Table of Contents
Executive Summary – Europe
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- The sector – The view to 2019
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- Figure 1: Europe: Grocers’ sector sales and forecast (excluding sales tax), 2008-19
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- Figure 2: Europe: Estimated annual growth in grocers’ sector sales, by country, 2014
- Figure 3: Europe: Forecast compound annual growth rates for grocers’ sector sales (in national currencies), by country, 2014-19
- Market shares – Aldi and Lidl gain ground rapidly in 2013
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- Figure 4: Europe: Leading ten grocery retailers’ shares of total European grocers’ sector sales, 2011-13
- The consumer – Attitudes to discounters
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- Figure 5: Europe: The consumer: Agreement with statements on discount supermarkets – First set of statements, October 2014 (UK: September 2014)
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- Figure 6: Europe: The consumer: Agreement with statements on discount supermarkets – Further statements, October 2014 (UK: September 2014)
- The consumer – Why they don’t shop (or shop more) at discounters
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- Figure 7: Europe: The consumer: Reasons for not shopping or not shopping more at discount supermarkets – First set of statements, October 2014 (UK: September 2014)
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- Figure 8: Europe: The consumer: Reasons for not shopping or not shopping more at discount supermarkets – Further statements, October 2014 (UK: September 2014)
- The consumer – Switching to discounters
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- Figure 9: Europe: Grocery shopping habits, selected statements, Q2 2014
Introduction and Report Scope
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- Coverage
- Technical notes
- Consumer spending
- Retail sales
- Financial definitions
- Currencies
- Abbreviations
- Sales tax rates
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- Figure 10: VAT rates, 2010-14
European Summary – The Market
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- Key points
- Eastern Europe and Scandinavia to lead growth in 2014
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- Figure 11: Europe: Estimated annual growth in grocers’ sector sales, by country, 2014
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- Figure 12: Europe: Grocers’ sector sales (excluding sales tax), 2009-14
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- Figure 13: Europe: Estimated compound annual growth rate for grocers’ sector sales (in national currencies), by country, 2014-19
- Figure 14: Europe: Grocers’ sector sales forecasts (excluding sales tax), 2014-19
- Annual sector growth rates
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- Figure 15: Europe: Annual growth in grocers’ sector sales (in national currencies), 2010-19
- Food-price inflation slows in 2014
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- Figure 16: Annual consumer prices inflation in food and non-alcoholic beverages, 2010-14
- Europe’s top grocers: top discounters pull ahead in 2013
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- Figure 17: Europe: Leading grocery retailers’ net revenues, 2009-13
- Market shares – Schwarz strengthens its lead
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- Figure 18: Europe: Leading grocery retailers’ shares of total European grocers’ sector sales, 2009-13
European Summary – The Consumer
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- Responsibility for grocery shopping
- Key point
- Greater gender split means more traditional shopping habits
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- Figure 19: Europe: The consumer: Responsibility for most grocery shopping, by gender, October 2014 (UK: September 2014)
- Attitudes towards discounters
- Key points
- What we asked
- French unenthusiastic, Germans noticing improvements
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- Figure 20: Europe: The consumer: Agreement with statements on discount supermarkets – First set of statements, October 2014 (UK: September 2014)
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- Figure 21: Europe: The consumer: Agreement with statements on discount supermarkets – Further statements, October 2014 (UK: September 2014)
- Why they don’t shop (or shop more) at discounters
- Key points
- What we asked
- Limited ranges are a major deterrent
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- Figure 22: Europe: The consumer: Reasons for not shopping or not shopping more at discount supermarkets – First set of statements, October 2014 (UK: September 2014)
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- Figure 23: Europe: The consumer: Reasons for not shopping or not shopping more at discount supermarkets – Further statements, October 2014 (UK: September 2014)
- Where they shop, country by country
- Key points
- What we asked
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- Figure 24: UK: The consumer: Where they shop – For main shops, top-up shops and in total, September 2014
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- Figure 25: France: The consumer: Where they shop – For main shops, top-up shops and in total, October 2014
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- Figure 26: Germany: The consumer: Where they shop – For main shops, top-up shops and in total, October 2014
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- Figure 27: Italy: The consumer: Where they shop – For main shops, top-up shops and in total, October 2014
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- Figure 28: Spain: The consumer: Where they shop – For main shops, top-up shops and in total, October 2014
- Switching to discounters
- Key points
- Polish shoppers lead in embracing discounters
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- Figure 29: Europe: Grocery shopping habits, selected statements, Q2 2014
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- Figure 30: Poland: Grocery shopping habits, selected statements, Q1 2014 and Q2 2014
- What we think
- UK
- France
- Germany
- Italy
- Spain
Austria
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- Grocery retailing in Austria
- The market
- The retailers
- Market size
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- Figure 31: Austria: Households’ expenditure on food and drink as % of all spending, 2009-14
- Figure 32: Austria: Households’ consumption expenditure (incl VAT), 2009-14
- Inflation
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- Figure 33: Austria: Harmonised indices of consumer prices: Annual % change, 2009-13
- Figure 34: Austria: Harmonised indices of consumer prices: Annual % change, January 2013 – August 2014
- Grocery retail sector size
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- Figure 35: Austria: Food retailers’ sales as % of all retail sales, 2009-14
- Figure 36: Austria: Retail sales (excl. VAT), 2009-14
- Figure 37: Austria: Retail sales forecasts (excl. VAT), 2014-19
- The grocery retailers – Financials and outlets
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- Figure 38: Austria: Leading grocery retailers, by revenues (excl vat), 2011-13
- Figure 39: Austria: Leading grocery retailers, outlet numbers, 2011-13
- Figure 40: Austria: Leading grocery retailers, sales per outlet, 2011-13
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- Figure 41: Austria: Leading grocery retailers’ shares all food retailers’ sales, 2011-13
- Online
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- Figure 42: Austria: Percentage of all individuals having purchased food/groceries online in the past 12 months, 2010-13
Belgium
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- Grocery retailing in Belgium
- The market
- The retailers
- Market size
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- Figure 43: Belgium: Households’ expenditure on food and drink as % of all spending, 2009-14
- Figure 44: Belgium: Households’ consumption expenditure (incl. VAT), 2009-14
- Inflation
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- Figure 45: Belgium: Harmonised indices of consumer prices: Annual % change, 2009-13
- Figure 46: Belgium: Harmonised indices of consumer prices: Annual % change, January 2013-August 2014
- Grocery retail sector size
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- Figure 47: Belgium: Food retailers’ sales as % of all retail sales, 2009-14
- Figure 48: Belgium: Retail sales (excl. VAT), 2009-14
- Figure 49: Belgium: Retail sales forecasts (excl. VAT), 2014-19
- The grocery retailers – Financials and outlets
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- Figure 50: Belgium: Leading grocery operators, by revenues (excl. VAT), 2011-13
- Figure 51: Belgium: Leading grocery retailers, outlet numbers, 2011-13
- Figure 52: Belgium: Leading grocery retailers, sales per outlet, 2011-13
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- Figure 53: Belgium: Leading grocery retailers’ shares all food retailers’ sales, 2011-13
- Online
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- Figure 54: Belgium: Percentage of all individuals having purchased food/groceries online in the past 12 months, 2009-13
Czech Republic
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- Grocery retailing in Czech Republic
- The market
- The retailers
- Market size
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- Figure 55: Czech Republic Households’ expenditure on food, beverages and tobacco as % of all spending, 2009-14
- Figure 56: Czech Republic: Households’ consumption expenditure (incl VAT), 2009-14
- Inflation
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- Figure 57: Czech Republic: Harmonised indices of consumer prices: Annual % change, 2009-13
- Figure 58: Czech Republic: Harmonised indices of consumer prices: Annual % change, January 2013-August 2014
- Grocery retail sector size
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- Figure 59: Czech Republic: Food retailers’ sales as % of all retail sales, 2009-14
- Figure 60: Czech Republic: Retail sales (excl. VAT), 2009-14
- Figure 61: Czech Republic: Retail sales forecasts (excl. VAT), 2014-19
- The grocery retailers – Financials and outlets
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- Figure 62: Czech Republic: Leading grocery retailers, by revenues (excl vat), 2011-13
- Figure 63: Czech Republic: Leading grocery retailers, outlet numbers, 2011-13
- Figure 64: Czech Republic: Leading grocery retailers, sales per outlet, 2011-13
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- Figure 65: Czech Republic: Leading grocery retailers’ shares all food retailers’ sales, 2011-13
- Online
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- Figure 66: Czech Republic: Percentage of all individuals having purchased food/groceries online in the past 12 months, 2009-13
Denmark
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- Grocery retailing in Denmark
- The market
- The retailers
- Market size
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- Figure 67: Denmark: Households’ expenditure on food and drink as % of all spending, 2009-14
- Figure 68: Denmark: Households consumption expenditure, (incl VAT), 2009-14
- Inflation
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- Figure 69: Denmark: Harmonised indices of consumer prices: Annual % change, 2009-13
- Figure 70: Denmark: Harmonised indices of consumer prices: Annual % change, Jan 2013-Aug 2014
- Grocery retail sector size
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- Figure 71: Denmark: Food retailers’ sales as % of all retail sales, 2009-14
- Figure 72: Denmark: Retail sales (excl. VAT), 2009-14
- Figure 73: Denmark: Retail sales forecasts (excl. VAT), 2014-19
- The grocery retailers – Financials and outlets
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- Figure 74: Denmark: Leading grocery retailers, by revenues (excl vat), 2011-13
- Figure 75: Denmark: Leading grocery retailers’ outlet numbers, 2011-13
- Figure 76: Denmark: Leading grocery retailers’ sales per outlet, 2011-13
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- Figure 77: Denmark: Leading grocery retailers’ shares of all food retailers’ sales, 2011-13
- Online
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- Figure 78: Denmark: Percentage of all individuals having purchased Food/Groceries online in the past 12 months, 2009-13
Finland
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- Grocery retailing in Finland
- The market
- The retailers
- Market size
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- Figure 79: Finland: Households’ expenditure on food and drink as % of all spending, 2009-14
- Figure 80: Finland: Households consumption expenditure (incl VAT), 2009-14
- Inflation
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- Figure 81: Finland: Harmonised indices of consumer prices: Annual % change, 2009-13
- Figure 82: Finland: Harmonised indices of consumer prices: Annual % change, Jan 2013-Aug 2014
- Grocery retail sector size
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- Figure 83: Finland: Food retailers’ sales as % of all retail sales, 2009-14
- Figure 84: Finland: Retail sales (excl. VAT), 2009-14
- Figure 85: Finland: Retail sales forecasts (excl. VAT), 2014-19
- The grocery retailers – Financials and outlets
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- Figure 86: Finland: Leading grocery retailers, by revenues (excl vat), 2011-13
- Figure 87: Finland: Leading grocery retailers, outlet numbers, 2011-13
- Figure 88: Finland: Leading grocery retailers’ sales per outlet, 2011-13
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- Figure 89: Finland: Leading grocery retailers’ shares of all food retailers’ sales, 2011-13
- Online
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- Figure 90: Finland: Percentage of all individuals having purchased food/groceries online in the past 12 months, 2009-13
France
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- Executive summary
- Spending and inflation
- Sector size and forecast
- Leading retailers – Financials and outlets
- Leading retailers – Market shares
- Online
- The consumer – Where they shop
- Consumers and the discounters
- What we think
- Spending and inflation
- Key points
- Consumer spending on food, drink and tobacco
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- Figure 91: France: Consumer spending on food drink and tobacco (incl VAT), 2009-14
- Inflation
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- Figure 92: France: Consumer prices: Annual change, Jan 2013-Oct 2014
- Figure 93: France: Consumer prices: Annual change, 2009-14
- Distribution of spending
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- Figure 94: France: Estimated distribution of spending on food and drink, 2013
- Sector size and forecast
- Key points
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- Figure 95: France: Food retailers’ sales (excl VAT), 2009-14
- Figure 96: France: Food retailers sales (excl VAT), 2014-19
- Leading retailers – Financials and outlets
- Key points
- Sales
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- Figure 97: France: Leading grocers, sales, 2011-13
- Outlets
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- Figure 98: France: Leading grocers outlet numbers, 2011-13
- Sales per outlet
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- Figure 99: France: Leading grocers, sales per outlet, 2011-13
- The retailers – Market shares
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- Figure 100: France: Leading grocers shares of all food retailers sales, 2011-13
- Online
- Key points
- Still a small share of the market
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- Figure 101: France: Online shoppers in the last 12 months, 2009-13
- But should they be doing it?
