly in electronics and clothing.

For cheaper online purchases, I would recommend looking at discount voucher websites such as Vouchercodes.co.uk and Moneysavingexpert.com.

Alternatively, consider snapping up good value shares in retailers such as Next and Home Retail, in advance of potentially upbeat January trading statements.


Tuesday, 9 December 2014

Quoted on Reuters: FTSE Tumbles on Tesco Turmoil


(Reuters) - The FTSE 100 fell to one-month lows on Tuesday, hit by supermarket retailer Tesco's (TSCO.L) fourth profit warning this year.

Shares in Tesco at one stage fell as much as 17 percent to their lowest in around 14 years, wiping some 2.6 billion pounds off the firm's market capitalisation. It later regained some ground to close 6.6 percent lower.

Tesco blamed its lower profit forecast on the cost of trying to recover from an accounting scandal and a slide in its market share.

The stock's decline also dragged down rivals such as WM Morrison (MRW.L), which retreated by 4.4 percent, and Sainsbury (SBRY.L), which fell 1.8 percent.

"It would be appear to be more of the same for Tesco. We all know that pricing pressure on retailers is intense, in particular on clothing retailers and supermarkets," said Edmund Shing, global equity portfolio manager at BCS Asset Management.

"However, this may be the last 'big bath' provisioning and resetting of forecasts by the new CEO so that Tesco can relaunch on a sensible footing."

Tesco took the most points off the blue-chip FTSE 100 index .FTSE, which ended 2.1 percent down at 6,529.47 points -- near its lowest in a month. The FTSE also suffered its biggest one-day fall since a 2.8 percent drop on October 15.

A further slump in mining and energy shares also weighed on the market. Energy stocks fell as the price of benchmark Brent crude oil touched five-year lows. A supply glut is building as Gulf producers looked ready to ride out plunging prices.

Mining stocks were also hit as aluminium dropped to multi-month lows in London and Shanghai on concerns over excess supply. Other base metals fell before China, the world's top metals consumer, releases data that is expected to show economic growth is slowing.

But specialist gold mining stocks benefited as the uncertain economic climate drove up the price of gold XAU=, with Randgold Resources (RRS.L) rising 3.6 percent.

In spite of the market pullback, Charles Hanover Investments' partner Dafydd Davies still expected the FTSE to rally to 6,800 points by the end of 2014. He said plans by central bankers to stimulate global economic growth would continue to support equities.

(Additional reporting by Atul Prakash and Francesco Canepa; Editing by Catherine Evans)