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PRIVACY
Retail & Consumer

Supermarkets offering fewer deals hits grocery price inflation slowdown

Grocery prices were 6.8% more expensive than a year ago in January, only a slight easing from December’s 6.9%

A woman shopping(Image: Hinckley Times)

The slowdown of grocery price inflation has stumbled as supermarkets offered their customers fewer deals after Christmas, figures show.

Grocery prices were 6.8% more expensive than a year ago in January, only a slight easing from December’s 6.9% and a significant drop-off in pace compared with the 2.2 percentage point decrease seen between November and December, according to analysts Kantar.

Items bought on offer accounted for 27% of all grocery spending in January compared with 32% in December, when retailers competed to attract customers through their doors. Despite this, shoppers spent almost £500m more on offers this January than in the same month last year.

Fraser McKevitt, head of retail and consumer insight at Kantar, said: “All eyes are back on inflation again after the Consumer Prices Index’s (CPI) unexpected jump earlier in the month.

“There’s been a lot of speculation about the impact the Red Sea shipping crisis might have on the cost of goods, but the story in the grocery aisles this January is more about the battle between the supermarkets to offer best value, rather than geopolitics.

“Retailers have taken their foot off the promotions gas slightly as we’ve come into the new year, and that’s meant inflation hasn’t fallen as quickly.”

Kantar’s research suggested consumers were opting for more homemade meals to keep budgets in line, with 86m more lunchboxes brought to work last year.

Spending on alcohol fell by more than half compared with December, with almost 6% of beer packs sold this month either no or low-alcohol options, a jump from 4% at the end of last year.