- The consumer – Where they shop
- Key points
- Who does the grocery shopping?
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- Figure 102: France: Who does the main grocery shop, October 2014
- Figure 103: France: Profile of main shoppers, October 2014
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- Figure 104: France: Store used for any shopping, October 2014
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- Figure 105: France: Profile of shoppers at leading food retailers, October 2014
- Main shop
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- Figure 106: France: Store used for any shopping, October 2014
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- Figure 107: France: Profile of main shoppers at leading food retailers, October 2014
- Top-up shopping
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- Figure 108: France: Store used for top-up shopping, October 2014
- Figure 109: France: Store used for top-up shopping, October 2014
- The consumer – Attitudes towards discount supermarkets
- Key points
- Why people don’t shop at the discounters.
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- Figure 110: France: Reasons for not shopping at discounters, October 2014
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- Figure 111: Attitudes to Discounters by shops used, October 2014
- How have discounters changed?
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- Figure 112: France: How have discounters changed in the last two years, October 2014
Germany
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- Executive summary
- Spending and inflation
- Sector size and forecast
- Leading retailers
- Online
- The consumer – Where they shop
- The consumer – Attitudes towards discount supermarkets
- The consumer – Why they don’t shop (or shop more) at discounters
- What we think
- Spending and Inflation
- Key points
- Lower inflation likely to hit spending growth for 2014
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- Figure 113: Germany: Consumer spending (including sales tax), 2009-14
- Figure 114: Germany: Consumer prices: Annual % change, January 2013-September 2014
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- Figure 115: Germany: Consumer prices: Annual % change, 2009-13
- Distribution of spending
- Sector size and forecast
- Key points
- Grocers outperform spending growth
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- Figure 116: Germany: Retail sales (excluding sales tax), 2009-14
- Figure 117: Germany: Grocers’ sector sales expressed as % of spending on food, beverages and tobacco, 2009-14
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- Figure 118: Germany: Retail sales forecasts (excluding sales tax), 2014-19
- Leading retailers – Financials and outlets
- Discounters growing share
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- Figure 119: Germany: Share of food retailers sector taken by leading discounters, 2011-13
- Discounters softening
- Full-range stores performance mixed
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- Figure 120: Germany: Leading grocers: Net revenues, 2011-13
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- Figure 121: Germany: Leading grocers: Store numbers, 2011-13
- Figure 122: Germany: Leading grocers: Annual sales per outlet, 2011-13
- The retailers – Market shares
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- Figure 123: Germany: Leading grocers: Shares of all food retailers’ sales, 2011-13
- Online
- Key points
- The market
- The consumer
- Retailer developments: Lidl ventures into grocery online
- The retailers online
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- Figure 124: Germany: Leading grocers’ online offers, October 2014
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- Figure 125: Germany: Bringmeister’s guarantees to shoppers, October 2014
- Figure 126: Bringmeister’s payment options, October 2014
- The consumer – Where they shop
- Key points
- What we asked
- Where they shop – Lidl leads over Aldi for main shops
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- Figure 127: Germany: The consumer: Retailers used for main grocery shopping, October 2014
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- Figure 128: Germany: The consumer: Retailers used for top-up grocery shopping, October 2014
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- Figure 129: Germany: The consumer: Retailers used for main and top-up grocery shopping, in total, October 2014
- Average shopper profiles
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- Figure 130: Germany: The consumer: Retailers used for main grocery shopping, average age and affluence, October 2014
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- Figure 131: Germany: The consumer: Retailers used for top-up grocery shopping, average age and affluence, October 2014
- A strong gender divide gives hausfraus time to shop around
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- Figure 132: Germany: The consumer: Agreement that they are mainly responsible for grocery shopping, by gender, October 2014
- The consumer – Attitudes towards discount supermarkets
- Key points
- What we asked
- Shoppers say brand choice and fresh-product quality has improved
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- Figure 133: Germany: The consumer: Agreement with statements about discount supermarkets, October 2014
- Attitudes to discounters among Aldi/Lidl shoppers
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- Figure 134: Germany: The consumer: Attitudes to discounters among Aldi/Lidl shoppers – Relative to total shopper average, September 2014
- Attitudes to discounters by where they do their main shop
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- Figure 135: Germany: The consumer: Attitudes to discounters, by where they do their main grocery shopping, September 2014
- The consumer – Why they don’t shop (or shop more) at discounters
- Key points
- What we asked
- Limited ranges deter shoppers
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- Figure 136: Germany: The consumer: Reasons for not shopping/not shopping more for groceries at discount supermarkets, October 2014
- Comparing to France and the UK
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- Figure 137: France and the UK: Most popular reasons for not shopping (or not shopping more) at discount supermarkets, October 2014
- By where they do any shopping
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- Figure 138: Germany: The consumer: Reasons for not shopping/not shopping more for groceries at discount supermarkets, by where they do any grocery shopping (main or top-up shopping), October 2014
Greece
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- Grocery retailing in Greece
- The market
- The retailers
- Market size
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- Figure 139: Greece: Households’ expenditure on food and drink as % of all spending, 2009-14
- Figure 140: Greece: Households’ consumption expenditure (incl VAT), 2009-14
- Inflation
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- Figure 141: Greece: Harmonised indices of consumer prices: Annual % change, 2009-13
- Figure 142: Greece: Harmonised indices of consumer prices: Annual % change, January 2013-August 2014
- Grocery retail sector size
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- Figure 143: Greece: Food retailers’ sales as % of all retail sales, 2009-14
- Figure 144: Greece: Retail sales (excl. VAT), 2009-14
- Figure 145: Greece: Retail sales forecasts (excl. VAT), 2014-19
- The grocery retailers – Financials and outlets
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- Figure 146: Greece: Leading grocery retailers, by revenues (excl vat), 2011-13
- Figure 147: Greece: Leading grocery retailers, outlet numbers, 2011-13
- Figure 148: Greece: Leading grocery retailers, sales per outlet, 2011-13
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- Figure 149: Greece: Leading grocery retailers’ shares all food retailers’ sales, 2011-13
- Online
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- Figure 150: Greece: Percentage of all individuals having purchased food/groceries online in the past 12 months, 2009-13
Hungary
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- Grocery retailing in Hungary
- The market
- The retailers
- Market size
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- Figure 151: Hungary: Households’ expenditure on food and drink as % of all spending, 2009-14
- Figure 152: Hungary: Households’ consumption expenditure (incl VAT), 2009-14
- Inflation
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- Figure 153: Hungary: Harmonised indices of consumer prices: Annual % change, 2009-13
- Figure 154: Hungary: Harmonised indices of consumer prices: Annual % change, January 2013-August 2014
- Grocery retail sector size
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- Figure 155: Hungary: Food retailers’ sales as % of all retail sales, 2009-14
- Figure 156: Hungary: Retail sales (excl. VAT), 2009-14
- Figure 157: Hungary: Retail sales forecasts (excl. VAT), 2014-19
- The grocery retailers – Financials and outlets
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- Figure 158: Hungary: Leading grocery retailers, by revenues (excl vat), 2011-13
- Figure 159: Hungary: Leading grocery retailers, outlet numbers, 2011-13
- Figure 160: Hungary: Leading grocery retailers, sales per outlet, 2011-13
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- Figure 161: Hungary: Leading grocery retailers’ shares all food retailers’ sales, 2011-13
- Online
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- Figure 162: Hungary: Percentage of all individuals having purchased food/groceries online in the past 12 months, 2009-13
