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Tag: grocery retailing

  • Barclays to buy retail banking arm of supermarket chain Tesco for £600 million

    Barclays to buy retail banking arm of supermarket chain Tesco for £600 million

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    Tesco on Friday said it was selling the retailing banking business of Tesco Bank to Barclays for £600 million initially, and then another £100 million after the settlement of certain regulatory capital amounts and after transaction costs.

    The U.K. supermarket chain said it will use majority of a combined £1 billion, which also includes a special dividend previously announced from Tesco Bank, for a share buyback.

    It will retain insurance, ATMs, travel money and gift cards, that on a proforma basis account for roughly £80 million to £100 million in operating profit, and said the deal is mildly accretive to earnings per share.

    Barclays said it’s acquiring credit cards, unsecured personal loans, deposits and the operating infrastructure that includes £8.3 billion of unsecured lending balances with a credit quality consistent with its existing U.K. portfolios. The business it’s buying had an adjusted operating profit of approximately £85 million in the 12 months ended February 2023.

    Barclays also will enter into an exclusive strategic partnership with Tesco for an initial period of 10 years to market and distribute credit cards, unsecured personal loans and deposits using the Tesco brand, paying £50 million per year.

    Tesco
    TSCO,
    +0.89%

    shares have dropped 3% this year while Barclays
    BARC,
    -1.02%

    shares have declined by 7%.

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  • Wall Street is raising quarterly profit forecasts for the first time in two years, and executives are relaxing about recession prospects

    Wall Street is raising quarterly profit forecasts for the first time in two years, and executives are relaxing about recession prospects

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    After nearly two years of concerns about a recession, growing optimism about the economy is starting to filter down into Wall Street’s expectations for individual companies’ quarterly results, with analysts growing more upbeat about corporate profit in the months ahead

    While expectations for those quarterly results usually trend lower as earnings season arrives, analysts over the past two months have actually nudged their profit forecasts higher for the first time in two years, according to a FactSet report released Friday….

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  • Ocado to Receive GBP200 Mln in Settlement from AutoStore

    Ocado to Receive GBP200 Mln in Settlement from AutoStore

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    By Christian Moess Laursen

    Ocado Group said Monday that it has reached an agreement to settle all litigation with Norwegian peer AutoStore over e-commerce patent claims.

    The online grocer and retail-technology specialist said AutoStore will pay Ocado 200 million pounds ($257.1 million) in 24 monthly installments starting this month.

    The settlement includes a cross-licence of certain patents between the two companies, whereby they both have freedom to access and use technology covered by each other’s pre-2020 patents.

    The agreement gives access to part of each company’s patent portfolio for both of them to use or develop their own products, Ocado said.

    The settlement ends a three-year row that started in 2020, when AutoStore filed a claim for patent infringement against Ocado regarding e-commerce tech.

    Write to Christian Moess Laursen at christian.moess@wsj.com

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  • Casino Receives Offers to Strengthen Capital Base

    Casino Receives Offers to Strengthen Capital Base

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    By Mauro Orru

    Casino Guichard-Perrachon said it has received two proposals to strengthen its capital base, a day after the group warned it could default on part of its debt.

    The French grocer said Tuesday that one proposal came from EP Global Commerce and Fimalac, and the second from 3F Holding. Casino said it would analyze the two proposals and put them to creditors on Wednesday, when it expects to disclose details of the offers.

    Casino has for months been grappling with high debt and has entered talks with creditors to ensure it has enough funding available. Last week, the group said it was seeking to raise at least 900 million euros ($982.2 million) to deliver its midterm targets.

    “Casino’s governance bodies will not take any decision relating to such proposals until they have been presented and discussed with the creditors under the aegis of the conciliators,” the group said in a statement.

    On Monday, the company said it had fully drawn its revolving credit line at the end of June, with the ratio of gross secured debt to earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation, and amortization after lease payments expected to exceed a cap that is closely watched by investors.

    The company warned it could be in default under its revolving credit line by the end of August, “which would result in a cross-default in respect of a part of its financial debt at the level of its operating subsidiaries.”

    Write to Mauro Orru at mauro.orru@wsj.com; @MauroOrru94

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  • Sainsbury’s Backs FY24 View

    Sainsbury’s Backs FY24 View

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    J. Sainsbury sees same-store sales rise 9.8% in first quarter, backs 2024 view

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  • Casino Shares Plunge After Warning of Potential Debt Default

    Casino Shares Plunge After Warning of Potential Debt Default

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    By Mauro Orru

    Shares of Casino Guichard-Perrachon slumped in early Monday trading after the French grocer said it could default on part of its debt.

    At 0750 GMT, Casino shares traded 15% lower at EUR3.45.

    The group said that with its revolving credit line be fully drawn at the end of June, the ratio of gross secured debt to earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation, and amortization after lease payments is expected to exceed a cap that is closely watched by investors.

    The company said it could be in default under its revolving credit line by the end of August, “which would result in a cross-default in respect of a part of its financial debt at the level of its operating subsidiaries.”

    Casino has for months been grappling with high debt and entered talks with creditors to ensure it has enough funding available. Last week, the group said it was seeking to raise at least 900 million euros ($982.2 million) to deliver its midterm targets.

