Morrisons reveals ยฃ381m annual loss but hails solid festive trading


Supermarket Morrisons has revealed annual losses of ยฃ381 million after hefty borrowing costs but enjoyed a resurgent sales performance over Christmas.

The UKโ€™s fifth largest grocery chain reported a ยฃ381 million pre-tax loss for the year to October 26 after it faced a ยฃ281 million interest bill on its debt mountain, although it said this was narrowed from losses of ยฃ414 million in 2023-24.

The group โ€“ owned by US private equity firm Clayton, Dubilier & Rice โ€“ said it cut debts by 10% over the year, but still ended 2024-25 with a ยฃ3.1 billion debt pile.

Morrisons added that on an underlying basis and stripping out costs such as debt interest, its earnings remained flat at ยฃ835 million, with progress held back by rising costs and a cyber incident that caused an IT systems outage just before Christmas 2024, impacting product availability.

The group said measures in the 2024 budget, such as last Aprilโ€™s national insurance contributions tax hike and minimum wage rise, sent costs surging by ยฃ200 million in the past financial year.

It said it cut costs by ยฃ233 million in the year to October 26 and is making further savings over the current financial year to meet its ยฃ1 billion target.

This is not set to include job losses among its 95,000-strong workforce, although bosses said the group would not replace some workers as they left in an effort to make savings and as it rolls out initiatives such as electronic shelf price tags.

Over Christmas, the firm said like-for-like sales growth picked up to 3.4% in the crucial six weeks to January 4, helped by strong demand for its own-brand premium range, which saw sales jump 17.4%.

It cheered a โ€œgood performance in a competitive marketโ€, with non-food sales also up 10% and its clothing range seeing a 4.7% increase over the Christmas period.

The festive sales jump marked an improvement on trading in the full year to October, when like-for-like sales lifted 2.8%, with growth slowing to 2.4% in the final quarter.

Rami Baitieh, chief executive of Morrisons, said: โ€œIn a year when consumers were feeling the squeeze, we grew like-for-like sales for a 12th consecutive quarter, maintained Ebitda (earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation, and amortisation) and our market share.โ€

He said the results โ€œdemonstrated our resilience in the face of some tough external headwinds, from the cyber incident, rising inflation and Government cost increases, which we worked hard to offsetโ€.

Mr Baitieh added: โ€œWe had a good Christmas in 2025, providing a solid foundation for the first quarter.

โ€œAs we enter 2026, the grocery market remains competitive and we are committed to our focus on delivering good value and keeping prices low for customers.โ€

He said consumers were under pressure at the end of last year, with โ€œthe impact of the Government cost increases, with inflation and budget uncertainty all weighing on customer sentimentโ€ and added consumer confidence was still โ€œnot at its bestโ€ in 2026.

Recent industry data from Worldpanel suggested Morrisonsโ€™s market share slipped over Christmas, to 8.5% in the 12 weeks to December 28, down from 8.6% a year earlier despite the sales rise.

The gap with rival Lidl is closing and experts have said the German discounter could overtake Morrisons in the coming months if its current momentum continues.

Morrisons said it cut costs and borrowings in the year to October 26, with its debt now down by 46% from a peak seen in 2022.

Jo Goff, chief financial officer of Morrisons, said: โ€œWe worked hard during the year to offset the significant and unexpected cost headwinds arising from the Governmentโ€™s 2024 budget and other inflationary pressures, with our cost reduction programme delivering savings of ยฃ233 million, to take the total to date to ยฃ845 million.

โ€œWe expect to exceed our ยฃ1 billion savings target by the end of 2025-26.โ€

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