Ireland
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- Grocery retailing in Ireland
- The market
- The retailers
- Market size
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- Figure 163: Ireland: Households’ expenditure on food and drink as % of all spending, 2009-14
- Figure 164: Ireland: Households’ consumption expenditure (incl. VAT), 2009-14
- Inflation
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- Figure 165: Ireland: Harmonised indices of consumer prices: Annual % change, 2009-13
- Figure 166: Ireland: Harmonised indices of consumer prices: Annual % change, January 2013-August 2014
- Grocery retail sector size
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- Figure 167: Ireland: Food retailers’ sales as % of all retail sales, 2009-14
- Figure 168: Ireland: Retail sales (excl. VAT), 2009-14
- Figure 169: Ireland: Retail sales forecasts (excl. VAT), 2014-19
- The grocery retailers – Financials and outlets
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- Figure 170: Ireland: Leading grocery operators, by revenues (excl. VAT), 2011-13
- Figure 171: Ireland: Leading grocery retailers, outlet numbers, 2011-13
- Figure 172: Ireland: Leading grocery retailers, sales per outlet, 2011-13
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- Figure 173: Ireland: Leading grocery retailers’ shares all food retailers’ sales, 2011-13
- Online
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- Figure 174: Ireland: Percentage of all individuals having purchased food/groceries online in the past 12 months, 2009-13
Italy
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- Executive summary
- Spending and inflation
- Sector sales and forecast
- Leading retailers
- Online
- The consumer – Where they shop
- The consumer – Attitudes to Lidl
- The consumer – Why they don’t shop at Lidl
- What we think
- Spending and inflation
- Key points
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- Figure 175: Italy: Consumer spending on food and drink (incl. VAT), 2009-14
- Inflation
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- Figure 176: Italy: Harmonised indices of consumer prices: Annual % change, Mar 2013-Sept 2014
- Figure 177: Italy: Harmonised indices of consumer prices: Annual % change, 2009-13
- Distribution of spending
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- Figure 178: Italy: Estimated distribution of spending on food and beverages, 2013
- Sector size and forecast
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- Figure 179: Italy: Retail sales, excl. VAT, 2009-14
- Figure 180: Italy: Retail sales forecasts, excl. VAT, 2014-19
- Sector sales mix
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- Figure 181: Italy: Grocers sales mix, 2013
- Enterprises and employment
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- Figure 182: Italy: Number of retail enterprises, 2008-11
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- Figure 183: Italy: Retail employment by type of retailer, 2008-11 (Number of full time equivalent employees by sector)
- Figure 184: Italy: Number of grocery stores by type, 2010-12
- The retailers – Financials and outlets
- Key points
- Winners and losers at the top
- Selex – Multi-brand voluntary group
- Discounters gain ground
- Changes in buying alliances
- Conad joins forces with Finiper
- Auchan teams up with Sisa
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- Figure 185: Italy: Leading grocery retailers, by revenues (excl vat), 2009-13
- Figure 186: Italy: Leading grocery retailers’ outlet numbers, 2009-13
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- Figure 187: Italy: Leading grocery retailers’ sales per outlet, 2009-13
- The retailers – Market shares
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- Figure 188: Italy: Leading grocery retailers’ estimated shares of all food retailers’ sales, 2009-13
- Online
- Key points
- Online shoppers
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- Figure 189: Italy: Percentage of all individuals purchasing online in the past 12 months, 2008-13
- Market size and leading retailers
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- Figure 190: Italy: Leading retailers websites by visitor numbers, September 2014
- The consumer – Where they shop
- Key points
- What we asked
- Main-shop destinations
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- Figure 191: Italy: Where consumers buy main weekly shop, October 2014
- Trend data
- Top-up shop destinations
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- Figure 192: Italy: Where consumers buy their top-up shopping, October 2014
- The consumer – Attitudes to Lidl
- Key points
- What we asked
- Almost 60% of consumers now shop more at discount stores
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- Figure 193: Italy Consumer attitudes to Lidl – Agreement with statements, October 2014
- Sticking with Lidl even if they had more money
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- Figure 194: Italy: Consumer attitudes to Lidl – Changing shopping habits, October 2014
- Fresh foods – quality improving
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- Figure 195: Italy: Consumer attitudes to Lidl – Quality of products, October 2014
- Choice improving but still some limitations
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- Figure 196: Italy: Consumer attitudes to Lidl – Choice of products, October 2014
- Non-grocery special deals are a key selling point
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- Figure 197: Italy: Consumer attitudes to Lidl – Non-grocery products, October 2014
- The consumer – Why they don’t shop at lidl
- Key points
- What we asked
- Scope for further expansion?
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- Figure 198: Italy: Why consumers don’t do any/more of their grocery shopping at Lidl, October 2014
- Unfamiliar brands
The Netherlands
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- Grocery retailing in The Netherlands
- The market
- The retailers
- Market size
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- Figure 199: The Netherlands: Households’ expenditure on food and drink as % of all spending, 2009-14
- Figure 200: The Netherlands: Households’ consumption expenditure (incl. VAT), 2009-14
- Inflation
-
- Figure 201: The Netherlands: Harmonised indices of consumer prices: Annual % change, 2009-13
- Figure 202: The Netherlands: Harmonised indices of consumer prices: Annual % change, January 2013-August 2014
- Grocery retail sector size
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- Figure 203: The Netherlands: Food retailers’ sales as % of all retail sales, 2009-14
- Figure 204: The Netherlands: Retail sales (excl. VAT), 2009-14
- Figure 205: The Netherlands: Retail sales (excl. VAT), 2014-19
- The grocery retailers – Financials and outlets
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- Figure 206: The Netherlands: Leading grocery operators, by revenues (excl. VAT), 2011-13
- Figure 207: The Netherlands: Leading grocery retailers, outlet numbers, 2011-13
- Figure 208: The Netherlands: Leading grocery retailers, sales per outlet, 2011-13
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- Figure 209: The Netherlands: Leading grocery retailers’ shares all food retailers’ sales, 2011-13
- Online
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- Figure 210: The Netherlands: Percentage of all individuals having purchased food/groceries online in the past 12 months, 2009-13
Norway
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- Grocery retailing in Norway
- The market
- The retailers
- Market size
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- Figure 211: Norway: Households’ expenditure on food and drink as % of all spending, 2009-14
- Figure 212: Norway: Households consumption expenditure (incl VAT), 2009-14
- Inflation
-
- Figure 213: Norway: Harmonised indices of consumer prices: Annual % change, 2009-13
- Figure 214: Norway: Harmonised indices of consumer prices: Annual % change, January 2013-August 2014
- Grocery retail sector size
-
- Figure 215: Norway: Food retailers’ sales as % of all retail sales, 2009-14
- Figure 216: Norway: Retail sales (excl. VAT), 2009-14
- Figure 217: Norway: Retail sales forecasts (excl. VAT), 2014-19
- The grocery retailers – Financials and outlets
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- Figure 218: Norway: Leading grocery retailers, by revenues (excl vat), 2011-13
- Figure 219: Norway: Leading grocery retailers, outlet numbers, 2011-13
- Figure 220: Norway: Leading grocery retailers, sales per outlet, 2011-13
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- Figure 221: Norway: Leading grocery retailers’ shares all food retailers’ sales, 2011-13
- Online
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- Figure 222: Norway: Percentage of all individuals having purchased Food/Groceries online in the past 12 months, 2009-13
Poland
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- Grocery retailing in Poland
- The market
- The retailers
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- Figure 223: Europe: Grocery shopping habits, selected statements, Q2 2014
- Market size
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- Figure 224: Poland: Households’ expenditure on food and drink as % of all spending, 2009-14
- Figure 225: Poland: Households’ consumption expenditure (incl. VAT), 2009-14
- Inflation
-
- Figure 226: Poland: Harmonised indices of consumer prices: Annual % change, 2009-13
- Figure 227: Poland: Harmonised indices of consumer prices: Annual % change, January 2013-August 2014
- Grocery retail sector size
