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Retail & Consumer

Screwfix and B&Q owner Kingfisher hikes outlook after pandemic DIY boom

Kingfisher saw profits rise over the six months to the end of July but warned of potential supply chain issues

Screwfix

The parent company of Screwfix and B&Q has upped its full-year sales and earnings outlook following a pandemic-driven DIY boom, but has warned of increasing supply chain pressures.

Retail giant Kingfisher posted a 70% rise in statutory pre-tax profits to £677m as like-for-like sales in B&Q leapt almost 30% higher in the six months to July 31. On an underlying basis, profits rose by more than 60% to £669m.

The FTSE 100 firm, which has around 1,400 stores across nine countries, has announced a £300m share buyback and hiked its interim dividend on the back of a strong set of half-year figures.

The group said it had been boosted by a boom in DIY amid the pandemic, as the national lockdown confined people to their homes and encouraged them to improve their living and, in many cases, workplace conditions.

But it said sales had slipped in recent months as the company came up against tough comparisons from a year earlier.

B&Q sales soared by more than 80% in the first quarter but fell 1.2% in the following three months, and are 4.2% lower so far in the third quarter.

On a two-year basis, third quarter sales to date at B&Q are running 18.7% higher and 16.1% up across the group.

Kingfisher said the performance was better than expected, leading it to up its group-wide annual sales outlook, with it now forecasting a fall of between 3% and 7%, having previously predicted a drop of up to 15%.