Sales momentum remains weak across the grocery industry, with headline growth of +2.3% over the last four weeks, according to data released by Nielsen.
However, despite the slow start to Christmas spending, Nielsen is predicting that grocery shoppers will spend £7 billion in the crucial two-week period (ending 29th December). As Christmas Eve lands on a Monday this year, it’s all still to play for, with potential growth of 4% compared with the same period last year if predictions are met.
The slow start to Christmas trading in 2018 has not been helped by shoppers being concerned about their personal finances: 43% feel that it’s not a good time to spend.* However, while consumer confidence is not very strong when it comes to big ticket items, retailers should be comforted by the fact that people are more willing to spend on food and drink.
As for category growth, it seems shoppers are gearing up for a festive and indulgent family Christmas with gin, pre-mixed alcoholic drinks, salty snacks (such as pretzels), hampers and lower alcohol beers all displaying strong growth at supermarkets in recent weeks.**
Mike Watkins, Nielsen’s UK head of retailer insight, said: “It’s been a slow start to Christmas in 2018, and in particular for the grocery multiples. The good news is that we still expect shoppers to spend on seasonal treats and indulgences as well as premium food and drink when shopping and to enjoy the festive season with family and friends. This will provide some much-needed sales momentum in particular for the big supermarkets.
Watkins concluded: “Retailers have been putting a real focus on increasing the frequency of visits that shoppers make to stores. The ‘little and often’ shopping trend is just as important at Christmas and, as shoppers tend to expand their store repertoire at this time of year, now is the time for retailers to take the opportunity in the lead up to the holidays to make sure they’ve got all the festive favourites stocked alongside attractive offers.”
In terms of retailer performance among the big four supermarkets, Asda was the fastest growing store (+1.5%). Morrison’s growth was flat (0%), while Tesco and Sainsbury’s were slightly down (-0.1% and -0.4% respectively).
Table: 12-weekly % share of grocery market spend by retailer and value sales % change
The figures in the table are based on 12 weeks sales through to 1st December 2018 compared with the same 12 week period in 2017
Source: Nielsen Total Till, Nielsen Homescan.
The Nielsen scanning service measures total store sales every week by SKU for 20,000 shops across all food and drink trade channels in GB. This uses the actual EPOS data from retailers, thus, Scantrack is the most robust and reliable measure of FMCG sales and is integrated with Homescan for the key indicators of retailer performance. The total market measured is £145bn per annum. ‘Grocery Multiples’ is a defined sub-set of the major supermarkets that also includes all food sales from Marks and Spencer (but excludes Aldi and Lidl). The Grocery Multiples account for over £120bn of all GB food, drink and supermarket general merchandise sales.