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- Figure 228: Poland: Food retailers’ sales as % of all retail sales, 2009-14
- Figure 229: Poland: Retail sales (excl. VAT), 2009-14
- Figure 230: Poland: Retail sales (excl. VAT), 2014-19
- The grocery retailers – Financials and outlets
-
- Figure 231: Poland: Leading grocery operators, by revenues (excl. VAT), 2011-13
- Figure 232: Poland: Leading grocery retailers, outlet numbers, 2011-13
- Figure 233: Poland: Leading grocery retailers, sales per outlet, 2011-13
-
- Figure 234: Poland: Leading grocery retailers’ shares all food retailers’ sales, 2011-13
- Online
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- Figure 235: Poland: Percentage of all individuals having purchased Food/Groceries online in the past 12 months, 2009-13
Portugal
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- Grocery retailing in Portugal
- The market
- The retailers
- Market size
-
- Figure 236: Portugal: Households’ expenditure on food and drink as % of all spending, 2009-14
- Figure 237: Portugal: Households’ consumption expenditure (incl VAT), 2009-14
- Inflation
-
- Figure 238: Portugal: Harmonised indices of consumer prices: Annual % change, 2009-13
- Figure 239: Portugal: Harmonised indices of consumer prices: Annual % change, January 2013-August 2014
- Grocery retail sector size
-
- Figure 240: Portugal: Food retailers’ sales as % of all retail sales, 2009-14
- Figure 241: Portugal: Retail sales (excl. VAT), 2009-14
- Figure 242: Portugal: Retail sales forecasts (excl. VAT), 2014-19
- The grocery retailers – Financials and outlets
-
- Figure 243: Portugal: Leading grocery retailers, by revenues (excl vat), 2011-13
- Figure 244: Portugal: Leading grocery retailers, outlet numbers, 2011-13
- Figure 245: Portugal: Leading grocery retailers, sales per outlet, 2011-13
-
- Figure 246: Portugal: Leading grocery retailers’ shares all food retailers’ sales, 2011-13
- Online
-
- Figure 247: Portugal: Percentage of all individuals having purchased Food/Groceries online in the past 12 months, 2009-13
Spain
-
- Executive summary
- Spending and inflation
- Sector sales and forecast
- Leading retailers
- Online
- The consumer – Where they shop
- The consumer – Attitudes to Dia, Lidl and Aldi
- The consumer – Why they don’t shop at Dia/Lidl/Aldi
- What we think
- Spending and inflation
- Key points
- Consumer spending
-
- Figure 248: Spain: Consumer spending on food and drink ( incl. VAT), 2009-14
- Inflation
-
- Figure 249: Spain: Harmonised indices of consumer prices: Annual % change food and drink, Mar 2013-Sept 2014
- Figure 250: Spain: Harmonised indices of consumer prices: Annual % change, 2009-13
- Distribution of spending
-
- Figure 251: Spain: Estimated distribution of spending on food, beverages, and tobacco, 2013
- Sector size and forecast
- Key points
- Sector sales
-
- Figure 252: Spain: Retail sales, excl. VAT, 2009-14
-
- Figure 253: Spain: Retail sales forecasts, excl. VAT, 2014-19
- Sector sales mix
-
- Figure 254: Spain: Estimated sales mix for the grocers’ sector, 2013
- Retail enterprises and employee numbers
-
- Figure 255: Spain: Number of retail enterprises, 2008-12
-
- Figure 256: Spain: Number of full-time-equivalent employees in retailing, 2008-12 (Number of full time equivalent employees by sector)
- The retailers – Financials and outlets
- Key points
- Mercadona dominates the sector
- Winners – Discounters and other proximity retailers
- Losers – Larger store formats
- Condis rolls out Condislife format
-
- Figure 257: Spain: Leading grocery retailers, by sales, excl. VAT, 2011-13
- Figure 258: Spain: Leading grocery retailers’ outlet numbers, 2011-13
-
- Figure 259: Spain: Leading grocery retailers’ estimated sales per outlet, 2011-13
- The retailers – Market shares
-
- Figure 260: Spain: Leading grocery retailers’ shares of all food retailers sales, 2011-13
- Online
- Key points
- Online shoppers
-
- Figure 261: The consumer: Percentage of all individuals purchasing online in the past 12 months, 2008-13
- Market size and leading retailers
-
- Figure 262: Spain: Leading retail websites by visitor numbers,
- The consumer – Where they shop
- Key points
- What we asked
- Main grocery destination
-
- Figure 263: Spain: Where consumers buy main weekly shop, October 2014
- Top-up shop destinations
-
- Figure 264: Spain: Where consumers buy their top-up shopping, October 2014
- The consumer – Attitudes to Dia, Lidl and Aldi
- Key points
- What we asked
- More than 50% of consumers now shop more at discounters
-
- Figure 265: Spain: Consumer attitudes to Dia/Lidl/Aldi – Agreement with statements, October 2014
- Sticking with Dia/Lidl/Aldi even if they had more money
-
- Figure 266: Spain: Attitudes to Dia/Lidl/Aldi – Changing shopping habits, October 2014
- Fresh foods improving
-
- Figure 267: Spain: Consumer attitudes to Dia/Lidl/Aldi – Quality of products, October 2014
- Choice improving but still some limitations
-
- Figure 268: Spain: Consumer attitudes to Dia/Lidl/Aldi – Choice of products, October 2014
- Non-grocery special deals are a key selling point
-
- Figure 269: Spain: Consumer attitudes to Dia/Lidl/Aldi – Non-grocery products, October 2014
- The consumer – Why they don’t shop at Dia/Lidl/Aldi
- Key points
- What we asked
- Limited ranges and few stores limit shopper numbers
-
- Figure 270: Spain: Why consumers don’t do any/more of their grocery shopping at Dia/Lidl/Aldi, October 2014
- Women more concerned about limited ranges
-
- Figure 271: Spain: Why consumers don’t do any/more of their grocery shopping at Dia/Lidl/Aldi by gender, October 2014
- Poor perception of quality in Madrid
-
- Figure 272: Spain: Why consumers don’t do any/more of their grocery shopping at Dia/Lidl/Aldi, by region, October 2014
- Figure 273: Spain: Where consumers buy their top-up shopping, by region, October 2014
Sweden
-
- Grocery retailing in Sweden
- The market
- The retailers
- Market size
-
- Figure 274: Sweden: Households’ expenditure on food and drink as % of all spending, 2009-14
- Figure 275: Sweden: Households consumption expenditure, incl VAT, 2009-14
- Inflation
-
- Figure 276: Sweden: Harmonised indices of consumer prices: Annual % change, 2009-13
- Figure 277: Sweden: Harmonised indices of consumer prices: Annual % change, Jan 2013-Aug 2014
- Grocery retail sector size
-
- Figure 278: Sweden: Food retailers’ sales as % of all retail sales, 2009-14
- Figure 279: Sweden: Retail sales, excl. VAT, 2009-14
- Figure 280: Sweden: Retail sales forecasts, excl. VAT, 2014-19
- The grocery retailers – Financials and outlets
-
- Figure 281: Sweden: Leading grocery retailers, by revenues (excl vat), 2011-13
- Figure 282: Sweden: Leading grocery retailers’ outlet numbers, 2011-13
- Figure 283: Sweden: Leading grocery retailers’ sales per outlet, 2011-13
-
- Figure 284: Sweden: Leading grocery retailers’ shares of all food retailers’ sales, 2011-13
- Online
-
- Figure 285: Sweden: Percentage of all individuals having purchased Food/Groceries online in the past 12 months, 2009-13
Switzerland
-
- Grocery retailing in Switzerland
- The market
- The retailers
- Market size
-
- Figure 286: Switzerland: Households’ expenditure on food and drink as % of all spending, 2009-14
- Figure 287: Switzerland: Households’ consumption expenditure (incl. VAT), 2009-14
- Inflation
-
- Figure 288: Switzerland: Harmonised indices of consumer prices: Annual % change, 2009-13
- Figure 289: Switzerland: Harmonised indices of consumer prices: Annual % change, January 2013-August 2014
- Grocery retail sector size
-
- Figure 290: Switzerland: Food retailers’ sales as % of all retail sales, 2009-14
- Figure 291: Switzerland: Retail sales (excl. VAT), 2009-14
- Figure 292: Switzerland: Retail sales forecasts (excl. VAT), 2014-19
- The grocery retailers – Financials and outlets
-
- Figure 293: Switzerland: Leading grocery operators, by revenues (excl. VAT), 2011-13
- Figure 294: Switzerland: Leading grocery retailers, outlet numbers, 2011-13
- Figure 295: Switzerland: Leading grocery retailers, sales per outlet, 2011-13
-
- Figure 296: Switzerland: Leading grocery retailers’ shares all food retailers’ sales, 2011-13
- Online
UK
-
- Introduction
- Addressing the issues confronting grocery retailers
- Data
- Financial definitions
- Abbreviations
- Executive summary
- The market
- Value growth slowed by price competition
-
- Figure 297: Grocery retailers: Sector size and forecast (incl VAT), 2009-19
-
- Figure 298: Grocery retailers: Sector size and forecast (incl VAT), by segment, 2009-19
- Companies, brands and innovations
- Market shares
-
- Figure 299: Leading grocers: Market shares, 2013
- Figure 300: The Big Four grocers: Market shares, 2009-14
- Brand research
-
- Figure 301: Brand research: Levels of trust and differentiation, September 2014
- The consumer
- Where they shop
-
- Figure 302: The consumer: Retailers used for main and top-up shops, September 2014
- Types of store used
-
- Figure 303: The consumer: Type of store used for main shops and top-up shops, September 2014
- Attitudes to the discounters
-
- Figure 304: The consumer: Attitudes to Aldi/Lidl – Agreement with statements, September 2014
- Why they do not shop (or shop more) at Aldi/Lidl
-
- Figure 305: The consumer: Why they do not do any/more of their grocery shopping at Aldi or Lidl, September 2014
- Non-groceries purchased from supermarkets
-
- Figure 306: The consumer: Non-grocery items bought from grocery retailers, whether online or in-store, September 2014
- What we think
- Issues and insights
- Aldi and Lidl – How big will they get?
- The facts
- The implications
- Is the hypermarket dead?
- The facts
- The implications
- But shopper trends are hitting grocery retailers
- The facts
- The implications
- So should retailers be expanding their convenience formats?
