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Retail & Consumer

Co-op plans dozens of new and refurbished stores as it calls for business rates reform

Retailer continues recovery from cyberattack

Co-op CEO, Shirine Khoury-Haq(Image: Co-op)

The Co-op is pushing ahead with new openings and refurbishments as it continues its recovery from a cyber attack earlier this year – and says business rates reform will be vital to help it and other retailers to grow.

The retailer announced that 50 shops will launch or relaunch by Christmas whilst calling on the Government to overhaul rates before the autumn Budget. It said that reforms will prove "vital" to stimulate additional high street investment as it pursues its own expansion goals.

The newest wave of launches will mean the Co-op has opened and renovated more than 200 sites in the current financial year. It means the company will have invested upwards of £200 million throughout the shop portfolio.

The Co-op will launch 14 fresh outlets, including becoming the first permanent trader at the new Brent Cross Town project in London, five new micro-format 'on the go' shops and a new franchise outlet at Lancaster University.

The remaining 50 shops will comprise locations which have been shut for an extended period to undergo comprehensive renovation and will relaunch with a fresh appearance and updated product selection.

The expansion initiatives arrive as the group, which boasts some 6.9 million member-owners, continues its recovery from a substantial cyber attack.

It revealed in September that the breach, which occurred in April, will hit its annual earnings by roughly £120 million.

Additionally, it stated the cyber attack, which resulted in empty shelves and saw data stolen, affected sales by approximately £206 million.