Tesco has said it will continue to lower grocery prices “wherever we can” while revealing a leap in sales and profits.
The UK’s biggest retailer said it expected the outlook for food inflation to continue to ease in the run-up to Christmas despite upward pressures remaining on shopping bills.
Experts have warned that higher oil prices and a weakening of the pound against the dollar, which makes imports more expensive, are a threat to consumer costs in the months ahead.
But Tesco said it was in a “strong position” to invest further in its prices and had taken market share from its largest rivals in the industry price war as it reported a 13.5% leap in adjusted operating profits for the first half of its financial year to £1.4bn.
As a result, the company said it was now expecting annual profits of between £2.6bn and £2.7bn by the same measure.
That was up from earlier guidance of about £2.5bn.
Like-for-like sales at its supermarkets were up 7.8% over the six months compared to the same period last year.
That figure rose to 8.7% solely for the UK.
‘Relentless focus on customers’
It added that sales volumes were higher than anticipated, with its Finest range seeing growth of 4.1% despite the squeeze on shoppers’ budgets amid the wider cost of living crisis.
Please use Chrome browser for a more accessible video player
Chief executive Ken Murphy said: “We know how challenging it is for many households across the country, as they continue to grapple with ongoing cost of living pressures.
“We are committed to doing everything we can to drive down food bills and Tesco is now consistently the cheapest full-line grocer.
Be the first to get Breaking News
Install the Sky News app for free
Read more:
Food prices ‘see first month-on-month fall for two years’
“This relentless focus on customers, combined with significant cost reductions from our ‘save to invest’ programme, has driven our strong performance in the first half of the year.
“Food inflation fell across the half and while external pressures remain, we expect that it will continue to do so in the second half of the year.
“We are in a strong position to keep investing for customers, and will continue to lower prices wherever we can – doing everything in our power to make sure customers can have a fantastic, affordable Christmas by shopping at Tesco.”
He told a call with analysts that Tesco was the most competitive on price than it had ever been.