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Tesco's troubles can turn around

March 29, 2012 14:56

By

Alex Brummer,

Alex Brummer

3 min read

Tesco may have run out of Jewish chief executives but as a supermarket group it has remained true to its roots. And I am not just referring to its large stashes of discount matzah at this time of year.

A guiding principle of the business that can be traced back to its founder, Sir Jack Cohen and his late sons-in-law, Hyman Kreitman and Sir Leslie Porter is the group's belief in owning the premises from where it does business.

This belief that Tesco is as much a property company as a grocer was handed down to their successor Lord MacLaurin and those who followed, Sir Terry Leahy and now Philip Clarke.

Leahy has made it clear that one of the secrets of the company's success under his leadership, when it outpaced all its competitors, was its belief in land. It was, for instance, the anticipation of the public's interest in large, edge-of-town stores that allowed it to leap over is competitors over the past two decades to win 30 per cent of the UK grocery market.

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