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Mar 16, 2021

Janice Kew, Bloomberg News
A customer’s shopping bags sit on the payment counter inside a Shoprite Holdings Ltd. store in Cape Town, South Africa, on Wednesday, Dec. 21, 2016. South Africa was a bright spot for banks on the continent in 2016, with stocks shrugging off the nation’s economic woes to head for the third-best performance in the past decade. Photographer: Dean Hutton/Bloomberg , Bloomberg
(Bloomberg) — Shoprite Holdings Ltd. switched its focus firmly toward taking market share in its home market of South Africa, after opting to withdraw from Nigeria and Kenya and move more cautiously in Angola.
The more guarded approach comes after the continent’s biggest supermarket chain struggled with supply-chain disruptions and getting money out of some countries. The company is seeking to take advantage of its increased dominance of the South African grocery industry in a year blighted by coronavirus lockdowns.
“The business remained vigilant, combating the challenges faced across Africa, however, currency devaluations again eroded much of our efforts,” Chief Executive Officer Pieter Engelbrecht said Tuesday in a statement. “From here, our capital allocated to the region remains at a minimum and we continue to manage costs as best as we can.”
Despite leading the growth trail into Africa for years, the Cape Town-based company’s difficulties on the continent mirror several other South African retailers that have pulled back, most notably in regions beyond their immediate local borders. Angolan revenue declined by 16% in local currency and by 40% in rand terms in the six months through Dec. 27, it said.
Sales at Shoprite’s South African supermarkets business, which accounts for the bulk of income, climbed 5.6% in the first half. Shoprite has been able to offer affordable prices to increasingly cash-strapped consumers, while also luring wealthier shoppers through the expansion of its niche and fresh-food offering and the Checkers Sixty60 one-hour grocery delivery application.
The stock has climbed 41% in the past 12 months, compared with a 25% gain in the FTSE/JSE Africa Food & Drug Retailers Index.
©2021 Bloomberg L.P.

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