Tesco plunged to an annual loss of £6.4 billion ($9.5 billion) on Wednesday, the worst in its 96-year history, after shoppers deserted Britain’s biggest retailer and forced it to write down the value of its stores.
Hurt by an accounting scandal and a price war sparked by the march of discount groups Aldi and Lidl, the supermarket wrote down the value of its business by £7 billion to reflect restructuring charges and the lower sales its stores were making.
The statutory loss, which also includes stock writedowns, is one of the biggest in British corporate history.
Tesco’s trading profit was £1.4 billion, in line with company guidance but less than half of the £3.3 billion made the year before and a third straight year of decline.
The firm also revealed it had net debt of £8.5 billion and a net pension deficit of £3.9 billion. It has agreed a deal with the trustees to pay £270 million per year into the scheme to help make up the shortfall.
“The market is still challenging and we are not expecting any let up in the months ahead,” said Dave Lewis, a former Unilever executive who has impressed investors with his decisive action since he joined in September.
Analysts said the full-year results were broadly in line with expectations, but the writedown was larger than forecast.
Shares in the group were up 1.3 percent in early trading.
Tesco’s property writedown follows similar moves by rivals Sainsbury’s and Morrisons and reflects the deterioration in UK grocery market conditions in recent years.
It is on top of about 4 billion pounds of charges Tesco has taken over the last three years.
“If proof were needed that the retail world is changing, we just got it,” said John Ibbotson of the retail consultants, Retail Vision. “This is the official end of the Tesco era.
“The irony is that Tesco is on the right path. But there’s a long way to go yet.”
The results did show some signs of improvement, with like-for-like sales in its home market, excluding fuel and VAT, down 1.2 percent in the fourth quarter, from a fall of 4.4 percent in the previous three months.
Like-for-like volumes were up for the first time in over four years.
The group said trading conditions remained tough overseas where trading profit in Asia and Europe fell 15.3 percent and 31.1 percent respectively.
($1 = 0.6696 pounds)