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Tesco (TSCO)     

dai oldenrich - 01 May 2007 16:26

Tesco is one of the worlds leading international retailers. Since the company first the trading name of Tesco, in the mid 1920s, the group has expanded into different formats, different markets and different sectors. The UKs leading retailer Tesco was floated on the stock exchange in 1947 and in 1995 took over rival Sainsburys position as the UK number one. The principal activity of the group is food retailing, with over 2,000 stores worldwide. Tesco has a long term strategy for growth, based on four key parts: growth in the Core UK business, to expand by growing internationally, to be as strong in non-food as in food and to follow customers into new retailing services. The company launched a home shopping service in 2000, allowing customers to order their shopping online. Tesco is now expanding its convenience stores and overseas into areas such as Taiwan, Malaysia, Poland, the US and Ireland.

Chart.aspx?Provider=EODIntra&Code=tsco&S

Upper graph = 12 month share price with 6 month moving average
Lower graph = 12 month volume (red line = volume average).

dreamcatcher - 26 Feb 2015 12:20 - 1426 of 1721

Sharecast -


Tesco loses two more directors as Garfield and Tammenoms step down

Thu, 26 February 2015


Tesco loses two more directors as Garfield and Tammenoms step down

Two more Tesco directors have decided to join chairman Sir Richard Broadbent in departing at the end of this week.
The supermarket group revealed that Jacqueline Tammenoms, a six-year stalwart of the retailer's boardroom, had decided to step down at the end of the month.

Simultanously, Liv Garfield, also the chief executive of Severn Trent, called time on her stint just shy of two years after taking on the non-executive role.

Tesco said Garfield wanted to leave in order to allow her to concentrate fully on her new role at the FTSE 100 water company.

Chairman Sir Richard Broadbent, who is also due to leave at the end of the Month, said: "Tesco would like to put on record its appreciation for the dedicated and unstinting contribution of all its directors during a time of unprecedented challenge."

Last week the FTSE 100 group confirmed it had appointed Dixons Carphone chairman John Allan as a replacement for Broadbent, who resigned following the accounting scandal last October.

The resignations of Garfield and Tammenoms will leave Tesco with only one female non-executive on its board, US turnaround specialist Deanna Oppenheimer.

ExecLine - 26 Feb 2015 14:14 - 1427 of 1721

Well, wifey and I keep shopping there.

Maybe not next time though! Sainsbury's have pulled us away with a "Spend only £30 and get a voucher for 10p per litre of your petrol." So we will split the shopping conveyor and get ourselves two of those.

We are also very heavy on the things Aldi sell, which the average family simply just cannot do without. Anyone who shops at Aldi and wanders round the store, will know exactly what I mean.

skinny - 03 Mar 2015 12:51 - 1429 of 1721

Highest since last August @248.50p - mind the gap!

Chart.aspx?Provider=EODIntra&Code=TSCO&S

skinny - 20 Mar 2015 07:04 - 1431 of 1721

Tesco announces 21 store transaction

TESCO REFOCUSES ON ITS CORE BUSINESS WITH 21 STORE TRANSACTION

Tesco has regained sole ownership of 21 superstores in a transaction with British Land. The agreement comes as Tesco continues to strengthen its core UK business.

The 21 superstores and associated debt were part of a joint venture between Tesco and British Land and were all subject to RPI-indexed rent increases.

In exchange for the superstores, British Land will take over Tesco's stake in three shopping centres, three retail parks and three standalone stores which are held in two joint ventures between the two companies. Tesco will continue to lease the stores at these sites at market rents which are not subject to RPI-indexed increases.

As part of the transaction, Tesco will also receive £96m from British Land.

Dave Lewis, Tesco CEO, said:

"Last year we identified the opportunity to increase the proportion of our stores we own as freehold. This transaction with British Land allows us to increase our ownership and thereby insulate more of our businesses from indexed rent reviews. We have a long way to go but it's a transaction which takes us in the right direction. This agreement makes our business simpler and stronger."

skinny - 08 Apr 2015 13:00 - 1432 of 1721

Tesco sales rise shows tentative recovery continues

skinny - 10 Apr 2015 13:56 - 1433 of 1721

Barclays Capital Equal weight 248.40 205.00 240.00 Reiterates

dreamcatcher - 11 Apr 2015 22:02 - 1434 of 1721

Tesco-could-face-3bn-bill-for-failing-supermarkets.

