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Canadian retailer Loblaw misses revenue estimates amid cautious consumer spending

Canadian retailer Loblaw missed Wall Street expectations for the first quarter revenue on Wednesday, as consumers become more cautious in their spending amid rising macroeconomic uncertainty.

Lower-income Canadians are cutting back on non essential spending due to a squeeze on their household budgets caused by?higher prices for groceries, higher crude oil prices from Iran's war, and increased inflation.

Retailers in North America are feeling the pinch. U.S. supermarket Albertsons forecasted soft sales last month, and Canadian discount retailer Dollarama projected a year-end?sales that were largely below expectations.

Loblaw continues to expect that its adjusted net income will grow in the high single-digits.

The retailer stated that?its discount brands, such as?No Frills? and?Maxi?, continue to perform well, while it continues to focus on its core operations.

In the last quarter, same-store sales increased by 2.4% in its food retail segment as well as 4.1% in its drug retail division.

LSEG data shows that the company's revenue for the quarter grew 4% on an annual basis to C$14.48 ($10.65) billion, but fell short of analysts' expectations at C$14.55?? billion.

Analysts' expectations were met when it posted adjusted earnings per share of 52 Canadian Cents for the quarter ended March 28.

Loblaw announced in March that it was investigating data breaches after criminals accessed basic customer data on a non-critical portion of its IT network. However, no passwords, financial or health data, were compromised.

(source: Reuters)