• Total Till grocery sales in the four weeks ending 28th January increase by 7.6% but these reflect inflationary growth, with food inflation reaching 13.8%1 in January
  • Shoppers are pulling back on FMCG spend post-Christmas with volumes down by 6.9% – the lowest in nine months 

British shoppers are reining in grocery spend post-Christmas, as UK supermarkets experienced a continued decline in volume sales during the four weeks ending 28th January 2023, reveals new data released today by NielsenIQ.

The new data shows that although Total Till grocery sales rose by 7.6% in the last four week period, this was due to an increase in food price inflation, which reached new highs of 13.8% in January. This decline in shopper spend is reflected in the decrease in volume sales (-6.9%). This is the lowest volume growth recorded in over nine months, and reflects the concern shoppers have about cost of living increases.

UK supermarkets experienced a very slow first week of January due to the bank holidays but NielsenIQ data shows that weekly value growths improved to +6.0% at the end of the month, which coincides with the first monthly payday of the year for many shoppers.

Nevertheless, many shoppers likely tried to shop to a fixed budget to save money and focussed on essentials, with bakery (+12.6%), dairy (+11.5%), pet food/care (+10.4%) and frozen sales (+8.9%) all experiencing an increase in value sales. However, fresh produce value sales fell -3.6%, while value sales for beers, wines and spirits (BWS) declined -4.7% (with volumes -8.5%). Volume sales for meat and poultry also fell 10%2.

NielsenIQ data also reveals that sales were strongest at bricks and mortar stores (+9.4%) with a -8.7% fall in online sales. The online share of all FMCG sales remains at around 11.1% – similar to the underlying share in the latter part of 2022.

In terms of retailer performance, the Discounters continued to show strong momentum with sales growth of almost +20% compared to the same time last year, with Lidl over taking Morrisons with 12 week market share of 8.9% and 8.3% respectively.

Our latest survey data now shows that 72% of UK households fear they will be severely or moderately affected by the cost of living crisis in the first part of 2023, up from 54% at the end of last year 3.

Mike Watkins, NielsenIQ’s UK Head of Retailer and Business Insight, said: “We expect a challenging first quarter for the grocery industry, with inflation very much top of mind for shoppers. As a result, shoppers will continue to trade down to cheaper brands or private label products. In January we have seen Private Label sales grow in Household by +16.5%, Ambient Grocery by +16.8% and Frozen by +20.2%4. Also, when consumers are cash poor, they also shop more frequently and across more retailers, because they can only afford to shop for groceries ‘little and more often’ to help manage household budgets. This will probably continue until Easter, when family gatherings and hopefully better weather gives a boost to sales.”

Table: 12-weekly % share of grocery market spend by retailer and value sales % change

Unless otherwise stated all data is NielsenIQ Homescan Total Till

1 BRC NielsenIQ Shop Price Index

2 NielsenIQ Scantrack Grocery Multiples

3 NielsenIQ Homescan Survey Nov 2022

4 NielsenIQ Homescan FMCG

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