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Morrisons sales are growing for the first time in 4 years

Jan 12, 2016, 13:17 IST

Torn flags fly in the wind outside a Morrisons supermarket in Liverpool, northern England March 12, 2015.REUTERS/Phil Noble

David Potts, the CEO drafted in to turn around ailing Morrisons last March, says the supermarket had "an improved trading performance over the Christmas period."

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The supermarket reported its first positive sales growth in 4 years, with a 0.2% improvement beating City forecasts of a 2% decline.

But profit for the year is set to be worse than last year, when it plummeted 52% for the supermarkets worst performance in 8 years.

Still, the key takeaway from Morrisons' festive trading update, released on Tuesday, is that while things may still be tough, there is some improvement.

Here are the key numbers from the update, covering the 9 weeks to January 4:

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  • Like-for-like sales (only counting sales from stores that were open this time last year) up 0.2%, or down 0.6% excluding fuel;
  • Like-for-like transactions down 1.6%;
  • Like-for-like items per basket down 1.1%;
  • Online sales up 100% on last year, although from a small base - it contributed just 0.9% to sales growth;
  • Deflation, excluding fuel, of 3.7% due to aggressive price cuts;
  • 800 head office jobs cut;
  • 7 further stores slated for closure;
  • Year-end net debt target cut from £1.9 billion-£2.1 billion to £1.65 billion-£1.8 billion;
  • Restructuring costs for the year forecast at £60 million;
  • Pre-tax profit forecast for the year of £295 million-£310 million, down from £345 million last year;

The overall picture is that Morrisons may have finally found the bottom for declining sales, reversing the trend by slashing prices and closing underperforming stores. Morrisons recently sold off its struggling convenience store business M Local and is cutting staff.

The 0.2% improvement in sales over Christmas compares to a 2.4% drop in the second quarter and a 2.6% fall in the third quarter - so it looks like things are improving. The sales performance also beat City forecasts.

Analysts at Jefferies say this morning that the results "suggest we are at a turn" and say "the group appears in great shape to deliver from here."

Potts says:

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