LONDON, June 3 (Reuters) - Tesco, Britain's biggest
supermarket group, plans to launch a 13th Jack's store,
indicating commitment to growing the discount format despite
pulling the plug on a store last year.
The group said it wants a Jack's to take over a vacant
Mothercare store in Kingston, Hull, in northern England,
and has submitted plans to the local council.
"We are always looking for potential sites for new Jack’s
stores and these applications are part of this process," said a
Tesco spokeswoman.
Plans for the latest opening were first reported by industry
publication, The Grocer.
Chief executive Dave Lewis launched the Jack's format, named
after Tesco's founder Jack Cohen, with great fanfare in
September 2018 at a store in Chatteris, eastern England.
Taking the fight to Aldi and Lidl, the store mimicked the
German-owned discounters' focus on simplicity and own-brands to
keep costs and prices down - a strategy that has seen them grab
13.6% of Britain's grocery market versus Tesco's 26.9%.
But Jack's progress has been slow and doubts about the
future of the format were fueled in September last year when the
Jack's store in Rawtenstall, north west England, was closed and
turned back into a Tesco.
Lewis is due to leave Tesco in October after six years as
CEO and be succeeded by Ken Murphy, a former executive at
healthcare group Walgreens Boots Alliance.
(Reporting by James Davey; editing by Sarah Young)