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By Paul Sandle and James Davey
LONDON, Jan 6 (Reuters) - Three leading British retailers on
Thursday underscored the threat they face from inflation this
year, with their bosses battling to remain competitive as
consumer finances come under pressure and prices surge.
Next, Britain's most profitable clothing retailer,
Greggs, a booming food-to-go chain, and discount group
B&M need to absorb higher commodity, energy, labour and
freight costs without pushing prices up to the detriment of
sales.
For Next, the worry is the gap between price rises and
customers' wage increases, while Greggs has lifted its own staff
wages to retain workers in a tight market, and now wants to pass
through price rises without losing its 'value' tag.
"This year is a more challenging year than most," outgoing
Greggs CEO Roger Whiteside told Reuters. "You've got inflation
coming at you from both the ingredient side and the labour
side."
Rising inflation is the big cloud on the horizon for the
global economy, as supply chain disruption, higher energy costs,
labour shortages and post-lockdown demand pushes up prices at
rates not seen for decades.
British consumers have already seen food prices rise, with
post-Brexit economic barriers pushing up the cost of trade, and
hikes in taxes and energy bills are due in April.
The Bank of England expects consumer price inflation to hit
6% in April, its highest since 1992, before easing.
MOUNTING PRESSURE
Next, a $15 billion retail giant that sells fashion, school
uniforms and suits to millions of customers, expects its prices
to rise by 6% in the second half of 2022.
Boss Simon Wolfson told Reuters the gap between general wage
rises and price increases would largely determine the company's
fortunes this year.
"If wage inflation is in line with our price increases - I
don't think it will be, but if it is - then it's not going to be
nearly as much of a problem as if wage inflation is a long way
behind."
Next has been hit by higher freight, and manufacturing
costs, and by high staff costs, particularly for workers in
areas where there are shortages such as warehousing. It said it
had already seen customers buying fewer items at a slightly
higher price.
Greggs said its biggest "lumps" of costs were staff wages,
which it has hiked ahead of a government-mandated rise in the
minimum wage, and soaring ingredient costs. With order contracts
in place, it has visibility for the next four to six months.
Whiteside, who built Greggs up to 2,181 stores across the
country, said he was watching rivals and would only increase
prices where they can remain below others. "Some of our prices
have moved, but so have our competitors," he said.
French caterer Sodexo said purchasing contracts
had helped it to contain UK inflation but the challenge would
come in the second half of the year as they come up for review.
B&M, a discount retailer that upgraded its profit
forecast on Thursday, said 2022 would bring further supply chain
disruption, inflationary pressures and uncertainty from
COVID-19.
ING Developed Markets Economist James Smith said inflation
would pose challenges, but noted many higher earners had
conserved cash in the last two years, though they had also spent
on items when unable to travel, potentially limiting future
demand.
($1 = 0.7386 pounds)
(Writing by Kate Holton Editing by John Stonestreet and Mark
Potter)