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LONDON, Sept 27 (Reuters) - The British and Irish arm of
German discount supermarket group Aldi said on Monday it would
invest 1.3 billion pounds ($1.78 billion) over the next two
years to open 100 new stores, as it bids to accelerate its
growth in market share.
Aldi and German rival Lidl have grown rapidly in the last
decade, forcing Britain's big four supermarkets of Tesco
, Sainsbury's Asda and Morrisons to cut
prices and compete more aggressively.
Aldi is Britain's fifth largest supermarket group, with 920
UK stores and an 8% market share.
It said its plans were expected to create over 2,000 new
jobs next year, adding to the 7,000 permanent roles created over
the past two years.
The group said 2020 sales rose 10.2% to 13.5 billion pounds
but operating profit fell 1.2% to 287.7 million pounds,
reflecting the costs of COVID-19.
Aldi enjoyed over a decade of strong growth on the back of
new store openings but its market share edged lower during the
pandemic, partly due to a lack of a significant online offer.
The crisis has prompted Aldi to accelerate its push into
home delivery via a partnership with Deliveroo so it can
benefit from an increase in demand that is expected to last.
It has also introduced a click and collect service which is
now live in 200 stores.
($1 = 0.7311 pounds)
(Reporting by James Davey; Editing by Kate Holton)