Thursday 23 October 2014

Tesco chairman Sir Richard Broadbent to quit over profit errors


Tesco chairman Sir Richard Broadbent has announced that he will be leaving the firm, following the firm's announcement of a bigger-than-forecast hole in its profits.

Tesco now says that profits in the first half of the year were overstated by £263m. That is an increase from last month's initial estimate of £250m.

Tesco also reported a sharp fall in sales and profits for the first half of its financial year.

Investigation

Accountancy firm Deloitte has completed an investigation into Tesco's misreported profits.

It found that profits were overstated by £118m in the first half of this year, by £70m in the 2013-2014 financial year and by £75m before that.

Tesco had been doing deals with suppliers over promotions, which is commonplace for supermarkets, but it appears Tesco had been booking returns from those promotions too early, while pushing back the costs.

Eight executives have been suspended since that practice was revealed.

Tesco said there was no evidence of fraud or personal gain from the mis-statement.

Deloitte's report is being passed to the Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) and other regulators.

Weak results

Meanwhile, Tesco's trading performance continues to deteriorate.

Like-for-like sales, which strip out new stores, fell 4.6% in the first half of the year and pre-tax profit slumped to £112m, down more than 90% on the same period in the previous year.

That profit number includes several one-off items, including an adjustment related to the overstated profit.

Underlying profit before tax was £783m, down almost 47% on the previous year, and a little less than analysts were expecting.

Tesco shares fell more than 6% in early trading in London.

'Profound regret'

Sir Richard said he was preparing to step down, although no date has been set for his departure.

"The issues that have come to light over recent weeks are a matter of profound regret. We have acted quickly to clarify the financial performance of the company," Sir Richard said in a statement.

"A new management team is in place to address the root causes of the mis-statement and to develop and implement the actions that will build the company's future," he said.

Philip Clarke, the former chief executive of Tesco, stepped down in July after the company announced a profits warning.

Tesco says that payment of his severance, widely reported to be worth £10m, will be delayed until the FCA completes its investigation into the overstated profit.

Tesco timeline

17 April 2013: Tesco announces first fall in annual profits in almost 20 years, as it pulls out of the US.

16 April 2014: Tesco sees profits drop 6% as earnings fall for second year.

21 July: Chief executive Philip Clarke says he will step down after failing to turn around the company's fortunes. His replacement will be Dave Lewis of Unilever.

29 August: Shock profit warning and interim dividend cut. Dave Lewis' start as chief executive is brought forward by one month.

1 September: Dave Lewis starts as chief executive.

22 September: Profit hole of £250m discovered. Four senior managers asked to step aside while investigation is carried out.

7 October: Fifth executive asked to step aside.

14 October: Three more executives suspended, taking the total to eight.

23 October: Profit hole revealed to be £263m, chairman Sir Richard Broadbent announces departure.

Analysis: Kamal Ahmed, BBC Business Editor

The most chilling fact for Tesco in these results is not the collapse in profits, not the accounting mis-statements that appear to go back to at least 2012-13 (appalling enough as those are), it is the 4.6% annual decline in UK sales.

Customers are turning their back on Tesco which is no longer seen as the best of the Big Four for price or quality. Dave Lewis will have to make a big move on both to convince customers to try Tesco's again.

Tesco is the most significant victim of a huge structural change in the UK retail sector - online shopping; the breakdown of the Big Four's dominant position and customers who want smaller, daily top-up shopping. Many believe that a permanently smaller, less profitable Tesco is now a stark reality.




BBC News

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