Pick n Pay looks to cut management jobs

Customers at Pick n Pay in Carlton centre in Johannesburg. Photo: Leon Nicholas.

Customers at Pick n Pay in Carlton centre in Johannesburg. Photo: Leon Nicholas.

Published Aug 7, 2013

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Johannesburg - Pick n Pay Stores Ltd., South Africa’s second-biggest grocer, said it may cut management positions as it seeks to reduce operating costs after annual profit plunged 51 percent.

Human Resources Director Isaac Motaung declined to give further detail on the job cuts when contacted by Bloomberg.

The reductions will come in the form of so-called voluntary retrenchments and focus on head office and regional hubs, a local newspaper reported today.

“Pick n Pay has a huge middle management bulge and it’s hard to compete at these margins,” Michael McLeod, an analyst at Avior Research, said in a phone interview from Johannesburg.

“I have confidence that with Richard Brasher as chief executive officer he will cut costs and get rid of inefficiencies.”

Brasher, the former head of Tesco Plc’s UK unit, joined the retailer in February to lead a sales-growth revival.

He said in April he is “optimistic” the Cape Town-based company could improve the underlying margins of the business.

Pick n Pay’s net income dropped to 550.6 million rand ($55 million) in the 12 months through March 3 as the company lost market share to rivals including Shoprite Holdings Ltd. and as consumer spending weakened in Africa’s largest economy.

 

’Wasted Employees’

 

Pick n Pay will need to keep “key management and get rid of the wasted employees” which is “easier said than done,” McLeod said.

The company’s shares declined 1.9 percent to 36.50 rand by 12:34 p.m. in Johannesburg, giving the retailer a market value of about 17.5 billion rand.

Pick n Pay has slumped 18 percent this year, compared with a 20 percent slide in the FTSE/JSE Africa Food & Drug Retailers Index.

The possible job cuts come after 650 employees took voluntary early retirement in December 2011 and the retailer came to an agreement with the South African Commercial, Catering and Allied Workers Union for flexible working conditions to avoid large-scale reductions. - Bloomberg News

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