"Tesco's pension deficit is likely to have widened – possibly to over £5bn - and we expect to hear more detail on how this will be addressed. We also expect Tesco to follow Morrison and Sainsbury's by taking a large property impairment – circa £3bn does not seem an unreasonable estimate when extrapolating from the peers."

The analysts said they "remain wary of totally ruling out a rights issue" but that there is "little immediate pressure" for Tesco given its credit rating has already been downgraded to junk.

Alongside the analysis from Barclays, figures from Nielsen suggest that Tesco's performance has slid behind rivals Sainsbury's and Morrisons.

Claret Dragon - 16 Apr 2015 16:40 - 1436 of 1721

May be its time for me to exit Tesco before the possibility of the Summer sell off.

skinny - 19 Apr 2015 07:07 - 1438 of 1721

Tesco to plug pensions black hole

dreamcatcher - 21 Apr 2015 22:14 - 1439 of 1721


By Giles Gwinnett
April 21 2015, 6:39pm
Wednesday's agenda - Tesco's pending full year results divides opinion


Supermarket supertanker Tesco (LON:TSCO) reports final results and the numbers are sure to be closely scrutinised, though what they will be has opinion divided.

It's been a rough couple of years for Britain's largest grocer, blighted with falling profits and accounting scandals, but recently the green shoots of improvement have been visible.

Earlier this month, Kantar, the market researcher, said in the 12 weeks to March 29, Tesco sales were up 0.3% to £7.1bn.

But there's no doubt that new man at the helm Dave Lewis certainly has his work cut out for him as he attempts to re-build the group's balance sheet and rebuild shareholder value.

Most commentators believe the results will paint a dismal picture Wednesday though HSBC has gone against the grain.

The international bank has a "buy" recommendation on the shares and a target price of 295 pence, which is a long old way from the current price of 234.75p.

The bank reckons despite a period of huge under-performance, sales growth has been catching up with the industry and it is no longer losing significant market share.

Others expect the results to be the worst in 96 years, with some predicting the loss for the year to be up to £5bn.

Other black holes to look out for are said to include the pension deficit, property writedown, and supplier fees.

Pension problems dominated news on Tuesday with the retailer kicking off consultation with its 300,000 about the future of their pensions. The deficit has been estimated at £5bn.

US broker Citi rates the shares 'neutral' targeting £2.35 - up from £1.90.

The broker expects £1,840mln net ‘retail’ operating cash flow for FY14/15 - around 50% lower than last year and assumes a £4.5bn pension deficit at year-end.

skinny - 22 Apr 2015 07:03 - 1440 of 1721

Preliminary Results

PRELIMINARY RESULTS 2014/15

· £1.4bn Group trading profit, in line with expectations
· UK like-for-like sales volumes up for first time in over four years, driven by better availability, service and pricing; like-for-like sales performance improved to (1.0)% in Q4
· Significant reduction in UK trading profit, as previously announced
· Tough trading conditions overseas, especially in Korea; disappointing performance in Europe
· Transformation programme outlined in January progressing well; portfolio review ongoing
· £(7.0)bn one-off charges, predominantly non-cash; includes £(4.7)bn fixed asset impairment, reflecting challenging industry conditions and profit decline
· Pension deficit funding plan agreed with Trustee, comprising cash contributions of £270m per annum
· No final dividend, as previously announced
· Enhanced disclosure, including property valuation/ownership and commercial income
· Reiterating commitment to reinvest any savings or outperformance into further improvements for customers

dreamcatcher - 22 Apr 2015 07:07 - 1441 of 1721

An eye watering 6.4 billion loss, certainly not going to be the Tesco we know today for the future. Will drastic Dave survive ?

Claret Dragon - 22 Apr 2015 13:18 - 1442 of 1721

Bankruptcy a possibility?

HARRYCAT - 22 Apr 2015 13:56 - 1443 of 1721

Ha Ha! Not even a remote one.

ExecLine - 22 Apr 2015 14:31 - 1444 of 1721

Whatever their woes, it is generally considered they can trade out of it - even if it needs some kind of massive re-financing just to boost the balance sheet with cash.

And they don't seem to want any of that kind of medicine.

For the moment, the board are being supported as Dave clears the decks. In fact, I guess now we can just about believe, that there is maybe not even an ounce more of any bad news.

Or can we? I'm not exactly sure what I've just said means the shares are a 'buy'. The market itself is a bit toppy and wobbly and there's also the uncertainty of the Election.

Oakapples142 - 22 Apr 2015 14:35 - 1445 of 1721

No dividend - so I was out at 239p
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