Nielsen Market Overview David Glennon Forest of Arden Hotel 2010 Overview of Market performance 2009 How is the Convenience and Impulse sector performing? Market is responding to post recessionary shopper Impact on sustainability and ethical issues Outlook for 2010 and beyond What Who Is being bought Is buying it where Nielsen Scantrack Nielsen Homescan EPOS sales transactions across 15,000 food and drink stores 14,500 GB households Consumer Panel Grocery purchase transactions Nielsen On Line Why Are they buying it Nielsen Customised Research Online panels for tracking visits to e commerce sites and collection of CGM Attitudes & behaviour of consumers /shoppers Understanding of food retailing from Nielsen External forces impacted the UK shopper in 2009 Recession FALLING DEMAND • • • • House price deflation Much tighter credit Rising unemployment Wage freezes so less spending power Shoppers have remained cautious INCREASED COSTS Global Outlook • • • • Food prices Fuel & travel costs Cost of credit Weakening currency UK food retail has weathered the recession storm.... 6.7% 5.5% 0.2% 5.3% 2.0% 5.0% 1.8% 4.4% 4.4% 0.3% 2.8% 4.8% 3.4% Volume change Unit value change Nominal growth 5.3% 3.3% 4.7% 5.1% -0.7% 4.9% 1.6% 1.4% 2008 2009 Q4'08 Q1'09 Q2'09 Q3'09 Q4'09 Source: Nielsen Growth Reporter (Grocery Multiples) In a continuous search for value shoppers shopped differently Inflation : the coping strategies 1. Shopping less often 2. Reduce Basket size 3. Switch Channels Recession : different strategies 1. shopping MORE often 2. Switch Channels 3. Different Pack Sizes Last year the convenience sector outperformed out of town stores Total All Food Retailers £130b +4.0% Out of Town £68b High Street £33b Convenience £28b +4.2% +2.3% +5.6% >25,000 sq ft 3,000 -25,000 sq ft <3,000 sq ft Large Stores £20b Small Stores £13b +2.7% +1.6% 10,000 -25,000 sq ft 3,000 -10,000 sq ft Source: Nielsen Scantrack Growths :52 weeks to 20th March 2010 Channel sizes : £ per annum Out of Town store growth slowed as inflation slowed Total All Food Retailers £130b +2.4% Out of Town £68b High Street £33b Convenience £28b +2.3% +2.1% +2.9% >25,000 sq ft 3,000 -25,000 sq ft <3,000 sq ft Large Stores £20b Small Stores £13b +2.4% +1.7% 10,000 -25,000 sq ft 3,000 -10,000 sq ft Source: Nielsen Scantrack Growths :12 weeks to 20th March 2010 Channel sizes : £ per annum Against low year ago comparatives, most categories are now showing positive unit growths. Year on Year Growths in Value and Unit Sales, y/e 20th March 2010 Delicatessen Meat, Fish & Poultry 4% General Merchandise 3% BWS 4% 6% 3% 2% Health & Beauty 1% Frozen Produce 2% Total GB 2% Crisps & Snacks 2% 2% 2% 2% Soft Drinks 4% 4% 5% 1% Tobacco 5% 1% Packaged Grocery 5% 1% Dairy 1% Household & Petcare 0% 0% Bakery Confectionery 6% 5% 5% -1% 1% 4% Value 0% 8% Units Source: Nielsen Scantrack Total Store Read Total GB Total Convenience Market is worth £28bn (+5.6% vs +0.5% prior year). £m +5.3%Tobacco 8,225 Alcohol +1% 4,415 +9.4 General Merchandise 3,957 +4.7% Confectionery 2,404 +4.6 Soft Drinks +6.7 1,869 Chilled 2,876 +8.1 Packaged Grocery 1,278 +5.4 Bakery +15.5 936 Meat Fish Poultry 580 +11.8 605 Produce +5.4 Household & Pet +6.0 Frozen 726 473 up Source: Nielsen Scantrack – Convenience Stores Total Store Read 52 w/e 20.03.2010 v year ago Slowing ambient food inflation and a cautious consumer is impacting growths in packaged grocery which is now seeing negative value growths for the first time ... in over 2 years Packaged Grocery 4 Weekly Growths 14.0% 2008 2009 Units Value 2010 12.0% 10.0% 8.0% 6.0% 4.0% 2.0% 0.0% -2.0% -4.0% 22 -M ar 19 -08 -A p 17 r-0 -M 8 ay 14 -0 -J 8 un 12 -08 -J u 09 l -08 -A u 06 g -0 -S 8 ep 04 -08 -O c 01 t-0 -N 8 o 29 v-0 -N 8 ov 27 -0 -D 8 ec 24 -0 -J 8 an 21 -09 -F eb 21 -0 -M 9 ar 18 -09 -A p 16 r-0 -M 9 ay 13 -0 -J 9 un 11 -09 -J u 08 l -0 -A 9 u 05 g -0 -S 9 ep 03 -09 -O c 31 t-09 -O ct 28 -09 -N ov 26 -0 -D 9 ec 23 -0 -J 9 an 20 -10 -F eb 20 -1 -M 0 ar -1 0 -6.0% *BRC-Nielsen SPI Feb10 Ambient Food Inflation +3.6% vs 7.1% Feb09 Source: Nielsen Scantrack Grocery Multiples Fresh categories continue to fuel growth in Convenience stores whilst their core categories BWS, GM and Tobacco are finding it tougher. Year on Year Growths in Value and Unit Sales, 12w/e 20th March 2010 17% 18% Meat, Fish & Poultry 12% Produce 10% Delicatessen 8% Frozen 5% Bakery Packaged Grocery Soft Drinks 4% Dairy 3% Tobacco 1% Household & Petcare 3% 5% 4% -3% -3% -4% Health & Beauty BWS -5% -9% -7% 7% 8% 4% -3% Confectionery 12% 6% 0% Crisps & Snacks 13% 5% 1% Total Store Read General Merchandise 6% 6% 18% Value -1% Units Source: Nielsen Scantrack Total Store Read Convenience Promotional spend increased during 2009 and was a factor in driving footfall during the recession this trend looks set to continue in 2010 2007 2008 2009 30% 04 /1 1 30 /200 /1 2/ 6 24 200 /0 2/ 6 21 200 /0 4/ 7 16 20 /0 07 6 11 /200 /0 8/ 7 06 200 /1 0/ 7 01 200 /1 2/ 7 26 20 /0 07 1 22 /200 /0 3/ 8 17 200 /0 5/ 8 12 200 /0 7/ 8 06 20 /0 08 9 01 /200 /1 1/ 8 27 200 /1 2/ 8 21 20 /0 08 2 18 /200 /0 4/ 9 13 200 /0 6/ 9 08 200 /0 8/ 9 03 20 /1 09 0 28 /200 /1 1/ 9 23 200 /0 1/ 9 20 201 /0 3/ 0 20 10 28% 26% 37% 36% 35% 34% 33% 32% 31% 30% 29% 28% 27% 26% 25% Annual Average 35% % on Offer Source: Homescan Grocery Multiples % Exp On Offer: Total FMCG 4 weeks ending periods to 20th March 2010 / The Shopper Agenda now includes • Shopping at new retailers • Buying more on promotion • Spending relatively less on Own Label • Questioning “ethical” values and relevance A change in shopping behaviour …and different to Europe and USA We are buying different packs Smaller baskets (<5 items) are 50% of all visits (+6%) and 15% of spend(+10%) With more visits to buy less items And shopping more frequently Source: Nielsen Homescan – Total FMCG (excl Gen Merchandise and Tobacco) 52 w/e 26th December 2009 vs 2008 How shoppers attitudes towards spending changed during the recession Managed absolute spend Used Value Retailers Making-do Good is Good Enough As food inflation slowed, retailers encouraged shoppers to buy more through Multibuys Multibuy 53% Price Reduction Food Inflation High Point 51% 49% 47% Share of Spend On Offer annual average 45% 43% 41% 9 ec -0 26 -D No v09 28 - -0 9 31 - O ct -0 9 O ct 03 - Se p09 05 - Au g09 9 Ju l-0 11 - 08 - 9 Ju n0 13 - M ay - 09 9 16 - Ap r-0 18 - 21 - M ar - 09 9 Fe b0 21 - 24 - Ja n0 9 39% Source: Nielsen Homescan – Total FMCG 4 week ending periods to 26th December 2009 / Shoppers have been sticking with brands helped by the increased promotional support “As a result of the economic climate, I have changed the way I shop. .. I buy more own label products” Feb-09 Oct-09 64% 58% % Respondents that AGREE Source: Nielsen Homescan Survey Shoppers still plan to make savings “…which of the following actions would you take in order to stay within your budget: ? ” Try to save on gas and electricity 40% Cut down on take-away meals 23% Switch to cheaper grocery brands 23% 21% Spend less on new clothes Look for better deals on home loans, insurance, credit cards Cut down on out-of-home entertainment Use my car less often Delay the replacement of major household items Delay upgrading technology, eg. PC, Mobile, etc Cut down on holidays / short breaks Cut out annual vacation 20% 17% 16% 10% 10% 8% 6% Post Recessi on Source: Nielsen – Global Online Survey December 2009 Consumer Confidence – GB results Although the proportion of shoppers who prefer to buy products that are ethically produced or kinder to the environment has not changed – the number who believe it is worth paying extra for these products has not improved since January 2009 giving further credence that some shoppers are being forced to compromise their ethical and environmental credentials “I try to buy products that are ethically produced or kinder to the environment” “It is worth paying extra for products that are ethically produced or kinder to the environment” % respondents who AGREE 44% 43% 42% 43% October 2006 October 2007 January 2009 January 2010 36% 37% October 2006 October 2007 28% 28% January 2009 January 2010 Source: Nielsen Homescan Survey (GB) January 2010, January 2009, October 2007 and October 2006 Climate change and packaging waste continue to be the most important environmental issues for consumers. With increased global focus on our planet, this trend looks set to continue “Which of these environment and related issues concerns you the most?” 33% Climate change 34% 28% 30% Packaging waste 29% 28% 15% Pollution 15% 15% 7% Pesticides Sustainable farming Fuel emissions I am not worried about the environment