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PRIVACY
Retail & Consumer

The Co-op issues warning after major deal and cutting hundreds of jobs boosts profits

The Co-op said that 'despite very challenging markets' it delivered a 'strong sales performance and maintained underlying profitability'

The Co-op is headquartered in Manchester(Image: Dimitris Legakis)

The £600m sale of its petrol forecourt business to the billionaire Issa brothers and cutting hundreds of jobs have helped boost profits at The Co-op.

The Manchester-headquartered group has hailed a "strong operational performance" over the past year and said it benefited from “early and targeted action” against the tough economic backdrop, which included a shake-up which cut about 400 jobs last summer.

The Co-op has reported a jump in its pre-tax profits to £247m for 2022, £190m higher than the previous year, and said it would have fallen to a loss but received £319m of profit from the sale of its 132 petrol forecourts to rival Asda.

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Revenue also increased from £11.2bn to £11.5bn while its group net debt was cut from £920m to £333m.

The Co-op said that "despite very challenging markets" it delivered a "strong sales performance and maintained underlying profitability".

However it warned that it expects "inflationary pressure to continue" and affect profitability.

Chairman Allan Leighton said: "The inflationary challenges facing most consumer-facing businesses are well known, so for our Co-op to have delivered this level of performance over the year is encouraging.

"We are, rightly, judged by our members on both the financial and social value we can create and it’s clear that we’ve delivered on both sides of this equation.