Sarah Butler 

Sainsbury’s sales growth slows as poor weather hits non-food ranges

Euro 24 lifts TV sales at Argos but purchases of clothing, paddling pools and garden furniture fall
  
  

A shopper walks away from a Sainsbury's supermarket
Sainsbury’s says more customers are choosing its supermarkets for their big weekly shop. Photograph: Ben Stansall/AFP/Getty

Sainsbury’s has said sales growth slowed in recent weeks as food inflation eased and consumers shopped “more cautiously” amid poor weather and the cost of living crisis.

Sales at established stores rose 3% in the three months to 22 June compared with a rise of 4.8% in the previous quarter, excluding fuel and the impact of the closure of the group’s Irish Argos stores.

At Argos, sales fell by 6.2% in the quarter – worse than the 4.7% decline in the previous three months – despite selling 25% more TVs than a year before as sports fans prepared to watch the men’s Euro 2024 football tournament.

The retailer said the decline reflected “an unseasonal start to summer”, with cold and wet weather hitting sales of summer goods such as paddling pools and garden furniture that did well in a hot start to the summer last year.

Electronics sales were weaker amid softer demand, particularly games, in what it called “a tough trading backdrop”.

“Consumers continue to shop general merchandise more cautiously,” it said, adding that shoppers were responding where it had offered discounts.

Simon Roberts, the chief executive of Sainsbury’s, said consumers’ caution was “not surprising given everything households have been through in the cost of living crisis. Until we see sequential interest rate cuts, hopefully as soon as possible, that caution from consumers is going to continue on those more discretionary items.”

“People want more certainty that the cost of owning a home is going to come down,” he said.

UK inflation fell to 2% in May, returning to the official target rate for the first time in nearly three years.

Roberts said he thought inflation had now stabilised in the low single digits and Sainsbury’s was increasing prices at a slower pace than the wider grocery market. However, he said price rises would continue due to increasing wage bills and problems in the Red Sea where attacks on shipping have forced up costs and caused delays.

Roberts said he hoped a turn in the weather would release “pent up demand” for summer items. The group sold more electric fans during the warm spell in the last week of June than in the rest of the year so far and paddling pool sales have doubled.

Asked if he thought a change of government would boost trade, Roberts said he had been “really encouraged by the willingness to engage with business” from the two main parties in the election, adding that there was an “urgent need for reform of business rates” to support the retail industry.

Sainsbury’s said shoppers continued to buy more items of food than a year before but grocery sales growth fell to 4.8% from 7.3% in the previous quarter as inflation across the market eased.

Roberts said the group continued to win market share every month as more people chose its supermarkets for their big weekly shop.

The group’s online offering is proving particularly popular – 14% of sales were sold this way during the period, up 1 percentage point on the average last year – and there was an 80% rise in demand for its rapid delivery service.

Analysts said Sainsbury’s growth was in line with expectations as households continued to struggle with higher bills including energy, mortgages and rent.

“Given the unfavourable weather in the UK, weak performance in clothing was expected, especially as Sainsbury’s focuses more on assortment and less promotion,” said William Woods at Bernstein.

Sophie Lund-Yates, the lead equity analyst at Hargreaves Lansdown, said: “As inflation cools, the weather worsens and tough comparisons crop up on the course, eking out the amount of growth seen last year was always a difficult ask.

“But there is a lingering Sainsbury’s specific issue in its ownership of Argos. Electronics aren’t faring well in this economic climate as people prioritise the essentials.”

 

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