Benjamin Chiou Sharecast News
06 Jan, 2025 10:31

Tesco and B&M best placed as inflation picks up, says Citi

dl tesco plc ftse 100 consumer staples personal care drug and grocery stores food retailers and wholesalers logo
TescoSharecast graphic / Josh White

Tesco

370.60p

16:39 07/01/25
-0.64%
-2.40p

Citi has reiterated its 'buy' calls on UK retailers Tesco and B&M amid a "lacklustre" consumer backdrop as food inflation begins to reaccelerate.

B&M European Value Retail S.A. (DI)

359.80p

17:15 07/01/25
-1.29%
-4.70p

Food & Drug Retailers

4,425.46

17:14 07/01/25
0.61%
26.76

FTSE 100

8,245.28

17:14 07/01/25
n/a
n/a

FTSE 250

20,350.37

17:14 07/01/25
n/a
n/a

FTSE 350

4,537.45

17:14 07/01/25
n/a
n/a

FTSE All-Share

4,493.46

16:44 07/01/25
n/a
n/a

General Retailers

4,611.96

17:14 07/01/25
-0.53%
-24.56

UK discretionary retail expenditure in 2025 is expected to see a modest real-term decline of 0.4%, with price pressures picking up for the grocery sector, as a result of companies passing through higher costs to customers in the aftermath of the autumn budget last October, the investment bank said on Monday.

"We highlight Tesco and B&M as our top 'buy'-rated picks," Citi said in a research note.

"We expect Tesco to continue to take share in an inflationary grocery market, driven by strong pricing credentials, the success of its Finest range, investment in stores and an ability to under-inflate vs. the market. We expect B&M to benefit from its compelling price offer in the context of customers increasingly shopping around as grocery inflation accelerates."

Citi kept its target price for Tesco (last updated at 425p) unchanged, but raised its target for B&M from 510p to 520p.

Tesco's shares were down 0.2% at 371.6p by 1025 GMT, while B&M jumped 2.6% to 369.1p.

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