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When supermarkets are superpowers

May 21, 2009 11:13

ByAlex Brummer, Alex Brummer

3 min read

As a sector, Britain’s grocers are having a good recession. While other firms, including the food suppliers, have been shedding jobs, the supermarket chains Tesco, J Sainsbury, Wm Morrison, Asda and Waitrose have been adding them. And although Marks & Spencer has had to reshape “Simply Food”, jettisoning some of the stores it bought from Somerfield as a job lot, its executive chairman Sir Stuart Rose believes that its food offering has turned the corner, and that same-store sales — the critical measure for retailers — will soon be expanding again.

The current strength of grocery shopping was highlighted in results from J Sainsbury, where former M&S food supremo Justin King has been responsible for an impressive turnaround. Overall sales climbed by 5.7 per cent to £20.4bn and profits climbed by 11.3 per cent to £543bn, largely on the back of sales of its “basics” range. The same trend towards cheaper eating during hard times has been seen from all the food chains.

But there is another side to food austerity and eating at home. It used to be the food suppliers who held the whip hand in dealings with the retailers. Grocery suppliers such as Unilever, Heinz, Cadbury and Premier Foods — with their global reach — could dictate terms to the retailers. But these days the global food chains such as Tesco and Wal-Mart, the owners of Asda, can be as powerful as their suppliers.

This is especially true in an age when consumers have placed a premium on organic and local produce and the supermarkets are the dominant partner in the relationship. When times are tough and price becomes increasingly important, the grocers use their buying power to battle the suppliers into submission.