Supermarket giant Tesco on Wednesday took 1.2 billion pounds ($1.8 billion) hit from its failed U.S. division Fresh & Easy, sparking the first drop in annual profits in almost two decades, and confirmed its exit from the United States.
Net profits slumped 95 percent to 124 million pounds in its 2012/2013 financial year, from 2.806 billion pounds last time around, Tesco said in a results statement. Revenue edged 1.4 percent higher to 64.83 billion pounds.
Earnings dived as Britain’s biggest retailer also booked a 804-million-pound writedown on the value of its property portfolio in Britain.
The London-listed supermarket also took a 495-million-pound goodwill writedown for its operations in Poland, the Czech Republic and Turkey.
Pre-tax profits collapsed 51.5 percent to 1.96 billion pounds in the 52 weeks to February 23, as Tesco was also rocked by “deteriorating” economic conditions in Europe and regulatory restrictions in South Korea.
Tesco, which has struggled in recent times in its home market Britain and abroad, added that its performance was also dented by an investment plan that was aimed at turning around its domestic business.
“The announcements made today are natural consequences of the strategic changes we first began over a year ago and which conclude today,” said chief executive Philip Clarke in the results statement.
He added: “We have set the business on the right track to deliver realistic, sustainable and attractive returns and long-term growth for shareholders.
“The consequences are non-cash write-offs relating to the United States, from which we today confirm our decision to exit, and for U.K. property investments which we will not pursue because of our fundamentally different approach to space.”
“We have also faced external challenges which have affected our performance, notably in Europe and Korea.
“Our focus now is on disciplined and targeted investment in those markets with significant growth potential and the opportunity to deliver strong returns.”
Tesco had already signalled its intention to exit the United States in November. It said on Wednesday that it would not retain any part of the business but has not yet finalized its disposal plans.
(AFP)