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MOSCOW, March 17 (Reuters) - Russian food retailer X5 on Friday said declining profit in the fourth
quarter was partly owing to aggressive expansion of its network
of discount stores as Russian consumers feel the pinch.
Shoppers have faced surging prices and falling incomes in
the year since the Kremlin ordered tens of thousands of troops
into Ukraine, hitting spending power and boosting demand for
cut-price goods.
The active expansion of X5's Chizhik 'hard discounter'
format is in response to customers increasingly seeking the best
value offer for their money, CEO Igor Shekhterman said, pointing
to sharply higher revenue for the format.
Revenue for Chizhik was nearly 12 times higher in 2022 as a
whole at 36 billion roubles ($470 million).
X5 said its focus is on growth of its Pyaterochka convenience stores and Chizhik format, planning more than 3,000 store openings in the next three years.
Fourth-quarter profit dropped 73.8% year on year to 2.08 billion roubles ($27.2 million) but full-year profit was up 5.7% at 42.19 billion roubles.
The group's reduced profit margin was largely attributable to discounted prices and the aggressive expansion of the Chizhik network, it said, adding that the board would not recommend a dividend for 2022.
"While the Company remains committed to its long-term goal
of returning company profits to shareholders, the supervisory
board believes it would be in the company’s best interest to
temporarily deviate from its dividend policy as long as current
uncertainties and regulatory conditions prevail," X5 said.
($1 = 76.6000 roubles)
(Reporting by Olga Popova and Alexander Marrow
Editing by David Goodman)