- The facts
- The implications
- Trend application
- Accentuate the Negative
- Life Hacking
- Mintel Futures
- The market environment
- Key points
- Inflation dwindles
-
- Figure 307: Consumer prices: Annual % change, January 2012-September 2013
- Real-terms growth likely to return
-
- Figure 308: Annual consumer prices inflation (food, beverages, tobacco) versus annual growth in grocers’ sector sales, 2009-14
- Consumers feeling better off
-
- Figure 309: The consumer: Trends in current financial situation compared a year ago, July 2011-September 2014
- But they are not losing frugal habits
-
- Figure 310: The consumer: Those saying they “do more”, selected attitudes, December 2013-September 2014
-
- Figure 311: The consumer: Those saying they “do more”, average age and affluence, September 2014
- Ageing population
-
- Figure 312: Projected age structure of the UK population, 2013 and 2018
- Young people living with parents for longer
-
- Figure 313: UK: Percentage of young adults aged 20-34 living with their parents, by age group, 2004-13
-
- Figure 314: UK: Number of households, by occupancy, 2004 and 2013
- Consumer spending and channels of distribution
- Key points
- Low inflation to impact on spending growth in 2014
-
- Figure 315: Consumer spending on food, beverages and tobacco (incl VAT), 2009-13
-
- Figure 316: Estimated distribution of spending on food, beverages and tobacco, by type of retailer, 2013
- Figure 317: Food specialists sub-sector breakdown, 2013
- Spending on non-food grocery categories
-
- Figure 318: Consumer spending on non-food grocery categories (incl VAT), 2009-13
- Sector size and forecast
- Key points
- Value growth slowed by price competition
-
- Figure 319: Grocery retailers: Sector size and forecast (incl VAT), 2009-19
-
- Figure 320: Grocery retailers: Sector size and forecast (incl VAT), at current and constant prices, 2009-19
- Segment forecasts: Supermarkets stagnate, online surges, convenience grows
-
- Figure 321: Grocery retailers: Sector size and forecast (incl VAT), by segment, 2009-19
- Supermarkets segment: Stagnating in 2014
-
- Figure 322: Supermarkets: Segment size and forecast (incl VAT), 2009-19
-
- Figure 323: Supermarkets: Segment size and forecast (incl VAT), at current and constant prices, 2009-19
- Convenience stores segment: Outperforming
-
- Figure 324: Convenience stores: Segment size and forecast (incl VAT), 2009-19
-
- Figure 325: Convenience stores: Segment size and forecast (incl VAT), 2009-19
- Online: Strong growth from a small base
-
- Figure 326: Online sales by grocers: Segment size and forecast (incl VAT), 2009-19
-
- Figure 327: Online sales by grocers: Segment size and forecast (incl VAT), at current and constant prices, 2009-19
- Real-terms sector growth: 2014 will be better
-
- Figure 328: Annual consumer prices inflation (food, beverages, tobacco) versus annual growth in grocers’ sector sales, 2009-14
- Forecast methodology
- The fan chart
- Strengths and weaknesses
- Strengths
- Weaknesses
- Non-grocery retail
- Key points
- Non-groceries declining as share of sector sales
-
- Figure 329: Grocers sector: Estimated total general merchandise and clothing/footwear sales (incl VAT), 2011-13
- Non-grocery as a proportion of retailers’ sales
-
- Figure 330: Leading grocers: Estimated general merchandise and clothing sales as % of total sales, 2013
- Non-grocery sales by major retailer
-
- Figure 331: Leading grocers’ estimated sales of major non-food categories (excl VAT), 2011-13
- Brand perceptions and social media
- Brand perceptions
- Key brand metrics
-
- Figure 332: Key brand metrics, September 2014
- Brand map
-
- Figure 333: Attitudes towards and usage of brands in the supermarket sector, September 2014
- Brand attitudes
-
- Figure 334: Attitudes, by supermarket brand, September 2014
- Brand personality
-
- Figure 335: Supermarket brand personality – Macro image, September 2014
-
- Figure 336: Supermarket brand personality – Micro image, September 2014
- Brand usage
-
- Figure 337: Supermarket brand usage, September 2014
- Brand experience
-
- Figure 338: Supermarket brand experience, September 2014
- Social media and online buzz
- Social media metrics
-
- Figure 339: Social media metrics of selected supermarket brands, October 2014
- Online mentions
-
- Figure 340: Share of conversation of top five selected supermarket brands, by week, 27 October 2013-25 October 2014
- Figure 341: Share of conversation of next selected supermarket brands, by week, 27 October 2013-25 October 2014
- Topics of discussion
-
- Figure 342: Topics of discussion around selected supermarket brands, 27 October 2013-25 October 2014
- Where discussion is occurring
-
- Figure 343: Conversation, by page type, by brand, 27 October 2013-25 October 2014
- Analysis by brand
-
- Figure 344: Topic cloud around mentions of Tesco, 27 October 2013-25 October 2014
-
- Figure 345: Topic cloud around mentions of Asda, 27 October 2013-25 October 2014
- Figure 346: Topic cloud around mentions of Sainsbury’s, 27 October 2013-25 October 2014
-
- Figure 347: Topic cloud around mentions of Morrisons, 27 October 2013-25 October 2014
-
- Figure 348: Topic cloud around mentions of Aldi, 27 October 2013-25 October 2014
- Figure 349: Topic cloud around mentions of Lidl, 27 October 2013-25 October 2014
-
- Figure 350: Topic cloud around mentions of M&S Simply Food, 27 October 2013-25 October 2014
-
- Figure 351: Topic cloud around mentions of Waitrose, 27 October 2013-25 October 2014
-
- Figure 352: Topic cloud around mentions of The Co-operative, 27 October 2013-25 October 2014
-
- Figure 353: Topic cloud around mentions of Iceland, 27 October 2013-25 October 2014
- Brand communication and promotion
- Key points
- Total ad spend up
- The Big Four
- Discounters ramp up advertising spend
- Online grocery
-
- Figure 354: Main media advertising spend, by leading grocery retailers, 2010-13
- The press accounts for the lion’s share of ad spend
-
- Figure 355: Leading grocers’ main media advertising spend, by media type, 2013
- What we have seen in 2014
- Discounters pushing own brand product quality
- Premier Stores first ever TV advertising campaign
- Iceland’s ground-breaking commercial partnership with The Sun
- Price-matching gets fierce and ugly
- The consumer – Shopper profiles by retailer
- Key points
- Main-shop customer breakdowns
-
- Figure 356: The consumer: Breakdown of main-shop customers at major grocers, by age group, September 2014
-
- Figure 357: The consumer: Breakdown of main-shop customers at major grocers, by region, September 2014
-
- Figure 358: The consumer: Breakdown of main-shop customers at major grocers, by social grade, September 2014
- Figure 359: The consumer: Breakdown of main-shop customers at major grocers, by type of location, September 2014
-
- Figure 360: The consumer: Breakdown of main-shop customers at major grocers, by parent/non-parent, September 2014
-
- Figure 361: The consumer: Breakdown of main-shop customers at major grocers, by financial sentiment, September 2014
- The consumer – Where they shop
- Key points
- What we asked
- Main grocery shopping: Aldi nudging closer to Morrisons
-
- Figure 362: The consumer: Retailer used for main grocery shop, September 2014
- Changes year-on-year
-
- Figure 363: Retailer used for main shop/most grocery shopping, 2012, 2013 and 2014
- Top-up shopping: Aldi and Lidl rivalling the Co-op and Morrisons
-
- Figure 364: The consumer: Retailers used for top-up grocery shop, September 2014
- Total usage: two thirds of all consumers use Tesco
-
- Figure 365: The consumer: Retailers used for main and top-up shops, September 2014
- Demographics: typical Morrisons customer is now more affluent
-
- Figure 366: The consumer: Retailers used for main grocery shop, September 2014
-
- Figure 367: The consumer: Retailers used for top-up grocery shop, average age and affluence, September 2014
- Main shop, by region: Aldi under indexes in London
-
- Figure 368: The consumer: Retailer used for main grocery shop, by region – Relative to national average for each retailer, September 2014
- Online focus group
- The consumer – Types of stores used
- Key points
- What we asked
- Supermarkets continue to dominate main grocery shops
-
- Figure 369: The consumer: Type of store used for main grocery shop, September 2014
- And supermarkets still lead for top-up shops
-
- Figure 370: The consumer: Type of store used for top-up grocery shops, September 2014
-
- Figure 371: The consumer: Type of store used for grocery shopping – Total of main and top-up shops, September 2014
- Frequency of usage
-
- Figure 372: The consumer: Frequency of usage, by store type, September 2014
- Main shop demographics: Young turn to c-stores, older turn to out-of-town
-
- Figure 373: The consumer: Type of store used for main grocery shop, by age group, September 2014
-
- Figure 374: The consumer: Type of store used for main grocery shop, average age and affluence, September 2014
- Type of store, by retailer used for main shop
-
- Figure 375: The consumer: Type of store used for main grocery shop, by retailer used for main grocery shop, September 2014
-
- Figure 376: The consumer: Type of store used for main grocery shop, by retailer used for main grocery shop, September 2014 (continued)
- Repertoire of stores used for top-up shopping
-
- Figure 377: The consumer: Repertoire analysis of type of store used for top-up grocery shops, September 2014
- Online focus group: Changing shopping habits
- The consumer – Attitudes towards Aldi and Lidl
- Key points
- What we asked
- Almost half of consumers now shop at Aldi/Lidl more
-
- Figure 378: The consumer: Attitudes to Aldi/Lidl – Agreement with statements, September 2014
- Three quarters would stick with Aldi/Lidl even if they had more money
-
- Figure 379: The consumer: Attitudes to Aldi/Lidl – Changing shopping habits, September 2014
- Focus group
- Shoppers think quality has improved in fresh foods
-
- Figure 380: The consumer: Attitudes to Aldi/Lidl – Quality of products, September 2014
- Focus group
- Brand choice has improved but still cannot do all their shopping at Aldi/Lidl
-
- Figure 381: The consumer: Attitudes to Aldi/Lidl – Choice of products, September 2014
- Focus group
- Non-grocery special deals are a key selling point
-
- Figure 382: The consumer: Attitudes to Aldi/Lidl – Non-grocery products, September 2014
- Attitudes to discounters, among those who shop at the discounters
-
- Figure 383: The consumer: Attitudes to Aldi/Lidl among Aldi/Lidl shoppers – Relative to total shopper average, September 2014
- By where they shop
-
- Figure 384: The consumer: Attitudes to Aldi/Lidl, by where they do their main grocery shop, September 2014
- Focus group: What could prompt shopper migration to or from Aldi/Lidl?
- The consumer – Why they do not shop at Aldi/Lidl
- Key points
- What we asked
- Limited ranges and few stores limit shopper numbers
-
- Figure 385: The consumer: Why they do not do any/more of their grocery shopping at Aldi or Lidl, September 2014
- By region: too few stores in London and the south east?
-
- Figure 386: The consumer: Why they do not do any/more of their grocery shopping at Aldi or Lidl – “There is not one in a location that is convenient for me”, September 2014
- By social grade: ABs more concerned with brand choice
-
- Figure 387: The consumer: Why they do not do any/more of their grocery shopping at Aldi or Lidl, September 2014
- Why they do not shop there, crossed by where they do shop
-
- Figure 388: The consumer: Why they do not do any/more of their grocery shopping at Aldi or Lidl, by where they do their main grocery shop, September 2014
- Online focus group
- The consumer – Buying non-grocery items from supermarkets
- Key points
- Fully 86% buy non-groceries from supermarkets
-
- Figure 389: The consumer: Non-grocery items bought from grocery retailers, September 2014
- And 49% are buying non-groceries from supermarkets online
-
- Figure 390: The consumer: Non-grocery items bought from grocery retailers, by in-store/online, September 2014
- Supermarkets lose non-grocery shoppers in 2014
-
- Figure 391: The consumer: Non-grocery items bought from grocery retailers, September 2013 and September 2014
- 2014 vs 2013: In-store
-
- Figure 392: The consumer: Non-grocery items bought from grocery retailers – In-store, September 2013 and September 2014
- 2014 vs 2013: Online
-
- Figure 393: The consumer: Non-grocery items bought from grocery retailers – Online, September 2013 and September 2014
- By main-shop retailer: Aldi shoppers over-index on DIY
-
- Figure 394: Non-grocery purchases (whether online or in-store), by Retailers used for main and top-up shops, September 2014
- Online focus group
- Who’s innovating?
