Tesco posts rising sales as grocery giant boosted by Booker
Tesco has reported rising half-year sales and profits as the supermarket received a boost from its takeover of wholesaler Booker.
Britain’s biggest retailer delivered its 11th quarter in a row of rising UK and Ireland like-for-like sales, with a marked improvement to 4.2% over the past three months.
In the UK alone, comparable sales were up 2.3% in the second quarter.
The chain said group-wide underlying operating profits lifted 24.4% to £933 million in the first half. Statutory group pre-tax profits rose 2% to £564 million, or 2.2% higher on a constant currency basis.
In the UK and Ireland, Tesco booked a 47.6% jump in operating profits to £685 million, £97 million of which was linked to Booker.
Dave Lewis, chief executive of Tesco, said: “We have made a good start to the year.
“The step up in the second quarter is driven mainly by the UK & Republic of Ireland and delivers our eleventh consecutive quarter of growth.
“At the same time, we have made further strategic progress. We completed our merger with Booker in March and are delighted with performance so far.”
Tesco finalised the £3.7 billion deal earlier this year, and the group has been moving quickly to integrate the two businesses.
However, Tesco saw statutory operating profit fall 6.5% to £819 million as it booked exceptional costs linked to the closure of its non-food online business Tesco Direct.
The group recently launched a new discount store format – Jack’s – as it aims to take on German discounters Aldi and Lidl, which have eaten into the market share of Britain’s so-called “big four” supermarkets.
It is one of a number of initiatives Mr Lewis has launched to retain market dominance.
He added: “We announced a strategic alliance with Carrefour in July which goes live this month.
“And we are now more than half-way through the biggest own brand re-launch in our nearly 100-year history, including a significant investment in over 300 new ‘Exclusively at Tesco’ products at market-leading prices.”