The Tesco PLC Revival Was Fun: Now The Hard Work Starts

Dave Lewis has made a canny start at Tesco PLC (LON: TSCO) but he has a long journey ahead of him, says Harvey Jones

| More on:

The content of this article was relevant at the time of publishing. Circumstances change continuously and caution should therefore be exercised when relying upon any content contained within this article.

You’re reading a free article with opinions that may differ from The Motley Fool’s Premium Investing Services. Become a Motley Fool member today to get instant access to our top analyst recommendations, in-depth research, investing resources, and more. Learn More.

I hope you enjoyed the recent revival in the fortunes of supermarket giant Tesco (LSE: TSCO), which has seen the stock rebound 40% in the last six months.

It was fun while it lasted, but now the party is over. The stunning £6.4bn pre-tax loss announced this week, the largest ever by a UK retailer, brought it to a dismal end.

And rightly so, because the Tesco revival had run its course, being primarily a reaction to the earlier sell-off, which was also somewhat overdone.

It was also the market’s way of applauding new boss Dave Lewis, in part because he wasn’t Philip Clarke, but also for the unsentimental way he set about shaking up the business.

Shutting stores, closing the HQ, junking private jets, culling 10,000 jobs, terminating the final salary pension scheme, offloading BlinkBox and partly reversing the dash for convenience stores demonstrated that Lewis understood the scale of the challenge ahead of him.

You Shop, Shares Drop

Lewis has got his strategy right in a different way. He needs to buy time to turn Tesco round in the teeth of notoriously short-term market sentiment. He certainly wants longer than markets gave Clarke.

And he is doing that by scraping together all the bad news  he can find and getting it out there while he can still blame it on his predecessor.

It is an ancient strategy (Henry VIII’s first act was to execute his father’s hated tax collectors) but he has set about it with gusto, exposing the accounting scandal and now these apparently desperate results.

In fact, they relate mostly to asset write-downs rather than a sudden slump in trading, which has actually been picking up lately. Not so desperate, then.

UK like-for-like sales actually rose for the first time in more than four years, while customer transactions reversed recent falls to rise 1.5% in the fourth quarter.

Tesco To Go

Lewis now has a string of easy wins under his belt, and he deserves applause for his early success.

He has cannily lowered investor expectations into the bargain, so even tiny forward movements will be cheered to the rafters.

Markets reacted to the loss of relative calm. They still believe in Lewis. Difficult times lie ahead, however, because he has to show progress in the one thing that really matters, persuading shoppers to return to Tesco.

That won’t be easy, now that it isn’t just socially acceptable to admit shopping at Aldi and Lidl, but positively virtuous.

Markets have faith in Lewis, and right now, so do I.

Harvey Jones has no position in any shares mentioned. The Motley Fool UK owns shares of Tesco. We Fools don't all hold the same opinions, but we all believe that considering a diverse range of insights makes us better investors.

More on Investing Articles

British pound data
Investing Articles

Starting with nothing? Here’s why now is the perfect time to start building a passive income

Many are worried that 2026 might be a bad time to start investing in stocks and shares. Our Foolish author…

Read more »

ISA coins
Investing Articles

Decided not to bother with a Stocks and Shares ISA? You might be missing these 3 things!

With a fresh annual allowance for contributing to a Stocks and Shares ISA upon us, what might people who don't…

Read more »

GSK scientist holding lab syringe
Investing Articles

Why is everyone buying GSK shares?

GSK shares have been outperforming the FTSE 100 in 2026. Paul Summers takes a closer look and asks whether this…

Read more »

Middle-aged white man pulling an aggrieved face while looking at a screen
Investing Articles

£10,000 invested in easyJet shares at the start of 2026 is now worth…

Anyone buying easyJet shares will have endured a rough ride since January. Paul Summers wonders whether things could get even…

Read more »

Close-up of a woman holding modern polymer ten, twenty and fifty pound notes.
Investing Articles

5 years ago, £5,000 bought 2,645 Barclays shares. But how many would it buy now?

Despite delivering an impressive return since April 2021, Barclays' shares have lagged the FTSE 100's other banks. James Beard considers…

Read more »

Side of boat fuelled by gas to liquids, advertising Shell GTL Fuel
Investing Articles

5 years ago, £5,000 bought 354 Shell shares. But how many would it buy now?

When it comes to Shell’s numbers, most of them are impressive. And it’s no different when looking at the recent…

Read more »

A rear view of a female in a bright yellow coat walking along the historic street known as The Shambles in York, UK which is a popular tourist destination in this Yorkshire city.
Investing Articles

I asked ChatGPT if I should buy Aviva, Diageo or BAE Systems stock and it said…

Aviva, Diageo and BAE Systems shares are popular FTSE 100 picks. But which of the three does ChatGPT like the…

Read more »

Tesla car at super charger station
Investing Articles

SpaceX’s IPO threatens to leave the Tesla share price on the forecourt

As Elon Musk starts fuelling the engines for a SpaceX IPO, could the Tesla share price get left in the…

Read more »