- Key points
- Pioneering independent ethical supermarket
-
- Figure 395: hiSbe, Brighton
- Zero-waste supermarket
- Click-and-Collect
- Improving the checkout process for in-store shoppers
- Unique DIY mental health screening kiosk
- Car-like GPS in-store sales navigation system
- Smart trolley
- App for cash-back on groceries
- iBeacon technology changing the shopping experience at Waitrose
- Home scanning
- Space allocation summary
- Key points
- Summary data and classifications
-
- Figure 396: Food, non-food standard classifications, 2014
- Convenience – Comparison goods
-
- Figure 397: Leading food retailers: Convenience comparison split, October 2014
-
- Figure 398: Leading food retailers, pattern of space allocation to foods, October 2014
- Detailed space allocation data
-
- Figure 399: UK hypermarkets: Estimated space allocations, October 2014
- Figure 400: UK hypermarkets: Estimated space allocations, October 2014 (continued)
- Figure 401: UK hypermarkets: Estimated space allocations, October 2014 (continued)
- Figure 402: UK hypermarkets: Estimated space allocations, October 2014 (continued)
-
- Figure 403: Leading superstores: Estimated space allocations, October 2014
- Figure 404: Leading superstores: Estimated space allocations, October 2014 (continued)
- Figure 405: Leading superstores: Estimated space allocations, October 2014 (continued)
- Figure 406: Leading superstores: Estimated space allocations, October 2014 (continued)
-
- Figure 407: Smaller stores and hard discounters: Estimated space allocations, October 2014
- Figure 408: Smaller stores and hard discounters: Estimated space allocations, October 2014 (continued)
- Figure 409: Smaller stores and hard discounters: Estimated space allocations, October 2014 (continued)
- Figure 410: Smaller stores and hard discounters: Estimated space allocations, October 2014 (continued)
- Retail product mix
- Key points
- Sales
-
- Figure 411: Leading food retailers: Estimated sales breakdown, 2013/14
-
- Figure 412: Leading food retailers: Estimated sales breakdown, 2013
- Sales densities
-
- Figure 413: Leading retailers, Estimated sales density by product, 2013/14
- Market shares of spending on food
-
- Figure 414: Leading food retailers: Estimated share of all spending on food and drink, 2013
- Leading grocery retailers
- Key points
- Sales: Tesco’s first slippage in memory
-
- Figure 415: Leading grocery retailers: Net sales, 2009-13
-
- Figure 416: Leading 10 grocery retailers: Compound annual growth rates in net sales, 2009-13
- Store numbers and sales per outlet
-
- Figure 417: Leading grocery retailers: Store numbers, 2009-13
-
- Figure 418: Leading 10 grocery retailers: Compound annual growth rates in sales per outlet, 2009-13
- Figure 419: Leading grocery retailers: Annual sales per outlet, 2009-13
- Sales area and sales densities
-
- Figure 420: Leading grocery retailers: Total sales area, 2009-13
- Figure 421: Leading grocery retailers: Annual sales per sq m, 2009-13
- Operating profits and operating margins
-
- Figure 422: Leading grocery retailers: Operating profits, 2009-13
-
- Figure 423: Leading grocery retailers: Operating margins, 2009-13
- Market shares
- Key points
- Three of the Big Four are expected to lose share in 2014
-
- Figure 424: Leading grocery retailers: Share of sector sales, 2009-14
- The Big Four fall below two-thirds share
-
- Figure 425: Market shares: The Big Four and Tesco, 2009-14
-
- Figure 426: Market shares: Aldi and Lidl, 2009-14
- How we calculate our market shares
- Online
- Key points
- Online sales by grocery retailers
-
- Figure 427: Online sales by grocers as % of grocers’ sector sales, 2009-19
-
- Figure 428: Online sales by grocers: Segment size and forecast (incl VAT), 2009-19
- Market shares
-
- Figure 429: Estimated market shares of online sales by grocers, 2013
- UK coverage
-
- Figure 430: Coverage: Selected leading online grocers, February/March 2014
- Online sales of grocery products
-
- Figure 431: Online sales of grocery products (incl VAT), 2008-18
-
- Figure 432: Online grocery sales (incl VAT), at current and constant prices, 2008-18
- The consumer
- Nearly one quarter now buy online
-
- Figure 433: The consumer: Type of store used for grocery shopping – Online, September 2014
- Where they shop online
-
- Figure 434: The consumer: Retailers used for majority of grocery shopping, online, December 2013
- Why they do not shop online
-
- Figure 435: The consumer: Reasons for not shopping for groceries online, November 2012
- Website visitor data
-
- Figure 436: Leading food retail websites, by unique visitor numbers, September 2014
Ahold Group
-
- What we think
- Not yet in shape
- A greater focus on convenience
- Sells Slovakian operations to fund more Czech stores
- Broadening the online offer
- Company background
- Company performance
-
- Figure 437: Ahold Group: Retail division financial performance, excl. VAT, 2009-13
-
- Figure 438: Ahold Group: Outlet data, 2009-13
- Retail offering
Aldi
-
- What we think
- Germany
- Elsewhere
- Where next?
- Company background
- Company performance
-
- Figure 439: Aldi: Group financial performance, 2009-2013
- Figure 440: Aldi: Outlet data, 2009-2013
- Figure 441: Aldi: Outlet data, 2009-2013 (continued)
- Retail offering
Asda Group Ltd
-
- What we think
- Price
- Aldi and Lidl
- Stores
- Online
- Where next?
- Company background
- Company performance
-
- Figure 442: Asda Group Ltd: Group financial performance, 2009-13
-
- Figure 443: Asda Group Ltd: Outlet data, 2009-13
- Retail offering
-
- Figure 444: Asda: Sales mix, 2013
Groupe Auchan
-
- What we think
- Exposed in weak eurozone and under threat from trend away from hypermarkets
- Looking for growth
- Defensive purchasing alliances
- Company background
- Company performance
-
- Figure 445: Auchan: Group financial performance, 2009-13
-
- Figure 446: Auchan: Revenue by region, 2009-13
-
- Figure 447: Auchan: Retail sales estimates by country (Europe only), 2009-13
- Stores
-
- Figure 448: Auchan: Outlet data (Consolidated stores only), 2009-13
- Groupe Auchan – Non retail activities
- Retail offering
Carrefour
-
- What we think
- Where next?
- Company background
- Company performance
-
- Figure 449: Carrefour: Group financial performance, 2009-2013
-
- Figure 450: Carrefour: Outlet data, 2009-2013
-
- Figure 451: Carrefour (Europe): Outlet numbers (incl franchisees and partners, excluding cash and carry), 2009-13
- Retail offering
Casino
-
- What we think
- Warning signs in 2013
- Putting price first
- Casino and Intermarché enter buying agreement
- Online – Strong performance for GM and potential to expand in food
- Company background
- Company performance
-
- Figure 452: Casino: Group financial performance, excl. sales tax, 2009-14
-
- Figure 453: Casino: Outlet data (excluding franchises), 2009-13
- Retail offering
The Co-operative Food
-
- What we think
- Members vote in favour of changes to governance
- Clear focus on c-stores
- Marston’s deal brings over 60 new stores
- Improving the c-store offer
- Company background
- Company performance
- Interim results reflect a company in transition
-
- Figure 454: The Co-operative Food: Group financial performance, 2009/10-2013/14
-
- Figure 455: The Co-operative Food: Outlet data, 2009/10-2013/14
- Retail offering
Dia
-
- What we think
- 2013 in review
- Sells French operations
- Aquires El Arbol
- Company background
- Company performance
-
- Figure 456: Dia: Group financial performance, 2011-2014
- Figure 457: Dia: Group outlet data, 2011-13
- Retail offering
Edeka Group
-
- What we think
- Operations in 2013
- Netto goes fresh
- Acquisition of Kasier’s
- Online remains underdeveloped
- Company background
- Company performance
-
- Figure 458: Edeka Group: Group financial performance, 2009-2013
- Figure 459: Edeka Group: Outlet data, 2009-2013
- Store format
-
- Figure 460: Food outlet data and range by format, 2013
- Retail offering
- Edeka/Marktkauf
- Netto Marken-Discount
Iceland Foods
-
- What we think
- Riding the discounter wave
- Online: Gaining coverage
- Remains more popular as a top-up shop destination
- Company background
- Company performance
-
- Figure 461: Iceland Foods Ltd: Group financial performance, 2009/10-2013/14
- Figure 462: Iceland Foods Ltd: Outlet data, 2009/10-2013/14
- Retail offering
Intermarché/ITM Entreprises (Groupement des Mousquetaires)
-
- What we think
- A tougher French market
- Capital investment
- Investing to drive sales
- Company background
- Company performance
-
- Figure 463: Groupement des Mousquetaires (Intermarché/ITM Entreprises): Group financial performance, 2009-13
-
- Figure 464: Groupement des Mousquetaires (Intermarché/ITM Entreprises): Outlet data, 2009-13
- Store formats
-
- Figure 465: Groupement des Mousquetaires: Food outlet data and range by format type, 2013
- Retail offering
J. Sainsbury
-
- What we think
- Write downs
- Promotions
- Launch of Netto
- Change of CEO
- Where next?
- Company background
- Company performance
-
- Figure 466: J. Sainsbury: Group financial performance, 2009/10-2013/14
-
- Figure 467: J. Sainsbury: Outlet data, 2009/10-2013/14
- Retail offering
-
- Figure 468: Sainsbury’s: Estimated Sales Mix, 2013/14
Jerónimo Martins
-
- What we think
- Is Polish migration to discounters slowing?
- Pingo Doce consolidating its strong second place in Portugal
- Non-grocery a possible longer-term opportunity at Pingo Doce
- Company background
- Company performance
-
- Figure 469: Jerónimo Martins: Group financial performance, 2009-13
-
- Figure 470: Jerónimo Martins: Outlet data, 2009-13
- Retail offering
- Pingo Doce
- Biedronka
Leclerc
-
- What we think
- Price focus key to success
- Driven to succeed
- Collection remains the preferred online delivery method
- Company background
- Company performance
-
- Figure 471: E.Leclerc: Group sales performance, excl. VAT, 2009-13
- Figure 472: E. Leclerc: Estimated international sales by country, excl. VAT, 2011-13
-
- Figure 473: E. Leclerc: Group outlet data, 2009-13
- Retail offering
Lidl/Kaufland (Schwarz Group)
-
- What we think
- Online
- Where next
- Company background
- Company performance
-
- Figure 474: Schwarz Group: Group financial performance, 2009/10-2013/14
-
- Figure 475: Schwarz Group: Outlet data, 2009/10-2013/14
- Figure 476: Schwarz Group: Outlet data, 2009/10-2013/14 (continued)
- Figure 477: Schwarz Group: Outlet data, 2009/10-2013/14 (continued)
- Figure 478: Schwarz Group: Outlet data, 2009/10-2013/14 (continued)
- Retail offering
Marks & Spencer (UK food)
-
- What we think
- Product differentiation
- ‘Shop for today’ M&S Simply Food store expansion
- Developing the in-store experience
- Limited click-and-collect service
- Company background
- Company performance
-
- Figure 479: Marks & Spencer (UK food): Group financial performance, 2009/10-2013/14
-
- Figure 480: Marks & Spencer (UK food): Food outlets by format, 2009/10-2013/14
- Figure 481: Marks & Spencer (UK food): Outlet data, 2009/10-2013/14
- Retail offering
Mercadona
-
- What we think
- A more difficult year
- Continued investment in stores
- Rethinking fresh
- Company background
- Company performance
-
- Figure 482: Mercadona: Financial performance, 2009-13
- Figure 483: Mercadona: Outlet data, 2009-13
- Retail offering
Ocado
-
- What we think
- Morrisons partnership gets off to a good start
- Potential for similar tie-ups?
