British grocery sales get shot in the arm from vaccinated over-65s

Published Tue, Apr 27, 2021 · 07:18 AM

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    [LONDON] British grocery sales rose 6.5 per cent in the four weeks to April 18, with the rollout of Covid-19 vaccinations and partial relaxation of social restrictions encouraging older shoppers to return to physical stores, industry data showed on Tuesday.

    Market researcher Kantar said the four week period was the busiest in store for grocers in more than a year, and the number of trips made in April increased by 4 per cent compared to March.

    "With much of the over-65 community now vaccinated, older shoppers accounted for nearly half of the increased footfall," said Fraser McKevitt, head of retail and consumer insight at Kantar.

    In contrast, the number of people shopping online fell for the second consecutive month. Digital orders accounted for 13.9 per cent of grocery spend, down from a peak of 15.4 per cent in February.

    Kantar said the return to sales growth in the latest four-week period also reflected what was happening in April 2020.

    After the initial rush to stock up before Britain's first lockdown, this time last year was comparatively quiet. Shoppers chose to buy locally and minimise their trips to stores where possible, which is reflected in strong growth a year later.

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    "While the market may fluctuate between growth and decline in the months ahead, depending on the year-on-year comparison being made, the fact that trip numbers are up and basket sizes down suggests that habits are slowly returning to normal," said Mr McKevitt.

    Over the 12 weeks to April 18, Asda, with sales growth of 8.0 per cent, was the fastest growing of Britain's big four grocers for the first time in nearly two and a half years.

    Market leader Tesco's sales rose 6.4 per cent, with Sainsbury's up 6.0 per cent and Morrisons up 7.2 per cent.

    Kantar said grocery prices fell 0.3 per cent over the 12 week period.

    It said prices are rising fastest in markets such as chilled fruit juices and drinks, canned colas, and chocolate, while falling in bacon, vegetables, and toilet tissue.

    REUTERS

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