UK Grocery Inflation Slows In January – Kantar

By Reuters
UK Grocery Inflation Slows In January – Kantar

British consumers received some relief to pressure on their budgets in January as a set-up in supermarket promotions meant grocery inflation edged lower following four straight months of rises, industry data showed on Tuesday.

Market researcher Kantar said annual grocery price inflation was 3.3% in the four weeks to 26 January, down from 3.7% in last month’s report.

Sales rose 4.3% over the period year-on-year.

It said the fall in inflation reflected an increased level of January promotions from supermarkets.

They rose year-on-year by £274 million, accounting for 27.2% of sales – the highest level in January since 2021.

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Kantar said prices are rising fastest in products such as chocolate confectionery, chilled smoothies and juices and butters and spreads, and are falling fastest in cooking sauces, household paper products and cat food.

Despite the January fall in food inflation, supermarkets have warned that tax rises in the new Labour government’s first budget in October – together with another rise in the national minimum wage – will be inflationary.

Prominent grocery industry researcher, the Institute of Grocery Distribution, has forecast that food inflation could hit nearly 4.9% in 2025.

Kantar noted that consumers turned to non-branded products to help keep costs down, with own-label as a proportion of total sales hitting a record high of 52.3% in January.

Market Share

Online supermarket Ocado was once again Britain’s fastest-growing retailer with sales up 11.3% year-on-year over the 12 weeks to 26 January.

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This was the ninth consecutive month of Ocado leading growth.

Market leader Tesco gained the most share, with its 28.5% share some 70 basis points higher year-on-year, with sales up 5.6%.

Sales at number-two retailer Sainsbury’s rose 4.2%.

Shares in Tesco were up 1%, Sainsbury’s was up 2.1% and Ocado was up 1.6%.

Number-three Asda remained the laggard, with sales down 5.2% and a 1-percentage-point loss of market share over the year.

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Las week, Asda’s new boss Allan Leighton launched a major round of price cuts in an attempt to kickstart a recovery.

Kantar noted that Marks & Spencer also performed well – with sales up 10.5% – though the researcher does not include the retailer in its market share data.

Shares in Marks & Spencer were up 2.3%.

Read More: Tesco UK To Cut 400 Jobs Across Stores And Head Office

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