    Write to Mauro Orru at mauro.orru@wsj.com; @MauroOrru94

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  • ‘Greedflation’ is replacing inflation as companies raise prices for bigger profits, report finds

    ‘Greedflation’ is replacing inflation as companies raise prices for bigger profits, report finds

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    That’s the practice by many S&P 500 food and consumer companies of raising prices to protect what a new report calls their “cushioned corporate profits,” and it has enabled them to boost margins through the current inflationary period.

    Companies including Kimberly-Clark Corp.
    KMB,
    -0.45%
    ,
    PepsiCo Inc.
    PEP,
    -0.18%
    ,
    General Mills Inc.
    GIS,
    -0.88%

    and Tyson Foods Inc.
    TSN,
    -0.36%

    have on recent earnings calls touted their ability to raise prices, earning tidy profits and rewarding their shareholders as they go, according to the report from Accountable.US, a liberal-leaning consumer-advocacy group.

    And they have signaled their intention to continue to take “price actions” even as the Federal Reserve has hiked interest rates an unprecedented 10 times in an effort to tame inflation.

    “Higher interest rates haven’t stopped S&P companies, especially in the big food industry, from raising consumer prices despite reporting billions in extra net earnings and over a trillion dollars in new giveaways to wealthy investors,” said Liz Zelnick, director of economic security and corporate power at Accountable.US.

    “Corporate greed is a stubborn thing and requires serious action from Congress. The Fed has not seen an adequate return on its investment in a policy that has already created fissures in the economy that could lead to recession. It’s just not worth it,” she said. 

    Now read: Skip, pause or hike? A guide to what is expected from the Fed on Wednesday.

    Accountable.US is not alone in calling out price hikes on essentials including food. Walmart Inc.
    WMT,
    +0.73%

    is also unhappy with packaged-food companies that have steadily raised prices in dry grocery and consumable goods, according to a recent report from research company CFRA.

    “Given Walmart’s enormous bargaining power over its suppliers, we expect the retail giant to push back on further price increases from its packaged-food suppliers,” he said. That is expected to hurt margins, especially if volume growth does not recover.

    For more, see: Inflation in goods from cereal to soup has given a boost to consumer food stocks. Can Walmart help bring prices, both food and stock, down?

    May inflation data released Tuesday found that food prices were up 0.2% from April, after remaining flat for the previous two months. Food prices are up 6.7% over the last year. The food-at-home index is up 5.8% over the last year, while the index for cereals and bakery products is up 10.7%.

    Food prices started to rise about two years ago, when supply-chain issues and higher fuel and commodity prices led companies to pass some of those costs on to customers.

    But companies appear determined to raise prices even more, despite a decline in shipping and gas costs. Gasoline was down 5.6% in May from April and fuel oil fell 7.7%, according to consumer-price-index figures.

    Also read: U.S. inflation slows again, CPI shows, and might keep Fed on sidelines

    Kimberly-Clark executives told analysts on its recent earnings call that the company is able to “rapidly implement broad pricing actions” and acknowledged that “pricing has continued to be a big driver behind our top-line growth.”

    The company’s first-quarter earnings topped expectations and it raised guidance for the full year. That’s after it raised prices by 10% for a second straight quarter, driving margins wider by 340 basis points.

    Shareholders were rewarded to the tune of $425 million during the quarter, the Accountable.US report notes.

    See also: Colgate-Palmolive’s stock pops after earnings beat as company raises prices by double-digit percentage

    PepsiCo Chief Executive Ramon Laguarta told analysts on that company’s recent earnings call that most of its price increases are behind it.

    However, he said, “obviously, there are some markets, highly inflationary markets around the world, where we might have to take additional pricing. If you think about Argentina, Turkey, Egypt — those kinds of markets where the currencies are suffering. But the majority of our pricing is already done,” he said, according to a FactSet transcript.

    PepsiCo’s 2022 earnings rose 16.9% to nearly $9 billion, and it spent more than $7.6 billion on stock buybacks and dividends, with the former up 1,313% from 2021.

    General Mills, meanwhile, bragged about “getting smart about how we look at pricing” on its recent call. The parent of brands including Cheerios, Nature Valley, Blue Buffalo pet products and Pillsbury raised its fiscal 2023 guidance in February.

    And Tyson executives touted the “significant pricing power of our portfolio with a year-over-year increase of 7.6%.” Tyson’s latest quarter included a surprise loss, as it was hit by weak demand for meat, along with plant closures and job cuts.

    For more, see: Tyson Foods stock slides after meat producer swings to surprise loss

    But Tyson had net income of over $3.2 billion in 2022, up from $3 billion in 2021, and it rewarded shareholders with $1.35 billion in buybacks and dividends.

    For Accountable.US, it’s more compelling evidence that the Fed’s rate-hike strategy “has failed to root out one of the main drivers of inflation and should give the [Federal Open Market Committee] pause before lifting rates again this week to the detriment of jobs and the economy.”

    The Consumer Staples Select Sector SPDR exchange-traded fund
    XLP,
    +0.36%

    has fallen 1.6% to date in 2023, while the SPDR S&P Retail ETF
    XRT,
    +1.89%

    has gained 4.6%. The S&P 500
    SPX,
    +0.62%

    has gained 13% in the same period.

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