growth Archives - Ireland's Forecourt & Convenience Retailer https://forecourtretailer.com/tag/growth/ Ireland's Only Forecourt & Convenience Retailer Thu, 28 Jul 2022 14:49:09 +0000 en-GB hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.5.2 https://forecourtretailer.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/03/cropped-IFCR-Site-Icon-32x32.png growth Archives - Ireland's Forecourt & Convenience Retailer https://forecourtretailer.com/tag/growth/ 32 32 94949456 Food-to-go market recovering faster than expected: IGD https://forecourtretailer.com/food-to-go-market-recovering-faster-than-expected-igd/ Thu, 28 Jul 2022 14:49:09 +0000 https://forecourtretailer.com/?p=20907 The UK’s food-to-go market is forecast to be worth £23.4bn by 2027, 26% above pre-pandemic levels, according to IGD. While inflation is set to be

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The UK’s food-to-go market is forecast to be worth £23.4bn by 2027, 26% above pre-pandemic levels, according to IGD.

While inflation is set to be the main driver of growth, operators and retailers have an opportunity to support consumers through the cost-of-living crisis as they look to save money, the latest update from the insight provider says.

This year (2022) the UK food-to-go channel will be worth £18.9bn, 3% more than its pre-Covid value in 2019.

The market has performed better than predicted since the pandemic, but this is expected to slow by the end of the year and throughout 2023 as consumers battle rising energy, fuel and food costs.

Pent-up demand

Nicola Knight, Senior Analyst for Food-to-Go and author of the forecasts, said: “Foodservice businesses were the biggest beneficiaries of pent-up demand for food on-the-go last year because of all the innovation they put into working around lockdowns, such as flexible delivery solutions and click and collect offers.

“But as the cost-of living-crisis comes in these operators will be under pressure as they become more of a premium option compared with lower priced food-to-go alternatives from a retailer, or preparing food at home.”

Growth driver

Inflation will be the main driver of growth over the next 18 months, Ms Knight says.

“Inflation is already affecting many consumers but until now food-to-go has continued to perform strongly.  This will change as the true impact of rising prices really kicks in in the last quarter and takes hold next year. So, while inflation will boost the overall value of the market, volume will, at best, stay the same in 2023.

“The next 18 months will be a challenging period for the sector, mainly for coffee and food-to-go specialists, as operators attempt to balance rising costs with helping consumers to save money.

“Quick Service Restaurants (QSRs) that focus on communicating their value, particularly around deals and family offers, will do well with consumers that are still looking for the occasional treat without breaking the bank.”

Challenges and opportunities

The cost-of-living crisis will bring challenges for foodservice food-to-go operators but opportunities for retailers, she added.

With the focus back on value for at least the next 18 months, retailers are in a strong position. The price point, range and execution of meal deals will become fiercely competitive, as they aim to capitalise on the opportunity.

“During the pandemic, retailers deprioritised food-to-go space in favour of in-demand categories, leaving them on the competitive back foot as footfall returned and consumers sought a change from homemade meals,” Ms Knight said.

“However, if they can get their price, offer and format right, by 2027 retail could more than regain the share lost to foodservice operators during the pandemic to claim 23.7% of the food-to-go market, compared with 22.9% in 2019 and 20% in 2020/21.

Meal deal offers

“Key opportunities for retailers over the next 18 months will include strengthening their meal deal offers as consumers become more value-led, and utilising customer data to create tailored offers that are relevant and savings-focused. There’s also an opportunity for them to increase food-to-go ranges to meet consumer needs across a wider variety of meal occasions.”

The annual Food-to-Go forecast report from IGD examines in detail the outlook by sector for: QSR, coffee shops, food-to-go specialists, supermarkets/hypermarkets, and convenience, forecourts & other retailers.

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Ibec downgrades growth outlook amid rising costs and supply chain challenges https://forecourtretailer.com/ibec-downgrades-growth-outlook-amid-rising-costs-and-supply-chain-challenges/ Mon, 25 Apr 2022 08:55:56 +0000 https://forecourtretailer.com/?p=20052 Business group Ibec has scaled back its outlook for growth for this year to account for the economic impact of rising costs and supply chain

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The group estimates that the war will knock somewhere between 1 and 2 percentage points off the rate of growth relative to the 6.1% it had forecast at the end of last year. It now anticipates economic growth of around 4.3% in the year ahead.

Energy and commodity prices will remain much higher for longer, Ibec expects, even if growth in inflation – currently running at a 22 year high of 6.7% – slows down.

It warns that any “premature or misjudged” monetary policy reactions to the inflationary environment could trigger an unnecessary economic contraction.

“This coming year will be a tight balancing act for policymakers globally,” the report warns, adding that measures to support households and businesses must be “tightly targeted” to avoid further stoking inflation.

“Ibec is calling on Government to intensify work through the Labour Employer Economic Forum to ensure better coordination and targeting of tax, social welfare and other labour market policies that can address inflationary pressures,” Gerard Brady, Chief Economist and Head of National Policy with Ibec said.Overall consumer trends in the opening months of the year captured the strong momentum underlying the economy with retail sales volumes in the first two months up 12% on the same period in 2019.

But Ibec warns that the global environment will drag on growth this year and next, with rising energy costs, record commodity and transport costs and global supply chain challenges resulting in a slowing of business investment and lower than previously expected consumer spending.

“Rising energy prices will introduce a relative price shock to consumer spending,” Mr Brady said.

“This is where households when faced with higher spending on energy bills, cut back on consumption elsewhere. Overall consumption remains unchanged but other sectors of the economy – particularly those reliant on discretionary spending – lose out,” he added.

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Euro zone retail sales growth surges past expectations in November https://forecourtretailer.com/euro-zone-retail-sales-growth-surges-past-expectations-in-november/ Fri, 07 Jan 2022 11:32:07 +0000 https://forecourtretailer.com/?p=19103 Euro zone retail sales surged past all expectations in November, driven by in-store non-food purchases, data from Eurostat shows. The figures indicate that consumer demand

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The figures indicate that consumer demand remained healthy even as fresh pandemic-related restrictions were implemented.

Retail sales, a proxy for consumer demand, in the 19 countries sharing the euro rose 1% by value on the month, defying expectations for a 0.5% drop in a Reuters poll of analysts.

Compared to a year earlier, retail sales expanded by 7.8%, well ahead of projections for 5.6%, the European Union’s statistics agency said.

Non-food sales rose by 1.6% on the month while car fuel sales fell by 1.5%, reversing their earlier trend.

Among the bloc’s bigger countries, Spain and France performed above average while Germany was a drag on the retail expansion.

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