- New Sizzle “destination site” joins Fetch
- Company background
- Company performance
-
- Figure 484: Ocado Ltd: Group financial performance, 2008/9-2012/13
- Retail offering
Real (Metro Group)
-
- What we think
- Stripped back, but still struggling
- An improving trend?
- Implications of the purchasing agreement with Auchan
- Company background
- Company performance
-
- Figure 485: Real: Group financial performance, 2009-2013/14
-
- Figure 486: Real: Outlet data, 2009-2013/14
- Retail offering
Rewe
-
- What we think
- Penny conversions reaping rewards
- Pushing into convenience
- Online push is overdue in Germany
- International markets prove patchy
- Company background
- Company performance
-
- Figure 487: Rewe: Group sales performance, 2009-13
- Figure 488: Rewe: Group sales performance – Breakdown by country, 2009-13
-
- Figure 489: Rewe: Outlet data, 2009-13
- Retail offering
- Rewe
- Penny
Spar Europe
-
- What we think
- Enhanced own-label offering targeting meal-times
- Pushing its convenient shopping destination credentials
- Limited online grocery shopping option
- Positioning itself as a healthy food retailer
- Improving the in-store checkout experience for its customers
- Tailored formats offering additional sales growth opportunities
- Expanded everyday general merchandise range
- Company background
- Company performance
-
- Figure 490: SPAR International: Retail sales by country, 2009-13
-
- Figure 491: SPAR International: Outlets, 2009-13
- Figure 492: SPAR International: Retail sales area, 2009-13
- Figure 493: SPAR International: Sales per sq m, by country, 2009-13
- Retail offering
Tesco Plc
-
- What we think
- Profits overstatement
- Unintended consequences
- UK stores all important
- Where next?
- Longer term
- Company background
- Company performance
- Recent trading
- Profits overstatement
-
- Figure 494: Tesco Plc: Group financial performance, 2009/10-2013/14
- Figure 495: Tesco Plc: Outlet data, 2009/10-2013/14
- Retail offering
-
- Figure 496: Tesco: Sales breakdown, 2013/14
Waitrose Ltd
-
- What we think
- Creating additional reasons to visit its stores
- Establishing itself in the potentially lucrative commuter market
- Online grocery delivery enhancements
- Specialist online product offering boosting sales
- myWaitrose driving incremental sales
- Company background
- Company performance
-
- Figure 497: Waitrose Ltd: Group financial performance, 2009/10-2013/14
-
- Figure 498: Waitrose Ltd: Outlet data, 2009/10-2013/14
- Retail offering
Wm Morrison Group
-
- What we think
- What went wrong?
- But decline of superstores
- Match and More
- Cutting SKUs
- Online
- Going forward
- Company background
- Company performance
-
- Figure 499: Wm Morrison Group: Group financial performance, 2009/10-2014/15
- Figure 500: Wm Morrison Group: Outlet data, 2009/10-2013/14
- Retail offering
Appendix – Economic and Demographic Data
-
- Inflation
-
- Figure 501: Annual consumer prices inflation in food and non-alcoholic beverages, 2010-14
- Figure 502: Europe: Annual consumer prices inflation, all items, 2010-13
- Online
-
- Figure 503: Europe: Percentage of households with a broadband internet connection, by country, 2009-13
- Figure 504: Europe: Percentage of all individuals accessing the internet daily, 2009-13
- Consumer confidence
-
- Figure 505: Europe: Consumer confidence levels, November 2013-October 2014
- Population
-
- Figure 506: Europe: Population, total and by age group, 2010
- Figure 507: Europe: Forecast population, total and by age group, 2015
- Figure 508: Europe: Forecast population, total and by age group, 2020
- Gross domestic product
-
- Figure 509: Europe: Gross domestic product, at current prices, 2012 and 2013
- Figure 510: Europe: Real-terms year-on-year GDP growth, 2009-13
- Consumer spending
-
- Figure 511: Europe: Consumer spending, at current prices, 2012 and 2013
- Figure 512: Europe: Real-terms year-on-year growth in consumer spending, 2009-13
- Interest rates
-
- Figure 513: Europe: Central bank interest rates, 2009-13
Appendix – The Consumer – European Comparison
-
-
- Figure 514: Those in household responsible for grocery shopping, October 2014
-
Appendix – The Consumer – France
-
-
- Figure 515: Retailers used for main and top-up grocery shopping, France, October 2014
-
- Figure 516: Attitudes towards discount supermarkets in France, by most popular retailers used for main and top-up grocery shopping – Any grocery shop, France, October 2014
-
- Figure 517: Attitudes towards discount supermarkets in France, by next most popular retailers used for main and top-up grocery shopping – Any grocery shop, France, October 2014
-
- Figure 518: Reasons for not shopping/not shopping enough for groceries at discount supermarkets, by most popular retailers used for main and top-up grocery shopping – Any grocery shop, France, October 2014
-
- Figure 519: Reasons for not shopping/not shopping enough for groceries at discount supermarkets, by next most popular retailers used for main and top-up grocery shopping – Any grocery shop, France, October 2014
- Responsibility for grocery shopping
-
- Figure 520: Those in household responsible for grocery shopping, by demographics, France, October 2014
- Where people shop
-
- Figure 521: Most popular retailers used for main and top-up grocery shopping – Any grocery shop, by demographics, France, October 2014
-
- Figure 522: Next most popular retailers used for main and top-up grocery shopping – Any grocery shop, by demographics, France, October 2014
-
- Figure 523: Other retailers used for main and top-up grocery shopping – Any grocery shop, by demographics, France, October 2014
- Attitude statements
-
- Figure 524: Agreement with the statement ‘The quality of fresh meat at discount supermarkets has improved in the last 2 years’, supermarkets in France, by demographics, October 2014
-
- Figure 525: Agreement with the statement ‘The quality of fresh fruit and vegetables at discount supermarkets has improved in the last 2 years’, supermarkets in France, by demographics, October 2014
-
- Figure 526: Agreement with the statement ‘The quality of fresh bakery products at discount supermarkets has improved in the last 2 years’, supermarkets in France, by demographics, October 2014
-
- Figure 527: Agreement with the statement ‘The choice of brands available at discount supermarkets has improved in the last 2 years’, supermarkets in France, by demographics, October 2014
-
- Figure 528: Agreement with the statement ‘I can’t buy all the groceries I need at discount supermarkets’, supermarkets in France, by demographics, October 2014
-
- Figure 529: Agreement with the statement ‘I’d like to see a bigger choice of non-grocery items at discount supermarkets’, supermarkets in France, by demographics, October 2014
-
- Figure 530: Agreement with the statement ‘The choice of items available within certain ranges at discount supermarkets is too limited’, supermarkets in France, by demographics, October 2014
-
- Figure 531: Agreement with the statement ‘I would shop less at discount supermarkets if I had more money^’, supermarkets in France, by demographics, October 2014
-
- Figure 532: Agreement with the statement ‘I sometimes buy non-grocery items I didn’t plan to buy when shopping at discount supermarkets’, supermarkets in France, by demographics, October 2014
-
- Figure 533: Agreement with the statement ‘I sometimes visit discount supermarkets specifically to buy non-grocery items I’ve seen advertised in advance’, supermarkets in France, by demographics, October 2014
-
- Figure 534: Agreement with the statement ‘I do more of my grocery shopping at discount supermarkets than I did two years ago’, supermarkets in France, by demographics, October 2014
-
- Figure 535: Agreement with the statement ‘I’m less tempted to buy additional grocery items that I don’t really need at discount supermarkets’, supermarkets in France, by demographics, October 2014
-
- Figure 536: Most popular reasons for not shopping/not shopping enough for groceries at discount supermarkets, by demographics, France, October 2014
-
- Figure 537: Next most popular reasons for not shopping/not shopping enough for groceries at discount supermarkets, by demographics, France, October 2014
-
- Figure 538: Other reasons for not shopping/not shopping enough for groceries at discount supermarkets, by demographics, France, October 2014
-
Appendix – The Consumer – Germany
-
-
- Figure 539: Retailers used for main and top-up grocery shopping, Germany, October 2014
-
- Figure 540: Attitudes towards discount supermarkets in Germany, by most popular retailers used for main and top-up grocery shopping – Any grocery shop, Germany, October 2014
-
- Figure 541: Attitudes towards discount supermarkets in Germany, by next most popular retailers used for main and top-up grocery shopping – Any grocery shop, Germany, October 2014
-
- Figure 542: Reasons for not shopping/not shopping enough for groceries at discount supermarkets, by most popular retailers used for main and top-up grocery shopping – Any grocery shop, Germany, October 2014
-
- Figure 543: Reasons for not shopping/not shopping enough for groceries at discount supermarkets, by next most popular retailers used for main and top-up grocery shopping – Any grocery shop, Germany, October 2014
- Responsibility for grocery shopping
-
- Figure 544: Those in household responsible for grocery shopping, by demographics, Germany, October 2014
- Where people shop
-
- Figure 545: Most popular retailers used for main and top-up grocery shopping – Any grocery shop, by demographics, Germany, October 2014
-
- Figure 546: Next most popular retailers used for main and top-up grocery shopping – Any grocery shop, by demographics, Germany, October 2014
-
- Figure 547: Other retailers used for main and top-up grocery shopping – Any grocery shop, by demographics, Germany, October 2014
- Attitude statements
-
- Figure 548: Agreement with the statement ‘The quality of fresh meat at discount supermarkets has improved in the last 2 years’, supermarkets in Germany, by demographics, October 2014
-
- Figure 549: Agreement with the statement ‘The quality of fresh fruit and vegetables at discount supermarkets has improved in the last 2 years’, supermarkets in Germany, by demographics, October 2014
-
- Figure 550: Agreement with the statement ‘The quality of fresh bakery products at discount supermarkets has improved in the last 2 years’, supermarkets in Germany, by demographics, October 2014
-
