LuLu plans to double the number of products it sells under its own brand, where profits are higher. Ravindranath K / The National
LuLu plans to double the number of products it sells under its own brand, where profits are higher. Ravindranath K / The National
LuLu plans to double the number of products it sells under its own brand, where profits are higher. Ravindranath K / The National
LuLu plans to double the number of products it sells under its own brand, where profits are higher. Ravindranath K / The National

Grocers aim to beat price caps as controls hit profits


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Price controls on hundreds of products in the Emirates designed to curb inflation have prompted supermarkets to rethink their business models as profits are squeezed.

Retailers are considering a number of measures to manage the impact on margins, including increasing the prices of luxury goods, selling advertising space in stores and increasing sales of own-brand products.

"We are going and tapping new sources," said V Nandakumar, a spokesman for Emke Group, which owns Lulu Hypermarket. "Our teams are going to Germany, France, China, Japan and trying to source new suppliers and products so we can avoid the importers and distributors here."

Lulu Hypermarket plans to double the number of products it sells under its own brand, on which it makes more profit than on big name brands, from about 10 per cent of sales to 20 per cent.

The retailer is building new relationships with global manufacturers to produce hundreds of food items and products under the Lulu name.

"It will be a huge increase, [own-brand products] should be around at least 20 per cent. That is the industry benchmark," Mr Nandakumar said. "What we do is go to the guys in the business of manufacturing and commission them to make Lulu milk powder, for example."

Lulu's decision to increase own-brand products comes in part because government price controls are eating into margins.

The global consultancy Booz & Company says retailers in the GCC could achieve private-label market share of 15 to 25 per cent of grocery sales, which would represent a market size of US$5 billion (Dh18.36bn) to $9bn, and a net margin increment of 1 to 2 per cent.

Supermarkets have been asked to lower or fix the prices of hundreds of products, such as rice, bread and flour, until the end of the year.

"We are under enormous pressure for price control," said Fred Watts, the operations director at Almaya Supermarket. "We have to conform to it because we get fined and checked on. The Government is trying to keep the cost of living down and that is one of the ways they have to do it. We have to try and make it work for them."

Mr Watts said dealing with the price controls had become an "all-encompassing task" in managing price increases, the distribution chain and suppliers.

Almaya is trying to offer a variety of prices and products at its stores, with a basket of basic commodities at very low prices and luxury goods at increased prices.

"I appreciate where [the Government] is coming from because inflation could fly, it could just fly," said Mr Watts.

"I can't stop bringing in rice so it's one of those things we have to manage internally. The consumers are happy to pay a little more margin on something that becomes a luxury."

Even if the Government decides to drop its price controls next year, Lulu says it will aim to stabilise the prices of basic commodities.

"Given the option, we would like to keep these products as low as possible," Mr Nandakumar said. "We are in a fiercely competitive market."

To keep basic commodity prices low, Lulu is also considering selling advertising space in its stores to well-known brands.

"There will be a lot of activity which will be driven by other direct revenue sources," Mr Nandakumar said.

"For example, I will sell space to Lipton, to Unilever to Procter & Gamble inside my store, advertising space during a promotion, like a food festival."

Lulu then hopes to get cash or a discount on products from the branded suppliers.

"If we tell them to reduce costs, they won't do that unless I give something else," Mr Nandakumar said.

The hypermarket also hopes to issue coupons inside stores and online, which will give discounts on branded products. Suppliers will absorb the cost in return for marketing literature on the coupons.

"We have put down a clear policy with our buying managers," Mr Nandakumar said.

"If a supplier wants to increase the price of basic commodities, these guys need to go to the Ministry of Economy."

