Greggs profits slide due to hot weather and cautious customers

Greggs has revealed a slump in profits as it was knocked by hot weather and caution among shoppers over their finances.
The boss of the high street bakery chain said that many consumers are โsaving rather than spendingโ due to continued pressure on their household finances.
The Newcastle-based business revealed that pre-tax profits fell by 14.3% to ยฃ63.5 million for the half-year to June 28, compared to a year earlier.
It said the first half of 2025 was impacted by โchallenging market footfall, more weather disruption than in 2024โ and increased costs.
Earlier this month, Greggs told shareholders that soaring temperatures in June dragged on demand for its hot food over the month.
On Tuesday, the group added that it was also affected by heavy snow and strong winds in January.
Roisin Currie, chief executive of Greggs, told the PA news agency that it has experienced โchallengingโ conditions on the high street this year.
โIf you look at all the consumer confidence data, it remains low and points to cautious and fragile customers,โ she said.
โThey are saving rather than spending and that means they arenโt out and about on the high street as much.
โCustomers are worried about their finances and being very careful about their spending, but we do think Greggs is in a positive position because of our strong value offer.โ
The retail business said sales still grew by 7% to ยฃ1.03 billion for the half-year, as it was buoyed by new stores.
Greggs said like-for-like sales across company-managed stores grew 2.6%, with 4.8% growth across franchise sites.
Ms Currie also said the business still believes it can expand to โsignificantly more than 3,000โ sites across the UK.
In the latest half-year, Greggs opened 87 new stores but also shut 56 sites, leaving it with an estate of 2,649 shops at the end of June.
It said it is on track for between 140 and 150 net new shop openings this year, with more store openings weighted to the second half of 2025.
Ms Currie added: โAfter a challenging start to 2025 we remain clear on the strategic opportunities that lie ahead.
โThrough our disciplined estate expansion and focus on innovation, Greggs is evolving its offer further and making the brand more convenient for a wider range of customers.
โThe outlook for cost inflation is unchanged and we are making great progress in building the supply chain infrastructure that will support the next phase of growth.โ
Mark Crouch, market analyst at EToro, said: โGreggs has long been a reliable read on the UK high street.
โIts sudden stumble suggests consumers may not just be cooling on sausage rolls, but that appetite across the high street may be waning more broadly.
โWith inflation easing and real wages recovering, the macro backdrop should, in theory, be supportive. That it isnโt showing up in Greggsโ numbers is a red flag.โ
Greggs shares were 2.2% lower in early trading on Tuesday.