- Figure 551: Agreement with the statement ‘The choice of brands available at discount supermarkets has improved in the last 2 years’, supermarkets in Germany, by demographics, October 2014
-
- Figure 552: Agreement with the statement ‘I can’t buy all the groceries I need at discount supermarkets’, supermarkets in Germany, by demographics, October 2014
-
- Figure 553: Agreement with the statement ‘I’d like to see a bigger choice of non-grocery items at discount supermarkets’, supermarkets in Germany, by demographics, October 2014
-
- Figure 554: Agreement with the statement ‘The choice of items available within certain ranges at discount supermarkets is too limited’, supermarkets in Germany, by demographics, October 2014
-
- Figure 555: Agreement with the statement ‘I would shop less at discount supermarkets if I had more money^’, supermarkets in Germany, by demographics, October 2014
-
- Figure 556: Agreement with the statement ‘I sometimes buy non-grocery items I didn’t plan to buy when shopping at discount supermarkets’, supermarkets in Germany, by demographics, October 2014
-
- Figure 557: Agreement with the statement ‘I sometimes visit discount supermarkets specifically to buy non-grocery items I’ve seen advertised in advance’, supermarkets in Germany, by demographics, October 2014
-
- Figure 558: Agreement with the statement ‘I do more of my grocery shopping at discount supermarkets than I did two years ago’, supermarkets in Germany, by demographics, October 2014
-
- Figure 559: Agreement with the statement ‘I’m less tempted to buy additional grocery items that I don’t really need at discount supermarkets’, supermarkets in Germany, by demographics, October 2014
-
- Figure 560: Most popular reasons for not shopping/not shopping enough for groceries at discount supermarkets, by demographics, Germany, October 2014
-
- Figure 561: Next most popular reasons for not shopping/not shopping enough for groceries at discount supermarkets, by demographics, Germany, October 2014
-
- Figure 562: Other reasons for not shopping/not shopping enough for groceries at discount supermarkets, by demographics, Germany, October 2014
-
Appendix – The Consumer – Italy
-
-
- Figure 563: Retailers used for main and top-up grocery shopping, Italy, October 2014
-
- Figure 564: Attitudes towards discount supermarkets in Italy, by most popular retailers used for main and top-up grocery shopping – Any grocery shop, Italy, October 2014
-
- Figure 565: Attitudes towards discount supermarkets in Italy, by next most popular retailers used for main and top-up grocery shopping – Any grocery shop, Italy, October 2014
-
- Figure 566: Reasons for not shopping/not shopping enough for groceries at discount supermarkets, by most popular retailers used for main and top-up grocery shopping – Any grocery shop, Italy, October 2014
-
- Figure 567: Reasons for not shopping/not shopping enough for groceries at discount supermarkets, by next most popular retailers used for main and top-up grocery shopping – Any grocery shop, Italy, October 2014
- Responsibility for grocery shopping
-
- Figure 568: Those in household responsible for grocery shopping, by demographics, Italy, October 2014
- Where people shop
-
- Figure 569: Most popular retailers used for main and top-up grocery shopping – Any grocery shop, by demographics, Italy, October 2014
-
- Figure 570: Next most popular retailers used for main and top-up grocery shopping – Any grocery shop, by demographics, Italy, October 2014
-
- Figure 571: Other retailers used for main and top-up grocery shopping – Any grocery shop, by demographics, Italy, October 2014
- Attitude statements
-
- Figure 572: Agreement with the statement ‘The quality of fresh meat at discount supermarkets has improved in the last 2 years’, supermarkets in Italy, by demographics, October 2014
-
- Figure 573: Agreement with the statement ‘The quality of fresh fruit and vegetables at discount supermarkets has improved in the last 2 years’, supermarkets in Italy, by demographics, October 2014
-
- Figure 574: Agreement with the statement ‘The quality of fresh bakery products at discount supermarkets has improved in the last 2 years’, supermarkets in Italy, by demographics, October 2014
-
- Figure 575: Agreement with the statement ‘The choice of brands available at discount supermarkets has improved in the last 2 years’, supermarkets in Italy, by demographics, October 2014
-
- Figure 576: Agreement with the statement ‘I can’t buy all the groceries I need at discount supermarkets’, supermarkets in Italy, by demographics, October 2014
-
- Figure 577: Agreement with the statement ‘I’d like to see a bigger choice of non-grocery items at discount supermarkets’, supermarkets in Italy, by demographics, October 2014
-
- Figure 578: Agreement with the statement ‘The choice of items available within certain ranges at discount supermarkets is too limited’, supermarkets in Italy, by demographics, October 2014
-
- Figure 579: Agreement with the statement ‘I would shop less at discount supermarkets if I had more money^’, supermarkets in Italy, by demographics, October 2014
-
- Figure 580: Agreement with the statement ‘I sometimes buy non-grocery items I didn’t plan to buy when shopping at discount supermarkets’, supermarkets in Italy, by demographics, October 2014
-
- Figure 581: Agreement with the statement ‘I sometimes visit discount supermarkets specifically to buy non-grocery items I’ve seen advertised in advance’, supermarkets in Italy, by demographics, October 2014
-
- Figure 582: Agreement with the statement ‘I do more of my grocery shopping at discount supermarkets than I did two years ago’, supermarkets in Italy, by demographics, October 2014
-
- Figure 583: Agreement with the statement ‘I’m less tempted to buy additional grocery items that I don’t really need at discount supermarkets’, supermarkets in Italy, by demographics, October 2014
-
- Figure 584: Most popular reasons for not shopping/not shopping enough for groceries at discount supermarkets, by demographics, Italy, October 2014
-
- Figure 585: Next most popular reasons for not shopping/not shopping enough for groceries at discount supermarkets, by demographics, Italy, October 2014
-
- Figure 586: Other reasons for not shopping/not shopping enough for groceries at discount supermarkets, by demographics, Italy, October 2014
-
Appendix – The Consumer – Spain
-
-
- Figure 587: Retailers used for main and top-up grocery shopping, Spain, October 2014
-
- Figure 588: Attitudes towards discount supermarkets in Spain, by most popular retailers used for main and top-up grocery shopping – Any grocery shop, Spain, October 2014
-
- Figure 589: Attitudes towards discount supermarkets in Spain, by next most popular retailers used for main and top-up grocery shopping – Any grocery shop, Spain, October 2014
-
- Figure 590: Reasons for not shopping/not shopping enough for groceries at discount supermarkets, by most popular retailers used for main and top-up grocery shopping – Any grocery shop, Spain, October 2014
-
- Figure 591: Reasons for not shopping/not shopping enough for groceries at discount supermarkets, by next most popular retailers used for main and top-up grocery shopping – Any grocery shop, Spain, October 2014
- Responsibility for grocery shopping
-
- Figure 592: Those in household responsible for grocery shopping, by demographics, Spain, October 2014
- Where people shop
-
- Figure 593: Most popular retailers used for main and top-up grocery shopping – Any grocery shop, by demographics, Spain, October 2014
-
- Figure 594: Next most popular retailers used for main and top-up grocery shopping – Any grocery shop, by demographics, Spain, October 2014
-
- Figure 595: Other retailers used for main and top-up grocery shopping – Any grocery shop, by demographics, Spain, October 2014
- Attitude statements
-
- Figure 596: Agreement with the statement ‘The quality of fresh meat at discount supermarkets has improved in the last 2 years’, supermarkets in Spain, by demographics, October 2014
-
- Figure 597: Agreement with the statement ‘The quality of fresh fruit and vegetables at discount supermarkets has improved in the last 2 years’, supermarkets in Spain, by demographics, October 2014
-
- Figure 598: Agreement with the statement ‘The quality of fresh bakery products at discount supermarkets has improved in the last 2 years’, supermarkets in Spain, by demographics, October 2014
-
- Figure 599: Agreement with the statement ‘The choice of brands available at discount supermarkets has improved in the last 2 years’, supermarkets in Spain, by demographics, October 2014
-
- Figure 600: Agreement with the statement ‘I can’t buy all the groceries I need at discount supermarkets’, supermarkets in Spain, by demographics, October 2014
-
- Figure 601: Agreement with the statement ‘I’d like to see a bigger choice of non-grocery items at discount supermarkets’, supermarkets in Spain, by demographics, October 2014
-
- Figure 602: Agreement with the statement ‘The choice of items available within certain ranges at discount supermarkets is too limited’, supermarkets in Spain, by demographics, October 2014
-
- Figure 603: Agreement with the statement ‘I would shop less at discount supermarkets if I had more money^’, supermarkets in Spain, by demographics, October 2014
-
- Figure 604: Agreement with the statement ‘I sometimes buy non-grocery items I didn’t plan to buy when shopping at discount supermarkets’, supermarkets in Spain, by demographics, October 2014
-
- Figure 605: Agreement with the statement ‘I sometimes visit discount supermarkets specifically to buy non-grocery items I’ve seen advertised in advance, supermarkets in Spain, by demographics, October 2014
-
- Figure 606: Agreement with the statement ‘I do more of my grocery shopping at discount supermarkets than I did two years ago’, supermarkets in Spain, by demographics, October 2014
-
- Figure 607: Agreement with the statement ‘I’m less tempted to buy additional grocery items that I don’t really need at discount supermarkets’, supermarkets in Spain, by demographics, October 2014
-
- Figure 608: Most popular reasons for not shopping/not shopping enough for groceries at discount supermarkets, by demographics, Spain, October 2014
-
- Figure 609: Next most popular reasons for not shopping/not shopping enough for groceries at discount supermarkets, by demographics, Spain, October 2014
-
- Figure 610: Other reasons for not shopping/not shopping enough for groceries at discount supermarkets, by demographics, Spain, October 2014
-
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