Sainsbury's was the only retailer to increase its market share in the last three months, according to the latest data from Kantar Worldpanel.
The retailer increased its share from 16.9% to 17% in the 12 weeks ended 17 February, beating the market with a 4.6% growth rate, Kantar revealed today (26 Febuary).
Tesco, however, saw its share of the grocery market fall to 29.7% from 30.1%, while Asda's fell from 17.8% to 17.7%. Morrisons was the only major grocer to post a sales decline, with its market share also down, to 11.8% from 12.4% last year.
Upmarket grocer Waitrose and discounter Aldi delivered all-time record market shares for the period of 4.8% and 3.3% respectively, indicating that "market polarisation is continuing", Kantar said.
The figures reveal the impact of the first five weeks of the horsemeat scandal, which broke on 16 January.
Edward Garner, director at Kantar Worldpanel, says the issue has so far only affected the performance of individual markets rather than where consumers are choosing to shop, with frozen burger sales down by 43% in the period. Frozen ready meals declined by 13%.
The total grocery market is growing at an annual rate of 3.7% which lags behind grocery price inflation of 4.3%.
Grocery Market Share UK - First Retailer Share Data Since Horsemeat Contamination Broke 26/02/2013
The latest grocery share figures from Kantar Worldpanel, published today for the 12 weeks ending 17 February, reveal the impact of the first five weeks of the horsemeat scandal, which broke on 16 January.
Edward Garner, director at Kantar Worldpanel, explains: “The issue has so far only affected the performance of individual markets rather than where consumers are choosing to shop. For the four weeks ending 17 February, frozen burger sales were down by 43% and frozen ready meals declined by 13%, clearly demonstrating a change in shopping habits.
“Tesco’s share has come under pressure this period, with a drop from 30.1% a year ago to 29.7% now. It might seem natural to attribute this decline to the horsemeat contamination; however, Tesco undertook heavy promotions this time last year, where consumers received a £5 voucher when they spent £40, and not repeating this offer will have adversely affected its share.”
Within the big four, Sainsbury’s is the only retailer to increase share this period, beating the market with a 4.6% growth rate. Morrisons is the only retailer to post a sales decline.
Edward continues: “Waitrose and Aldi deliver all-time record shares this period of 4.8% and 3.3% respectively indicating that market polarisation and the ‘two nations’ consumer climate continues. Iceland records 10.1% growth confirming that the frozen food category as a whole remains robust.”
The total grocery market is growing at an annual rate of 3.7% which lags behind grocery price inflation of 4.3%. This confirms the continued pressure on shoppers who are using coping strategies to reduce their personal inflation rate.