Metcash reported a 2% drop in EBIT for 1H26. The company’s sales trends are likely to soften a little from here, particularly as it laps Woolworths DC strikes and the Black Friday boost to Total Tools dissipates. The swing factor for Metcash is its corporate hardware stores that need a meaningful upswing in the residential construction cycle. Profit margins are depressed and should recover. The combination of optionality around hardware upside, contract wins in convenience and a good dividend yield give us reason to be positive.
We have published our periodical chart pack of retailer performance vs market. See attached PDF. This market share report provides two insights – 1) which retailers are winning and to what extent. 2) Insights about market structure. If you would like any of the data in Excel at any point, just contact us.
Coles Group reported 1Q26 sales growth of 3.9% and an impressive 4.6% comparable sales growth in its Supermarkets. While the result is strong, the momentum is likely to slow as its larger rival Woolworths starts to improve its execution. Coles also faces a 2Q26e hurdle from DC strike benefits in 2Q25 and a diminishing contribution from new stores. We expect Liquor EBIT to decline again in FY26e.
We have made modest revisions to our retail sales forecasts. For FY26e, we forecast retail sales growth of 4.0% (prev 3.9%) and for FY27e 4.1% growth (unchanged). Non-food retail spending has been solid in the past six months and the trends are likely to continue into Christmas this year. However, we may see some shift in category performance in the new year as household goods slow, while fashion and takeaway food sales improve. Our upswing in retail sales is muted, which is a function of slowing household income growth and a low savings rates. We continue to monitor house prices closely as a source of upside risk if the wealth effect stimulates the use of previously stored-up savings.
Metcash’s 18-week AGM trading update highlighted a slowdown in sales. For the first 7 weeks, group sales were up 4.7% and the next 11 weeks, to the end of August 2025, sales dropped 1.2%. The biggest contributors to the slowdown were declining tobacco sales (-34%) and annualising Superior Foods acquisition (now trending at 2.7% growth). Metcash’s underlying results show sales trends slightly lower than industry growth other than liquor. Hardware sales trends remain sluggish, albeit improving over recent months.
The link provides a presentation associated with a webinar we held. The webinar addressed our retail sales forecasts for FY26e. The outlook remains constructive for retail spending in FY26e, interest rates are falling and tax cuts are providing stimulus for households, but population growth is slowing and income growth may not rise further from here. We assessed the willingness of consumers to dip into savings to drive retail spending higher.
Metcash reported FY25 EBIT up 2% and adjusted for acquisitions, earnings were down 4%. Hardware had a challenging year but there are signs of a recovery emerging. We forecast Hardware EBIT growth of 8% in FY26e. In its Food segment, Superior Foods and convenience will more than offset tobacco declines in FY26e and Liquor has a contract win. We
Australian retail sales rose 4.0% in April 2025 year-on-year. The March-April period has been distorted by the shift of timing of Easter over the past two years. Therefore, the combined March-April results are more relevant and show retail sales growth of 3.6%. The strongest areas are online, pharmacy, beauty and recreational goods. The weakest areas remain liquor, cafes & restaurants and department stores.
We have published our periodical chart pack of retailer performance vs market. See attached PDF. This market share report provides two insights – 1) which retailers are winning and to what extent. 2) Insights about market structure. If you would like any of the data in Excel at any point, just contact us.
Australian retail sales grew 3.2% in March 2025 year-on-year. March was impacted by the timing of Easter. Last year Easter Sunday fell on 31 March but was on 20 April in 2025. Impacts are varied by category depending on product and store closure effects. On an underlying basis, March growth looks strong for supermarket, department stores and recreational goods. Queensland sales were dragged down by Cyclone Alfred.