John Lewis scraps staff bonus and warns of job cuts after £234m loss

Warning follows group’s second ever full-year loss, and 3% fall in sales at Waitrose

John Lewis and Waitrose staff will not get a bonus this year after the retail group fell into the red, posting a worse than expected £230m full-year loss.

Sharon White, the chairman of the John Lewis Partnership, warned of job losses to come as she said “inflation hit us like a hurricane”, with higher freight, energy, labour and fuel bills adding £180m in costs. These helped push the group into the second ever full-year loss in its history.

White said some Waitrose shoppers had turned to the discounters, as the business “saw a post-Covid shift in grocery from online to shops” and belts tightened at a time of record-low consumer confidence.

She said the outlook remained uncertain because inflation, though diminishing, was still around and consumer confidence, though rising, remained subdued.

The staff-owned group said it made an underlying pre-tax loss of £78m in the year to 28 January, compared with analysts’ expectations of £50m and an £181m profit a year before. Write-downs of the value of Waitrose stores after poor trading took the overall loss much higher.

White apologised to staff, who are known as partners because they jointly own the business, for not paying an annual bonus for only the second time since 1953 after “a tough set of results”.

However, she defended her plan to cut costs and invest in new areas such as financial services and building homes to rent above stores. “I couldn’t be more confident that we could convert more of our £12bn-plus of sales into sustainable profit. We have a strong balance sheet and a prudent strategy to support long-term growth,” White said.

She said there was a “clear path to profit” although the group did not pledge to return to the black this year, potentially spelling another lost bonus for workers in 2024.

Sales for the group fell 2% to £12.25bn as steady sales at its department store chain only partly offset a 3% fall in sales at Waitrose. White said Waitrose had attracted 800,000 more customers but each had spent less.

White said the group was responding to its difficulties by tripling its target for cost savings to £900m by January 2026.

“The mantra for the year is cost out, margins up and customer focus,” she said, adding: “As we need to become more efficient and productive, that will have an impact on our number of partners”.

The figures were published a day after the parent group of John Lewis and Waitrose appointed the former Hovis boss Nish Kankiwala as its first group chief executive as it struggles to turn around the business amid rising costs.

The boss of its department store chain, Pippa Wicks, left unexpectedly last month to be replaced by the retail director, Naomi Simcock, while the boss of Waitrose, James Bailey, is under pressure after sales slid at the supermarket chain amid the cost of living crisis.

Sales at the department stores rose 0.2% to £4.9bn, helped by strong fashion and beauty offsetting a fall in sales of home technology and larger furniture. Operating profits slumped 11% to £676m as costs rose. Sales in stores were up by a fifth but there was a 5% slide online as shoppers returned to high streets after the pandemic restrictions.

John Lewis has put plans for smaller stores on hold in this year, but will update existing department stores to appeal more to families with, for example, more play areas, parent rooms and schoolwear from its cut-price range.

At Waitrose, sales fell 3% to £7.3b, with the number of items sold down 10% amid rising grocery inflation across the market. Online sales decreased to 14% of the total, down from 17% at the height of the pandemic, with store sales steady. Operating profit fell 12% to £894m. White said the retailer had partly suffered from availability problems caused by a warehouse fire and difficulties with product supply.

The supermarket is planning to open 50 new convenience store outlets via its partnerships with Dobbies garden centres and Shell garages but has no plans for more standalone Little Waitrose stores this year.

Susannah Streeter, head of money and markets at the broker Hargreaves Lansdown, said: “Although the high street has shown pockets of resilience among retailers offering value-for-money essentials, the nice-to-have items which are John Lewis’ bread and butter have been dropping out of shopping baskets fast. Waitrose, in particular, has been sideswiped by the trend, with essentials rather than treats a priority, shoppers have been putting less in their trolleys and decamping to cheaper stores.”

Contributor

Sarah Butler

The GuardianTramp

Related Content

Article image
John Lewis may find that cuddly co-investors don’t exist | Nils Pratley
Sharon White, chair of the partnership, is fishing in an extremely small pool if investors must be like-minded

Nils Pratley

22, Mar, 2023 @6:00 AM

Article image
John Lewis boss Sharon White to step down
Chair of John Lewis Partnership will leave in February 2025 at end of her five-year term, company says

Sarah Butler

02, Oct, 2023 @3:41 PM

Article image
John Lewis staff bonus at 67-year low as more closures announced
Three Waitrose stores to shut this year, putting about 400 jobs at risk

Sarah Butler

05, Mar, 2020 @6:25 PM

Article image
John Lewis cuts staff bonus to lowest level since 1953
Workers will receive bonus worth 3% of annual pay as underlying profits fall 45.4%

Sarah Butler

07, Mar, 2019 @7:34 PM

Article image
John Lewis may turn surplus stores into affordable homes
Partnership also plans to close some supermarkets and sell own-label food at other retailers

Zoe Wood

30, Jul, 2020 @3:14 PM

Article image
John Lewis agrees £500m deal with Abrdn to build 1,000 rental homes
Waitrose shops in Bromley and West Ealing will be redeveloped, and vacant warehouse in Reading

Mark Sweney

02, Dec, 2022 @8:41 AM

Article image
John Lewis cuts losses to £29m but warns of Christmas uncertainty
Retailer says it faces ‘significant uncertainty’ about trading amid staff and stock pressures

Sarah Butler

16, Sep, 2021 @5:01 PM

Article image
The decisions facing John Lewis as it tries to halt fall in profits
Sharon White will have the challenge of a new management structure when she arrives as chair

Sarah Butler

09, Jan, 2020 @7:12 PM

Article image
John Lewis and Waitrose owner appoints first group chief executive
Nish Kankiwala to lead staff-owned partnership as it struggles to turn around business amid rising costs

Sarah Butler

15, Mar, 2023 @12:04 PM

Article image
John Lewis to close eight more stores, putting 1,500 jobs at risk
Department stores in York, Peterborough, Sheffield and Aberdeen to shut and ‘at home’ shops in Ashford, Basingstoke, Chester and Tunbridge Wells

Sarah Butler

24, Mar, 2021 @11:37 AM