º£½ÇÊÓÆµ

Oops.

Our website is temporarily unavailable in your location.

We are working hard to get it back online.

PRIVACY
Retail & Consumer

Greggs hails strong start to 2022 but warns price increases are 'inescapable'

The North East food-on-the-go favourite now has 2,224 shops across the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ after opening another 49 sites in the year so far

A Northumberland Greggs store

The outgoing CEO of food-on-the go firm Greggs has hailed strong trading at the start of the year – but warned that price increases are ‘inescapable’.

The Newcastle headquartered business, which now has 2,224 shops across the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ, reported a 27.4% rise in like-for-like sales growth for the first 19 weeks of the year, a strong figure which compares against the same period in 2021 during restricted trading conditions.

The company said that like-for-like sales growth in the most recent ten weeks to May 14 – when lockdowns in 2021 were easing – has averaged 15.8% and it expects this figure to continue to normalise as it starts to compare with more robust trading periods last years. Total sales in the 19 weeks to May 14 were £495m, up from £378m.

Read more: go here for more North East business news

As expected, Greggs said sales levels in larger cities and in office locations lagged behind the rest of the estate but that transport locations showed a marked increase in activity in recent weeks.

Sales of hot food and snacks are showing particularly strong growth, which bodes well for its plans to roll out more hot food to more locations, with 500 shops targeted for evening openings this year.

Roger Whiteside, who steps down from the board at Tuesday’s AGM, said: “As far as the city and office locations, they’re still not back to normal numbers and we don’t know if they’ll ever get back to normal - they’re about 10% down – because we think there’s going to be more home working compared to pre-pandemic and there’s going to be more online shopping than pre-pandemic.

“On a strategic level we’re not concerned about that - they are not a particularly high percentage of our estate and what we’ve shown during the pandemic is we’ve got shops in all locations and those other locations tend to benefit locally if people aren’t travelling to cities or offices.”