Ocado has warned that its sales growth will be less than half the rate it had hoped for as the cost of living crisis and return to office work and dining out hit trade.
The online grocer, which is partly owned by Marks & Spencer, said it now expected sales growth of less than 5% for the year to the end of November, compared with 10% anticipated.
The prediction comes after sales fell 8% in the two months to 25 April compared with a fall of 5.7% in the previous three months as shoppers were buying fewer items than usual.
“The trading environment has deteriorated,” Ocado said in a statement, “with the cost of living crisis compounding the impact of a return to more normal consumer behaviours as restrictions have ended and many people return to the office.”
Ocado, which switched to a partnership with M&S in September 2020 after 20 years of selling Waitrose groceries, said it continued to win market share but the online grocery market had declined 20% year-on-year as families returned to shopping patterns more like those before the pandemic.
Online grocery sales boomed during the height of the coronavirus crisis as shoppers avoided crowded supermarkets and more people were able to easily accept home deliveries as they switched to working or studying from home.
While the online grocery market remains at least 50% larger than before the pandemic, sales have sunk back in recent months to be about 12% of total grocery sales compared with a peak of more than 14% two years ago.
Ocado said that as food retail prices were rising by about 4% or 5%, customers were ordering one or two fewer items each shop than before, so that the value of the average basket was down about 9% compared with a year ago.
It added: “The fundamentals of the business
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