But the supermarket chain has said it is trying not to pass on the increases to customers by putting up prices.

Over
 the last year rising costs have whittled away its profits, and figures 
just released show that before tax, they dropped 8.2%, down to £503m.
Sainsbury's chief executive Mike Coupe said: "We've manage to work with our suppliers and reduce our own costs."
But
 Sainsbury's 
predicts that its costs will go on rising by 2% to 3% over 
the next 12 months, largely because of the fall in the value of the 
pound which makes imported goods more expensive. 
As a result, it forecasts that underlying profits in the next six months will be lower than in the last six months.
Mr Coupe told the BBC: "We've done a brilliant job of reducing the impact of the currency movements on our customers."
"We've
 seen a minor tick-up in inflation, but we'll continue to look to not 
pass on the price increases that we see coming through." 
Meanwhile, the slow growth in wages is also having an effect on customers' shopping habits.  
Group sales in stores open for more than a year fell 1%.
Sainsbury's
 said that general merchandise and clothing sales growth had been hit by
 reduced consumer confidence and a marked slowdown in real pay growth.
Chief
 financial officer Kevin O'Byrne told Bloomberg TV: "People are 
predicting real wages are going to get squeezed further and we are going
 to have to work harder to keep customers coming through our doors."
New divisions
Sainsbury's
 bought the Home Retail Group which includes the Argos and Habitat 
brands for £1.4bn last year. These are the first accounts to show their 
impact on the whole group.
Once their sales are added in, overall group sales increased 12.7% 
Merging the operations has produced cost savings of £130m and a profit contribution from Argos of £77m.
Mr
 Coupe said: "We have opened 59 Argos Digital stores in Sainsbury's 
supermarkets and they are performing well. We are therefore accelerating
 our plan to open a total of 250 Argos Digital stores in Sainsbury's 
supermarkets."
"We continue to find ways to simplify our business 
and reduce costs. We are on track to deliver our three-year £500m cost 
saving programme by the end of 2017-18 and we will deliver a further 
£500m of cost savings over three years from 2018-19."
Market share
Sainsbury's is 
also seeing a change in shopping habits, with customers making more 
trips to smaller stores, but spending less on each trip. Sales in 
Sainsbury's convenience stores grew more than 6%, while those in its big
 supermarkets fell 2%.
The supermarket is also facing pressure from discounters like Aldi and Lidl.
Research
 group Kantar released a report showing Sainsbury's market share slipped
 from 16.5% to 16.1% of the UK market in the 12 weeks to 23 April. It 
has the second largest market share, behind Tesco with 27.5%.
Asked
 whether Sainsbury's would ever catch up Tesco, Mr Coupe told the BBC: 
"I think that'll be a long time coming , but the acquisition of the Home
 Retail Group has added quite a lot to our top line, and our market 
share has been remarkably resilient."
Neil Wilson, senior market analyst at ETX Capital, said: "Sainsbury's faces a squeeze on several fronts. 
"On
 one side, there are discounters like Aldi and Lidl crushing prices and 
stealing market share, while Tesco and Morrisons are both in the middle 
of strong turnaround programmes that are leaving Sainsbury's trailing."
Sainsbury's shares were the biggest faller on the London FTSE 100 index, dropping more than 2% in the first 20 minutes of trade.
The full-year dividend paid to shareholders has been reduced by 15.7% to 10.2p a share.
@BBC 
 
 
 
 
 
 




 
 
 
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