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Enterprise

Asda says sales hit by 'temporary disruption' after major IT upgrade

The supermarket chain said it had seen a "clear improvement" in performance as it pushes forward with a major turnaround strategy

An Asda store(Image: PA Media)

Asda has reported that recent sales have been impacted by "temporary disruption" to product availability due to a delayed IT systems upgrade.

However, CEO Allan Leighton stated that he has observed a "clear improvement" in the performance of the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ's third-largest supermarket chain as it continues with a significant turnaround strategy.

The Leeds-based company announced that, as of Thursday morning, it had completed the roll-out of its £1bn Project Future upgrade of its IT systems across all stores and food depots, which Mr Leighton described as potentially the "biggest IT systems change, certainly in Europe, maybe ever".

"The cost is material, but largely that is now behind us," he said.

Asda noted that this work had resulted in "some temporary disruption with product availability" in stores and online, while transitioning from the old to the new system. This is anticipated to affect the supermarket chain's sales over the three months until the end of September.

"We've been doing 50 stores a week, every week, for 10 weeks. The collective scale of that does cause some friction, some of the systems don't run as fast as they should do., so that's where the impact has been," Mr Leighton explained.

Mr Leighton, who rejoined the business last year, 25 years after serving as its chief executive, has spearheaded a major overhaul centred on reducing prices and enhancing availability on shelves in an effort to reverse declining sales. On Thursday, the Leeds-headquartered retailer reported that it had reduced the pace at which sales were falling during the most recent quarter.

The supermarket group's total turnover, excluding fuel, fell by 0.2% year-on-year to £5.3bn in the three months ending in June. This followed a 5.9% drop in fuel-excluded revenues during the year's opening quarter.