The specs

Engine: 2x201bhp AC Permanent-magnetic electric

Transmission: n/a

Power: 402bhp

Torque: 659Nm

Price estimate: Dh200,000

On sale: Q3 2022 

Results

Ashraf Ghani 50.64 per cent

Abdullah Abdullah 39.52 per cent

Gulbuddin Hekmatyar 3.85 per cent

Rahmatullah Nabil 1.8 per cent

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Blonde
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BIGGEST CYBER SECURITY INCIDENTS IN RECENT TIMES

SolarWinds supply chain attack: Came to light in December 2020 but had taken root for several months, compromising major tech companies, governments and its entities

Microsoft Exchange server exploitation: March 2021; attackers used a vulnerability to steal emails

Kaseya attack: July 2021; ransomware hit perpetrated REvil, resulting in severe downtime for more than 1,000 companies

Log4j breach: December 2021; attackers exploited the Java-written code to inflitrate businesses and governments

FIGHT CARD

Welterweight Mostafa Radi (PAL) v Tohir Zhuraev (TJK)

Catchweight 75kg Leandro Martins (BRA) v Anas Siraj Mounir (MAR)

Flyweight Corinne Laframboise (CAN) v Manon Fiorot (FRA)

Featherweight Ahmed Al Darmaki (UAE) v Bogdan Kirilenko (UZB)

Lightweight Izzedine Al Derabani (JOR) v Atabek Abdimitalipov (KYG)

Featherweight Yousef Al Housani (UAE) v Mohamed Arsharq Ali (SLA)

Catchweight 69kg Jung Han-gook (KOR) v Elias Boudegzdame (ALG)

Catchweight 71kg Usman Nurmagomedov (RUS) v Jerry Kvarnstrom (FIN)

Featherweight title Lee Do-gyeom (KOR) v Alexandru Chitoran (ROU)

Lightweight title Bruno Machado (BRA) v Mike Santiago (USA)

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Healthcare spending to double to $2.2 trillion rupees

Launched a 641billion-rupee federal health scheme

Allotted 200 billion rupees for the recapitalisation of state-run banks

Around 1.75 trillion rupees allotted for privatisation and stake sales in state-owned assets

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- Marie Curie

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- Jack the Ripper

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Bantamweight: Victor Nunes (BRA) beat Azizbek Satibaldiev (KYG). Round 1 KO

Featherweight: Izzeddin Farhan (JOR) beat Ozodbek Azimov (UZB). Round 1 rear naked choke

Middleweight: Zaakir Badat (RSA) beat Ercin Sirin (TUR). Round 1 triangle choke

Featherweight: Ali Alqaisi (JOR) beat Furkatbek Yokubov (UZB). Round 1 TKO

Featherweight: Abu Muslim Alikhanov (RUS) beat Atabek Abdimitalipov (KYG). Unanimous decision

Catchweight 74kg: Mirafzal Akhtamov (UZB) beat Marcos Costa (BRA). Split decision

Welterweight: Andre Fialho (POR) beat Sang Hoon-yu (KOR). Round 1 TKO

Lightweight: John Mitchell (IRE) beat Arbi Emiev (RUS). Round 2 RSC (deep cuts)

Middleweight: Gianni Melillo (ITA) beat Mohammed Karaki (LEB)

Welterweight: Handesson Ferreira (BRA) beat Amiran Gogoladze (GEO). Unanimous decision

Flyweight (Female): Carolina Jimenez (VEN) beat Lucrezia Ria (ITA), Round 1 rear naked choke

Welterweight: Daniel Skibinski (POL) beat Acoidan Duque (ESP). Round 3 TKO

Lightweight: Martun Mezhlumyan (ARM) beat Attila Korkmaz (TUR). Unanimous decision

Bantamweight: Ray Borg (USA) beat Jesse Arnett (CAN). Unanimous decision

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Some 70 per cent visitors are projected to come from outside the UAE, the largest proportion of international visitors in the 167-year history of World Expos.

More than 30,000 volunteers are required for Expo 2020

The site covers a total of 4.38 sqkm, including a 2 sqkm gated area

It is located adjacent to Al Maktoum International Airport in Dubai South

F1 The Movie

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Director: Joseph Kosinski

Rating: 4/5

MISSION: IMPOSSIBLE – FINAL RECKONING

Director: Christopher McQuarrie

Starring: Tom Cruise, Hayley Atwell, Simon Pegg

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The biog

Fast facts on Neil Armstrong’s personal life:

  • Armstrong was born on August 5, 1930, in Wapakoneta, Ohio
  • He earned his private pilot’s license when he was 16 – he could fly before he could drive
  • There was tragedy in his married life: Neil and Janet Armstrong’s daughter Karen died at the age of two in 1962 after suffering a brain tumour. She was the couple’s only daughter. Their two sons, Rick and Mark, consulted on the film
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