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Woolies Dash sees strong growth

Published: 2024-02-28 09:42 +02:00 by Duncan McLeod tag: E-commerce

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Online sales in Woolworth’s Food division jumped 46.6% year on year, but that’s still below Checkers Sixty60’s performance.
Online sales in Woolworth’s Food division jumped 46.6% year on year in the 26 weeks to 26 December 2023, propelled by increased coverage of the retailer’s Woolies Dash on-demand delivery venture.

The first-half growth meant Woolworths Food contributed 5.1% to divisional South African sales.

The on-demand grocery shopping market in South Africa has ballooned in recent years, led by Shoprite Holdings’ market-leading Checkers Sixty60 app, which took off during the Covid-19 pandemic when consumers were encouraged to stay at home. At end-January, Shoprite reported half-year sales growth for Sixty60 of 63.1%.

The increasingly crowded market now has Checkers, Pick n Pay, Woolworths and Spar all jockeying for position

The increasingly crowded market now has Checkers, Pick n Pay, Woolworths and Spar all jockeying for position alongside the retailer-agnostic, Massmart-owned OneCart and the independent app Zulzi.

Meanwhile, in the Fashion, Beauty and Home category, Woolworths said it reported a 26.9% increase in online sales, contributing 5.4% to total South African sales.

At a group level, Woolworths reported a 7.5% fall in half-year earnings as consumers pulled back on discretionary spending and South Africa’s energy and logistics crisis persisted.

The food, fashion and beauty products retailer, which targets mid- to upper-income consumers, said its headline earnings per share from continuing operations fell to 203.3c from 219.9c a year earlier. For total operations, Heps declined by 31%.

Profits fall

Group turnover and concession sales from continuing operations, excluding retailer David Jones that it sold last year, rose 5.4% to R38.1-billion, or by 4.4% in constant currency terms. Profit before tax fell by 14.2% to R2.5-billion.

Woolworths said its results were impacted by an increasingly challenging macroeconomic backdrop, given the sustained effect of interest rate increases and higher living costs.

“This negatively impacted footfall, resulting in a greater-than-expected pullback in discretionary spend in both geographies,” it said, also referring to Australia.

Read: Online shopping key to Woolworths’ fight for affluent shoppers

In South Africa, business operations were further disrupted by higher levels of power cuts, congestion at ports due to equipment failures and the impact of Avian flu on the availability of key food product lines.

Read: Checkers Sixty60 grows sales by 63%

The port congestion curtailed turnover and concession sales growth at Woolworths’ fashion beauty and home business to 2.2% due to poor availability of products, in part due to the late arrival of certain summer ranges. – © 2024 NewsCentral Media, with additional reporting by Nqobile Dludla, © 2024 Reuters

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