* Asda has been losing market share to rivals
* Deal will replace and upgrade Asda's e-commerce infrastructure
* Ocado's solutions to be rolled out at Asda from 2027
* Deal is boost for Ocado after closure of some US sites
* Ocado shares up 12.3% (Updates shares in paragraph 3, Ocado CEO comments in 11, 15, analyst in 14)
LONDON, May 29 (Reuters) - British supermarket group Asda has struck a partnership with technology firm Ocado to overhaul its online business across the UK as it seeks to stem market share losses, the companies said on Friday.
The deal is a boost for Ocado after a major setback last year, when its North American partners - Kroger in the U.S. and Sobeys in Canada - closed some robotic customer fulfilment centres, citing weaker-than-expected demand.
Ocado shares rose 12.3%, paring losses over the last year to 10.3%.
Asda, majority owned by private equity firm TDR Capital, is Britain's third-largest grocer but has been losing ground to rivals including industry leader Tesco, number two Sainsbury's and discounters Lidl and Aldi. Asda's core profit slumped 33% in 2025.
Asda trades from about 1,100 stores and already runs a sizeable online grocery business, handling more than 700,000 e-commerce orders a week. Its annual online sales of about £3 billion ($4 billion) equate to about 1.5% of the UK grocery market. Its total share is 11.5%.
REPLACE AND UPGRADE
Under the deal, Asda will replace and upgrade its existing e-commerce infrastructure using Ocado's technology, with solutions rolled out across stores and "dark stores" - which fulfil online orders and are not open to the public - from 2027.
"These solutions include Ocado's front-end (webshop), in-store fulfilment, and software to support last mile planning and route efficiency," Ocado said.
The partnership will allow Asda to offer a full range of online services, including scheduled and short lead-time orders, as well as click and collect. Asda will also use Ocado’s platform to fulfil and deliver orders placed through aggregators such as Uber Eats, Deliveroo and Just Eat.
"Partnering with Ocado will strengthen our online offer," Allan Leighton, Asda's executive chairman, said.
Ocado CEO Tim Steiner told Reuters he hoped the deal "was the start of a long journey together," noting that in the future Asda could sell Ocado products.
Ocado already has a UK partnership with Morrisons, the number six grocer, and a 50% stake in Ocado Retail, its online delivery joint venture with Marks & Spencer. M&S declined to comment.
Ocado said the Asda deal is not expected to have a material financial impact in its 2025/26 year. It reiterated that it expects to turn cash-flow positive in the second half of 2025/26 and for the full year in 2026/27.
JPMorgan analyst Marcus Diebel estimated the deal is worth an annual 20 million pounds of incremental core earnings for Ocado from 2027.
As for more deals, Steiner said Ocado is "engaged in a lot of conversations in many places."
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