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Tesco looks to cash in on the mortgage crisis

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Published Date: 01 October 2008
TESCO may begin offering home mortgages and current accounts to compete with the major lenders as a result of "opportunities" arising from the credit crisis.
Britain's largest retailer yesterday claimed it was "at its best" in difficult trading conditions as it shrugged off the impact of a consumer slowdown to report an 11.3 per cent rise in pre-tax profits to £1.44 billion in the six months to 23 August.


Tesco said that as part of its plans to expand its financial services offering it was considering a range of new products.

In July, the high street giant announced plans to buy out Royal Bank of Scotland, its joint venture partner, from Tesco Personal Finance, for £950 million, with the deal expected to be completed in November.

While Tesco had previously resisted offering mortgages on the grounds that the margins were so tight that they were unprofitable, finance director Andrew Higginson said yesterday that the credit crunch appeared to have created an opportunity.

"It hasn't been good for the consumer, but we have seen the return of rational pricing in mortgages and that would potentially offer us the opportunity to get in there," he remarked.

Difficulties in the wholesale credit markets have driven up the cost of mortgages.

Higginson said Tesco may also begin offering customers current accounts which, despite often operating at a loss, create a relationship with customers to offer other products to.

Tesco, which said it wants to increase profits from Tesco Personal Finance to more than £1bn a year over the next few years, warned that substantial changes would probably be at least a year away, with a large amount of integration required in the short term.

Group chief executive Sir Terry Leahy said he would prefer to be operating in a stronger economy, but claimed the company was at its best when times were difficult.

"It (the slowdown] is quite a healthy thing really, the business shouldn't rely on customers having more money to spend every year," he said.

Customers, who began tightening their belts towards the end of 2006, had become increasingly price sensitive, so the group had responded by offering new discount lines and cut price deals, Leahy said.

He admitted that the company's premium range, Tesco Finest, "certainly isn't growing", while sales of organic products have been flat in recent months.

Tesco shares closed up nearly 5 per cent yesterday at 387.6p after the company reported group sales excluding VAT up 13.8 per cent to £25.6bn.

The figures were helped by a huge jump in international sales, which grew by 26.8 per cent during the period, as the company continues its drive overseas, mainly in the US and Asia.

Tesco said it plans to increase its total floor space by 25 per cent this year.






The full article contains 478 words and appears in The Scotsman newspaper.
Page 1 of 1

  • Last Updated: 30 September 2008 9:21 PM
  • Source: The Scotsman
  • Location: Edinburgh
 
1

Evan Owen,

Snowdonia 01/10/2008 07:48:29
Good idea, start from scratch and make sure you don't do anything stupid. Let me know first when you have it all up and running, I don't want to be caught in a stampede.
2

Yorkston Rix,

edinburgh 01/10/2008 18:44:21
The bank branches should sell fruit and veg
3

Active Sassenach,

Luton, England 01/10/2008 20:44:52
Salami is relevant to grocers and banks. Salami slicing is usually an honourable calling for grocers, but not in Tesco's case. Take the price of bananas.

You can buy them by weight in bunches at 77 pence per kilo (exactly the same price as Sainsbury's, Tesco's and Asda even though collusion on pricing is illegal). You can buy them in Tesco's as Market Value Bananas by the pack at 55 pence. This rip-off works on the same principle in Sainsbury's and Asda but is differentiated by the amount you are ripped off - true competitiveness. You see if you can get 715 grams of bananas in a market value pack in Tesco's - just weigh it on the check weigher. All the packs in ours are 640 grams. So, loose, they are 77 pence per kilo and in special good value packs they are 85 pence per kilo. A new perspective on salami and the slicing thereof.

If Tesco's apply this legerdemain to mortgages and savings, the FSA will have their revenge and Terry Leahy will be sharing a cell in the Cages at Peterhead with Andy Hornby. He was from Asda - the last grocer to misunderstand the capital you need to support mortgages through fluctuations in net interest margin.

Tesco at its best in difficult trading conditions insisting its customers make sure shareholders don't suffer. Every little helps the dividend.

 

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