US: Kroger profits plunge on charges

By: just-food.com | 9 March 2010

Kroger shares on concerns over Q4

Kroger shares on concerns over Q4

Profits at US grocer Kroger tumbled during 2009 due to impairment charges, soft sales and increased promotional activity.

Net earnings for fiscal 2009 totalled US$70m, down from $1.25bn a year ago.

The company said earnings were hit by asset impairment charges in southern California, booked during the third quarter. Excluding these items, profits would have fallen to $1.12bn.

Total sales rose 0.8% to $76.7bn. Excluding fuel, sales were up 2.9%, while identical sales gained 2.1%.

"Throughout 2009, Kroger successfully achieved identical sales growth, one of the key objectives of our business model," chairman and CEO David Dillon said.

"Through the efforts of all of our associates, we continue to widen the gap between Kroger's identical sales growth trends and those of most of our competitors," he insisted.

However, Kroger shares fell 2.45% in early trade this morning, declining to $22.34 at 9.40 am ET, on concerns over profits and the weakness of Kroger's fourth quarter.

During the final three months of 2009, Kroger saw net earnings fall to $255.4m from $349.2m last year. The company said that increased promotional activity and food deflation meant margins declined 214 basis points as US retailers increased competition around price.

Looking to the coming year, Kroger said it anticipated the structural issues that weighed on the business during the back half of 2009 would continue to have a negative impact.

“Inflation or deflation in product and operating costs, the competitive environment, fluctuating fuel margins, and the pace of the economic recovery are uncertain and cause Kroger to be cautious about its fiscal year 2010 forecast,” the company said.

Kroger predicted identical sales growth, excluding fuel, of 2-3% and net earnings are expected to range from $1.60 to $1.80 per share.

For the full earnings release click here and click here for Kroger's 2010 outlook.

Sectors: Retail

Companies: Kroger

View next/previous articles

Currently reading -

US: Kroger profits plunge on charges

There are currently no comments on this article

Be the first to comment on this article

Related research

Kroger Co., The - SWOT Analysis

Datamonitor's Kroger Co., The - SWOT Analysis company profile is the essential source for top-level company data and information. Kroger Co., The - SWOT Analysis examines the company’s key business structure and operations, history and products, and ...

Kroger Co in Retailing - World

Kroger is the leader in US supermarkets, a status it maintains through its Customer 1st strategy. While it cannot match Wal-Mart on price, Kroger invests in offering friendly service, fast checkouts and expanding its natural and premium food offer. K...

Company Financials The Kroger Co.

The Company Financials offers insights into the financial performance of the company over last five years for about 1000 leading global companies. The datapack covers wealth of financial information relating to income statement, balance sheet, and ca...

Related articles

The just-food management briefing - convenience stores - part I

Convenience stores are a dynamic part of the food retail sector worldwide. As consumers gain wealth, they lose time - making convenience retail increasingly attractive. The US has blazed the trail for c-stores and any examination of convenience store retail needs to begin there.

US: Private-equity firm "puts US retailer Bi-Lo up for sale"

US retailer Bi-Lo is reportedly up for sale after its private-equity owner Lone Star Funds decided to put the business on the block.

US: Kroger appoints new president of Dillon Food Stores

Joe Grieshaber has been appointed as president of Kroger's Dillon Food Stores division. He will replace John Bays, who is retiring after 42 years with the US grocery retailer.

Not a member? Join here

Decrease font sizeDecrease font sizeDecrease font size Increase font sizeIncrease font sizeIncrease font size Comment on this article Email this to a friend Print this page