Supermarket giant Tesco has slumped to a £6.4 billion annual loss after taking a massive writedown on the value of its property portfolio.
The bottom-line loss for the 12 months to February 28 caps a disastrous year for the chain following an accounting scandal and a series of profit warnings amid a ferocious price war with rivals.
Underlying profits were 68% lower at £961 million in the period but new chief executive Dave Lewis said the company had drawn a line under the past and was seeing some encouraging signs.
The full-year loss - one of the largest in UK corporate history - was driven by £7 billion of one-off items, including £3.8 billion from a review of its store portfolio in light of industry conditions and declining profits.
It also wrote down the value of work-in-progress by £925 million following its decision in January not to proceed with 49 sites in its property pipeline.
Tesco has also agreed a contribution of £270 million a year to its pension fund after a valuation revealed a deficit of £2.8 billion at the end of March last year.
Mr Lewis said: "The market is still challenging and we are not expecting any let-up in the months ahead. When you add to this the fundamental changes we are making to our business and our offer, it is likely to lead to an increased level of volatility in short-term performance.
"Our clear priority - and the one that will deliver sustainable value for our shareholders - is to improve consistently for customers. The changes we have made and will continue to make put us in a stronger position to do this."
Tesco has been caught up in a price war with rivals Asda, Sainsbury's and Morrisons as their market share is gnawed away by discounters Aldi and Lidl.
Since the arrival of former Unilever executive Mr Lewis, it has announced the closure of 43 loss-making stores as well as shelving plans for a further 49.
The group has shut its final salary pension scheme and sold its loss-making blinkbox online video operation. It also plans to save £250 million a year by shutting its headquarters in Cheshunt and has axed its dividend this year.
Tesco has also recruited former Dixons chairman John Allan to head its board to succeed Sir Richard Broadbent, who left after the discovery last autumn of a £263 million accounting blunder, now being investigated by the Serious Fraud Office.
Mr Lewis said the company had added a net 4,652 customer-facing roles in stores since September, while cutting the number of head office jobs.
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