Tesco - Analysing the environment - Enterprise Profile - PEST Analysis - SWOT Analysis

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TESCO -ANALYSING THE ENVIRONMENT

Enterprise Profile

Tesco is one of Britain's leading food retailers and has 586 stores though out Great Britain. From 19921 Tesco has grown greatly and has increased its market share from 10.4% to 15.2%. This increase in customers has also given Tesco a large amount of profit.

Tesco has 164,500 shareholders. Tesco's profit is about 505 million pounds after the tax has been deducted; about 50%of this is then distributed to the shareholders as dividends. The rest roughly 250 million pounds is held back for investment in stores and improving services for the customers. The average shareholder holds between one and one thousand shares, but also a large amount of shares are held by banks, pension funds and building societies. Tesco's share prices have risen since February 1997 when it was 349p to 586p on the 21st April 1998. The shares have peaked a high price of 603p. With this growth Tesco's is now the largest super market chain in the U.K.

PEST Analysis

A PEST analysis was undertaken of factors which would have an impact on Tesco or which need to be addressed by it.

Political Environment

The environment comprises of laws, government agencies and pressure groups that influence and limit Tesco PLC.

* With the increase in market concentration in recent years the UK's leading grocery retailers have come increasingly under the scrutiny of the Office of Fair Trading (OFT) for allegedly exerting monopsony powers in agricultural markets. It was suggested that these retailers abused their dominant position by dictating particularly favourable terms and conditions on suppliers such as farmers.

* Public concerns about the operation of the grocery retail sector-one campaign on "rip-off" Britain had highlighted the fact that food prices in the UK were consistently above those in other European countries-lead to a referral to the Competition Commission (formerly the Monopolies and Mergers Commission) in 1999.

* Public disquiet about the effect of out of town superstores on town centres has grown and both current and future planning policies will seriously hamper future development. Though conversions of existing stores allows some increase in selling space it is limited.

* Community organisations have since gained momentum consequent to the Competition Commissions ruling and have been lobbying neighbourhoods to boycott supermarkets and large food manufacturers and instead support small independent suppliers, processors and retailers at the expense of large supermarkets like Tesco..

Economic Environment

* The UK food retailing market is mature and highly competitive. In order to improve margins large grocery retailers has moved into non food retailing where it now claims a 4% market share of non-food goods with a target of 6%. While non food items have higher margins they do have marginally higher costs in that they require adjustments to the supply chain process.

* The UK market has been affected by negative inflation in the food sector. This negative inflation has been driven by the so-called 'Wal-Mart effect' i.e. downward pressure on prices from Asda / Wal-Mart's aggressive 'Every Day Low Price (EDLP)' strategy, It was not just the Wal-Mart effect that pressurised retailers into a price war but.

* The saturation of domestic markets and the desire for growth have fuelled increasing globalisation in retailing through self-start, merger and acquisition and franchising. The increasing merger activity in the retail sector has also been partly driven by global shortages of real estate available to retailers to build stores, particularly with strong growth restrictions in Western Europe..

* Scarce land resources compounded by government legislation on planning restrictions on out of town shopping facilities makes it difficult to expand into these locations.

* Britain's supermarkets are racing to open small high street stores to cash in on demand for convenience shopping in urban areas.

Social Environment

* The over powering proposition of the "everything under one roof" format has been a major factor in the demise of the small independent grocer, butcher and green grocer in recent times thus replacing the high street as the focal point of community life.
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* With no strong attachments to Local communities, supermarkets readily use job cuts as a safety net to ensure profits. Consequently local communities are haemorrhaging quantities of meaningful skilled jobs. The British Retail Planning Forum of 1998 revealed that every time a large supermarket opens and average of 276 jobs are lost 2

* Declining meal preparation consequent to demographic changes such as an increasing number of single-person households and working women is forcing UK retailers are to focus on added-value products such as the booming 'food-to-go" sector (eating out is now the UK's favourite leisure time ...

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