Food sales feed Woolworths’ earnings

File picture: Supplied

File picture: Supplied

Published Feb 11, 2016

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Johannesburg - Woolworths, the South African food and clothing retailer, said first-half earnings climbed 47 percent as food sales grew and as revenue from its David Jones unit in Australia climbed.

The seller of organic foods and international clothing brands such as Country Road posted the gain even as the worst drought in more than a century pushed South African food prices higher, with December food inflation climbing to 5.8 percent. Woolworths lifted its food prices by 5.7 percent in the second half of last year.

Read: SA retailers dominate Africa

Net income rose to R2.4 billion in the six months through December 27, from R1.6 billion in the same period a year earlier, the Cape Town-based company said in a statement on Thursday. Sales gained 17 percent to R35.5 billion.

“As a result of the deterioration in the outlook for the global economy, conditions are expected to become more difficult both in South Africa and Australia,” the company said. “Increasing interest rates in South Africa will add further pressure on the local consumer.”

Woolworths also benefits from the rand’s depreciation relative to the Australian dollar, a result of its 2014 purchase of Sydney-based department-store operator David Jones. The rand has weakened about 26 percent against the Australian currency during the past year.

Woolworths shares, which rallied 30 percent in 2015, have dropped 6.9 percent this year. The FTSE/JSE Africa General Retailers Index of 11 companies has declined 8.6 percent.

The company will pay an interim dividend of R1.33, an increase of 38 percent.

BLOOMBERG

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