Sainsbury’s stuck to its full-year guidance as the supermarket group reported a 23% increase in first-half profit boosted by higher grocery sales and cost cuts.
Underlying pretax profit for the six months to 18 September rose to ยฃ371m from ยฃ301m a year earlier as group sales increased 5.9% to ยฃ17.53bn. Excluding fuel, retail sales rose 0.2% to ยฃ14.87bn.
Sainsbury’s reiterated its guidance for underlying pretax profit of at least ยฃ660m for the year to the end of March. The interim dividend was unchanged at 3.2p a share.
The FTSE 100 company said it increased market share as grocery sales rose 0.8% to ยฃ11.3bn. Sales of general merchandise, which includes Argos, dropped 5.8% to ยฃ3.1bn from a year earlier when shoppers were buying household goods during lockdowns.
Clothing sales rose by one-third to ยฃ0.5bn as people returned to work and school and fuel sales increased by 63% as petrol prices increased and motorists returned to the roads.
Sainsbury’s said it cut costs by closing 37 standalone Argos stores in the first half, closing food counters and introducing more self-checkout tills. The company said it was confident about dealing with supply-chain problems and a shortage of workers exacerbated by Brexit.
Simon Roberts, Sainsbury’s chief executive, said: “We are making good progress delivering our plan to put food back at the heart of Sainsbury’s. Our industry faces labour and supply chain challenges. However our scale, advanced cost saving programme, logistics operations and strong supplier relationships put us in a good position as we head into Christmas.”




