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Premier Foods ramps up supply chain spend ahead of Christmas

Premier Foods makes Mr Kipling and Cadbury cakes as well as Bisto and Oxo stock cubes
Premier Foods makes Mr Kipling and Cadbury cakes as well as Bisto and Oxo stock cubes

Premier Foods, the maker of Mr Kipling and Cadbury cakes, plans to spend most of its earnings from the first half of the year on its supply chain, with the UK battling a shortage of food items as it comes out of the pandemic.

The company, which traces its roots to the early 1800s, also said today that it was spending to keep higher stock levels going into the Christmas season.

It cited that as a reason for recording £23.2m of outflow in the six months to October 2.

Economies across the world have faced a range of hurdles from tighter labour markets to snarled supply chains and a resultant increase in prices as they come out of prolonged lockdowns.

Some of the issues have been exacerbated in Britain by a shortage of workers from the European Union because of Brexit, while post-Brexit trade frictions also crop up.

Premier Foods noted these hurdles, while drawing attention to the shortage of lorry drivers, who are a key part of the supply chain especially during the festive season when volumes are driven up by gifts and food items as people get together.

"Much of our Christmas volumes have been produced and is now sitting in our warehouses and will be shipped over in the next few weeks. We are the peak of that now, it is essentially done," Premier Foods boss Alex Whitehouse told a media call.

The company posted £30.7m in pretax earnings for the six months to October 2, a 39.2% drop compared with a year earlier, and guided to £25m in capital expenditure (capex) for the year as it invests more across the supply chain.

In the half-year period, Premier Foods, which also makes Oxo stock cubes and Bisto gravy, said capex was £6.3m.

"With further inflation now evident across a variety of input costs, the group will be taking a range of actions which it expects will be effective later this financial year," Premier Foods said.

Its half-year revenue also fell 6.5% to £394.1m due to a tough comparative with a year earlier, when people cooked more at home due to Covid-19 enforced lockdowns.