British retailers count cost of brutal Christmas trading

Reuters  |  LONDON 

By and Paul Sandle

With parliament in deadlock less than three months before Britain leaves the European Union, consumer spending is fading fast, exposing the weakness of many major retailers who are having to work ever harder to win sales and also adapt to the migration to online

Many Britons reined in their spending in November before leaving it late to shop for gifts in December.

"This comes despite some retailers desperately attempting to generate sales through slashed pricing, which has seemingly not been enough to encourage shoppers," said Paul Martin, a at accountants

Trading updates released on Thursday showed that suffered another quarter of falling underlying sales in both clothing and food, while is looking for fresh funding after its sales tumbled.

John Lewis, the employee owned biggest department store, said demand for and women's clothing had enabled it to nudge up sales but its gross profit margins remained under pressure in the "intensely competitive pricing environment".

"I would say that on average the promotional activity was something in the region of 20 to 30 percent higher than last year," Paula Nickolds, of department stores, told reporters.

said the country's second biggest group would have to find another 80 million pounds of costs to cut in order to protect its profits after slashing prices.

"The market in general has been very, very competitive," he told reporters. https://tmsnrt.rs/2H2WRhy

STANDS FIRM

Tesco, Britain biggest retailer, emerged as one of the few winners from the festive period after its own-brand basic ranges combined with premium offerings to fend off rivals at the top and bottom of the market, and keep its tills ringing.

It attracted 125,000 more shoppers to its stores this than last, with December 23 the busiest Sunday in Tesco's history. In just one hour it served 766,000 customers.

The solid performance stood in contrast to rivals Sainsbury's and which both missed Christmas sales forecasts this week, hit by competition from German discounters and

Richard Hunter, at Interactive Investor, said had defied the gloom, but even it will need to continue to perform strongly to maintain its market rating.

"Prospects for the UK economic environment remain nebulous, with a nervous consumer potentially looking to shop on price alone," he said.

Britain's slowed after the 2016 Brexit referendum and looks to have lost more momentum in late 2018 as struggles to get parliament's support for her plan for a smooth exit from the

The British Consortium (BRC) said its members reported zero year-on-year total sales growth in December, the worst performance for the month since 2008. The flat figure compared with 1.4 percent growth in December 2017.

One of the worst performers was the bicycles-to-car parts retailer which cut its profit forecasts. Its shares fell 25 percent.

(Additional reporting by James Davey, and in London, and in Bengaluru; editing by Keith Weir)

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Thu, January 10 2019. 15:17 IST