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he boss of Aldi’s UK and Ireland business has said the cost-of-living crisis has changed shopping habits as the supermarket chain was boosted by shoppers seeking to reduce their grocery bills.
Giles Hurley, chief executive officer of Aldi UK and Ireland also said that “households are still under real pressure from higher living costs” as it reported its finances for last year.
Shoppers are making fewer trips to the supermarket, buying more own-branded items and are switching which supermarket chain they use more regularly, he added.
The German supermarket firm’s UK and Ireland business has reported annual sales of £15.5 billion for 2022, jumping from £13.6 billion in the previous year.
It also reported an operating profit of £178.7 million for the year, jumping from £60.2 million in 2021 on the back of increased sales.
It added that more recent sales data, compiled by Kantar earlier this month, showed the business saw 17.1% growth year-on-year as shoppers seek to reduce the cost of their weekly shop.
Mr Hurley said: “said: “Although inflation is easing, households are still under real pressure from higher living costs.
“As a result, Britain is shopping very differently to how it did 18 months ago – fewer trips, more own label products, and switching supermarkets in search of better value.
“What we’re seeing is a new generation of savvy shoppers who’ve turned their back on traditional, full-price supermarkets in favour of transparent, low prices, which is what we’re famous for.
“That’s why we’re still welcoming more and more customers through our doors – people who come to us for our low prices but stay for the award-winning quality of our exclusive brands.”
It comes as the supermarket group, which currently has more than 1,000 UK shops, continues to expand around the country.
Aldi said on Monday that it plans to open a further 18 stores by the end of the year and has laid out plans to open up to 500 more shops across the UK over the longer term.
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