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Five Waitrose stores to close after John Lewis issues warning on profits Five Waitrose stores to close after John Lewis issues warning on profits
(about 2 hours later)
The John Lewis Partnership has said it will make no profit in the first six months of this year and is to close five Waitrose stores as tough trading on the high street takes its toll.The John Lewis Partnership has said it will make no profit in the first six months of this year and is to close five Waitrose stores as tough trading on the high street takes its toll.
The group said its full-year profits, to be announced next March, will also be substantially lower than last year. It operates 50 John Lewis outlets and 350 Waitrose shops. The group, which operates 50 John Lewis department stores and 350 Waitrose shops, said full-year profits for the year to January 2019 will also be substantially lower than last year.
JLP blamed market uncertainty and cited significant extra costs as a result of greater IT investment, which would be the main cause of the profit decline. JLP blamed the likely fall on market uncertainty and significant extra costs as it invests in IT and suffers the pinch from Brexit-fuelled inflation, at a time when it has been forced to cut prices because of widespread discounting by ailing competitors.
Waitrose will shut four convenience shops and one small supermarket, affecting about 200 staff. The four convenience stores are being sold to the Co-Op. The group said it would be gradually slimming down its high street presence over time, beginning with the sale of four Little Waitrose convenience stores to the Co-op and the chain’s supermarket on Camden high street, north London, to Aldi, which will affect about 200 staff.
Sir Charlie Mayfield, the JLP chair, said: “It is very important that we feel the jeopardy of what is happening right now. This isn’t a blip, it is a major shift and it has a while to run.” The convenience stores changing hands are in Spinningfields and near Piccadilly station in Manchester, Colmore Row in Birmingham and Portman Square in central London.
While John Lewis said it had no plans to carry out the kind of mass closures happening at rivals House of Fraser and Marks & Spencer, at least two department stores are also to be slimmed down in size – including Peterborough – as the retailer said it would potentially lease out spare space to other retailers.
Sir Charlie Mayfield, the JLP chair, said the difficulties currently being experienced on the high street were not short term: “It is very important that we feel the jeopardy of what is happening right now. This isn’t a blip, it is a major shift and it has a while to run.”
Waitrose is expected to see profit growth, but that will be offset by a decline at John Lewis.Waitrose is expected to see profit growth, but that will be offset by a decline at John Lewis.
The group said: “It is widely acknowledged that the retail sector is going through a period of generational change and every retailer’s response will be different. For the partnership, the focus is on greater differentiation, not scale.”The group said: “It is widely acknowledged that the retail sector is going through a period of generational change and every retailer’s response will be different. For the partnership, the focus is on greater differentiation, not scale.”
The stores are to change their branding from John Lewis’s trademark green and white and Waitrose’s lime and grey to black and white. “We have clear plans to build on our strengths and to sharpen our points of difference in both Waitrose and John Lewis,” JLP said. The stores are to change their branding over the next five years so that both chains include “& partners” in the name.
John Lewis will ditch its trademark green and white and Waitrose its lime and grey in favour of black and white livery. The change, which will kick off in September, is intended to highlight increased emphasis on service from its employee owners as a way to fight off competition.
Mayfield said John Lewis was aiming to build on its differences, with more own-label and exclusive brands as well as improved services such as personal shoppers in the department stores and trained baristas or diet experts in the supermarkets.
“We are determined to be innovators and disruptors in this market,” he said. “This is no time to bring the legions closer to Rome. You can’t win defensively but by developing newness and innovation.”
In order to fund revamped stores, online and IT development and lower prices with £400m to £500m of investment a year, the group will be cutting costs at head office, stopping investment in new stores and reining in marketing spending.
Retailers have been hammered by rising costs and falling consumer confidence, with several high-profile casualties this year resulting in hundreds of store closures. A number of store chains, including House of Fraser, New Look, Carpetright and Mothercare are closing stores, with thousands of jobs at risk, as a result of higher costs and a sea change in shopping habits as more sales move online.Retailers have been hammered by rising costs and falling consumer confidence, with several high-profile casualties this year resulting in hundreds of store closures. A number of store chains, including House of Fraser, New Look, Carpetright and Mothercare are closing stores, with thousands of jobs at risk, as a result of higher costs and a sea change in shopping habits as more sales move online.
John LewisJohn Lewis
WaitroseWaitrose
Retail industryRetail industry
Profit warnings
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