UK’s second biggest supermarket says it will invest £500m to keep prices low as it reports fall in sales

The pressure on households will “only intensify” through the rest of this year, the boss of Sainsbury’s has warned as he said the supermarket would invest £500m in attempting to keep prices low.

The pledge came as the UK’s second biggest supermarket, which also owns the Argos and Habitat chains, revealed that sales at established stores fell 4% in the 16 weeks to 25 June compared with the same period a year before and excluding fuel. The slide was led by an 11% fall in sales of general merchandise and a 10% drop in sales of clothing. Grocery sales fell 2.4% year-on-year but were up nearly 9% on pre-pandemic levels.

Continue reading…

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You May Also Like

Mirror and Express publisher Reach to axe 200 roles in £30m cost-cutting drive

Newspaper group reports slump in print advertising and digital ads in traditionally…

Ukraine war briefing: Fraught path through US Congress for aid as Russia makes gains

Invaders breaking out and making headway in absence of US help, says…

Russia plans to recover wreckage of US drone downed over Black Sea

US says any recovery operation in such deep water would be difficult…

Aviva, Phoenix, ABI and Virgin Media O2 quit CBI, as PwC suspends activity over ‘multiple horrific allegations’ – business live

Insurance company Aviva says CBI ‘no longer able to fulfil its core…