Underlying profits for the first half of its financial year were
£354m, 55% down on the same period last year, when it made £779m.
TESCO |
Its pre-tax profit was £74m, compared with a loss of £19m for the same period a year ago.
Like-for-like sales were down 1.1% for the UK and the Republic of Ireland.
The group warned price deflation was still having a detrimental effect.
Chief
executive Dave Lewis said in a BBC interview he was "quietly confident"
about Tesco's turnaround, admitting the group hit a low point at the
end of last year.
"We obviously had some issues to deal with, we
dealt with them. It meant that in the second half of last year we made
no profit whatsoever in the UK.
"So if I compare to the second half of last year, the first half of this year feels like we've made some progress.
"Our
sales are growing compared to where they were either a year ago, or
indeed in the second half of last year. And we've generated some profit
as we rebuild the profitability of Tesco business. But importantly at
the same time, as improving what it is we're doing for our customers."
Mr Lewis added.
'Much more to be done'
Mr
Lewis has put pressure on profits by focusing on cutting prices and
putting more staff in stores, in an effort to attract customers back to
Tesco.
But Mike Dennis, of global financial services firm Cantor
Fitzgerald Europe, described Tesco's interim results as "disappointing".
"The
risk now is that Tesco's recovery needs more time, requires more
restructuring and asset sales and, with less cash flow, could require a
rights issue to lower the indebtedness." Mr Dennis added.
Tesco
has confirmed it will cost it about £500m to meet the government's
proposed National Living Wage rate of £9 an hour by 2020.
Mr
Lewis said the group already paid more than the £7.20 minimum which is
being brought in under the National Living Wage plans next April.
He added that extra staff benefits already brought its hourly rate closer to £9.
Tesco
has completed the sale of its Homeplus stores in South Korea, reducing
its debt by £4.2bn, but it has decided to keep its Dunnhumby data
business.
In April, Tesco reported the worst results in its
history, with a record statutory pre-tax loss of £6.4bn for the year to
the end of February.
The supermarket is still under a criminal
investigation by the Serious Fraud Office (SFO) after it admitted
overstating its profits by £263m nearly a year ago.
Mr Lewis declined to comment in a BBC interview on reports that the company was close to striking a deal with the SFO.
The results come a week after rival Sainsbury's forecast
better-than-expected full-year profits, but the big four supermarkets
continue to be under pressure from discount retailers Aldi and Lidl.
Richard
Hunter, Head of Equities at Hargreaves Lansdown Stockbrokers said
"There is clearly much more to be done, but the progress to date in such
a short period of time is laudable."
Tesco shares were down 0.75% in early morning trading.
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