Food miles 7% 8% 5% 5% 7% 4% 4% 4% 3% 4% 6% 3% 3% 4% Jul-07 Jul-08 Jan-10 % Respondent s Source: Nielsen Homescan Survey (GB) January 2010, July 2008 vs July 2007 For 1 in 4 shoppers “local” really does mean “local”, mileage is important, and an increasing proportion of shoppers are looking to support their local county “I consider a product to be local when/ it has been grown or made by a business situated ....” % respondents 37% Up to 10 m iles from w here I bought it from 26% 15% 11 to 20 m iles from w here I bought it from 21 to 30 m iles from w here I bought it from 31 to 40 m iles from w here I bought it from 16% 7% 9% 5% 4% 19% Within the County w here I live e.g. Yorkshire, Ham pshire In the sam e Country that I Live (England, Wales, Scotland, Ireland) In the UK It says ‘Local’ on the packet Jul-08 Jan-10 23% 6% 9% 4% 5% 6% 8% Source: Nielsen Homescan Survey (GB) January 2010 vs July 2008 2/3 of shoppers desire to help local farmers and local business with shoppers looking for evidence of provenance “I try and buy local products because...” % respondents 64% 66% I like to support local farmers and companies 54% 46% 51% 49% I think it is important that food is not transported too far 37% 32% The supermarkets are too powerful and I want to support small businesses 32% 33% Jul-08 Jan-10 26% 33% 24% 21% It is cheaper than organic food 11% 13% Source: Nielsen Homescan Survey (GB) January 2010 vs July 2008 How we shopped in the last 3 months …. 1. Sales growths for Total GB food and drink slowed to +2.4% . 2. Unit growths have increased in the last 4 weeks due to promotional activity. 3. Out of Town growths have slowed as food inflation continues to slow. 4. Fuel prices are rising again which attracted additional Out of Town spend over Easter * and we expect also for the Bank Holidays. 5. Growths in the wider Convenience channel have now stabilised after a strong end to 2009 and remain at +2.9%. The Economic Outlook 2010 will be different to 2009 • General Election and need for a second budget within 6 months (whoever wins and reaches a deal) • The subsequent reaction of the currency markets, and then sterling, and possibly (or inevitably) the cost of imported food/food stuffs. • Global Harvests, Oil and Commodity prices – upward pressures • The magnitude of household and national debt (and so the ongoing need to cut). • Uncertainty of the consumer and investor sentiment for when interest rates start to rise again (probably in the second half of the year). Source : Shore Capital , January 2010 The Retailer Outlook 2010 will be a lower growth environment than 2009 • Low to moderate food inflation (3%) which indicates more stability. • Promotions may fall back as brand owners discretionary budgets are used to absorb cost price increases with retailers using more Own Label promotions to compensate • Own Label (and including Premium OL) growths could accelerate as retailers focus on reclaiming that point of difference in the ever more promotionally led and disloyal market. The Shopper Outlook Promiscuous shoppers and a battle for loyalty • More visits to more stores will continue to benefit convenience sector • Less frequency but with bigger baskets at out of town stores. • Discounters `keep` shoppers who had started to use their stores during the recession, adding a Discounter to their repertoire of food shops regularly used. • Loyalty schemes, Coupons, Extra Reward Points and Vouchers will be used more and by more retailers. • Fuel savings (e.g. 5p a litre after spending £50 on food) could be a tactic used more regularly by the TOP4. Looking ahead for the next 12 months • First quarter of 2010 has been be tough and slowing inflation hasn’t helped • Q2 will be another difficult quarter – versus inflationary growths in 2009 and a slow economic recovery. • Q3/Q4 ...shoppers start to feel the impact falling disposable income (rising fuel bills, some inflation, increased taxes). • Ethical and Health may return to the shopper agenda however affordable luxuries and convenience/snacking are already in the mindset of shopper. • Continue to plan for a lower growth environment in 2010 as the Post - Recession shopper remains cautious, savvy and is still looking to make savings. Thank You [email protected]
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