Tesco's new boss looks to avoid nightmare before Christmas
Shopping trolleys are seen at a Tesco supermarket in central London, December 9, 2014. REUTERS/Toby Melville · Reuters

By Paul Sandle and James Davey

LONDON (Reuters) - Dave Lewis, the new boss of Tesco (TSCO.L), Britain's biggest grocer, is betting on a customer charm offensive coupled with selective price cuts to prevent poor Christmas trading compounding an already disastrous year for investors.

The group, like its big three UK rivals Wal-Mart's Asda (WMT.N), Sainsbury's (SBRY.L) and Morrisons (MRW.L), has suffered as shoppers turn against the traditional big weekly hypermarket shop.

Instead they are increasingly spending more at discounters Aldi [ALDIEI.UL] and Lidl [LIDUK.UL], at convenience stores and online, with the odd treat from upmarket retailers Waitrose [JLP.UL] and Marks & Spencer (MKS.L) thrown in.

Tesco's woes have been exacerbated by an accounting scandal requiring a total re-setting of its relationships with suppliers. A fourth profit warning in five months on Tuesday sent its shares, which have halved in value this year, to a 14-year low.

"Most people think the wider recovery at Tesco is going to be painful and very protracted. One tends to feel that like-for-like sales could well remain in negative territory for another 18 months to two years," said Charles Stanley analyst Sam Hart.

The last few weeks before Christmas, however, remain the busiest of the year for grocers, and Tesco's poor performance last Christmas, when underlying sales fell 2.4 percent, set the tone for a year to forget in 2014.

Given current trends, analysts don't expect any of Britain's big four grocers to exceed last year's Christmas performance on a same-store basis.

In an attempt to stem the rate of shopper defections, Lewis has recruited 6,000 extra workers into stores to improve customer service, while 6,000 head office staff are working half a day a week in stores in the run-up to Christmas.

He has also cut prices on Christmas products and on 1,000 key lines, where he has focused efforts on improving availability. Stores are cleaner, tidier and warmer, and more check-outs are open.

SURGICAL APPROACH

"(We are) trying to take a more surgical approach to put things in that help the offer without destroying the Christmas operation," Lewis told reporters on Tuesday.

Neil Saunders of retail consultancy Conlumino says that while Tesco's problems will take years to fix, this Christmas is still important because it represents a first opportunity to judge how Lewis is faring.

"Good stores that are well stocked are going to trade far better than stores with holes in key product lines and items missing and out of stock, and that has been one of the issues at Tesco," he said.