
Tesco Plc, Britain's largest retailer, plans to sell its 129-store Japanese unit because it cannot build a "sufficiently scalable business" there eight years after entering the market. The stores will remain open during the sale process, the Cheshunt, England-based grocer said in a statement today. Same- store sales in Japan fell 6.4 percent in the first quarter, making it Tesco's worst-performing business in the period. The division, which includes the Tsurakame, Tesco and Tesco Express formats, is Tesco's smallest international retail business and just over half the stores are profitable. The retailer has invested 100 million pounds ($163 million) there since 2004..."What we thought we'd be able to do is take our Express format and our small supermarket format and grow it in the Tokyo area," Clarke told journalists on a conference call. "Unfortunately its proven to be very difficult to shift consumers from the stores that they use into new ones," he said. "It was more about our difficulty in getting scale because you're competing with some extremely large Japanese retailers," the CEO added. The company has less than half of one percent of Tokyo's market share, where it employs just under 4,000 staff. "We are tiny," he said...more...
FG member Doctor Stop predicted this withdrawal as soon as Tesco began rolling out their convenience store format.