Very little helps
Britain's biggest retailer announces its worst-ever results
By CR/RC
ONE way of trying to draw a line under a disastrous period of trading is to announce all the bad news in one go. It is called kitchen-sinking. This is what Tesco, Britain’s biggest retailer, did on April 22nd when it announced results for the year ending February 28th.
By any measure the figures were eye-popping, worse even than most analysts had expected of the struggling company. Tesco made the largest pre-tax loss, of £6.4 billion ($9.6 billion), in British retail history, eight times as much as the previous record, set by Morrisons last year. This was also the sixth-largest loss in the country’s corporate history. Most of it (about £4.7 billion) was due to a fall in the property value of Tesco’s British stores. This was not merely an accounting matter, but a sign of how its out-of-town hypermarkets have fallen out of favour with consumers who shop online or use smaller convenience stores. Underlying profits were 68% down on the previous year, at £961m, and overall sales were down by 1.8%. The stock that Tesco keeps in its warehouses is worth £570m less than previously thought, and the pension scheme is £3.89 billion in deficit. And so on.
This article appeared in the Britain section of the print edition under the headline "Very little helps"
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