Workers at Metro Inc. are putting in overtime to keep stores open as the company grapples with an ongoing labour crunch, the Montreal-based grocery and drugstore retailer said Wednesday.
“There's a lot of open positions out there and there's not enough workers to fill them,” Metro president and CEO Eric La Flèche said during a call to discuss the company's third-quarter results.
Canada's labour market remains exceptionally tight, with more than one million job vacancies across the country amid historic low unemployment rates, according to Statistics Canada.
“Labour shortages are causing pressures ... because that increases overtime to supply our stores,” La Flèche said. “We have higher overtime percentages than we're used to.”
He added that Metro currently has “more open positions” than usual but declined to provide an exact number of vacancies across the company's warehouses and stores, which include conventional supermarkets like Metro and Metro Plus, discount grocery chains Super C in Quebec and Food Basics in Ontario as well as drugstores Jean Coutu and Brunet.
La Flèche's comments came as the retailer reported a third-quarter profit of $275 million, up from $252.4 million a year earlier, as sales gained 2.5%. The profit amounted to $1.14 per diluted share for the period ending July 2, up from $1.03 cents per diluted share a year earlier. Sales totalled $5.87 billion, up from $5.72 billion, as food same-store sales gained 1.1% and pharmacy same-store sales rose 7.2%.
On an adjusted basis, Metro said it earned $1.18 cents per diluted share for the quarter, up from $1.06 per diluted share a year earlier.
The grocer warned that ongoing inflationary pressures and labour shortages could begin to weigh on margins. “If this high inflationary, high price environment continues it will continue to put pressure on margin,” Metro chief financial officer Francois Thibault said.
For now, strong margins in the company's pharmacy division made up for a decline in food gross margin, he said. “We had very strong front-store sales in our pharmacy business at Jean Coutu and Brunet in the quarter,” La Flèche said. “Over-the-counter cough and cold products are flying.”
Canada's jobless rate stayed at 4.9% in July, the lowest since comparable record-keeping began in 1976, Statistics Canada reported last Friday in its latest labour force survey.
Meanwhile, inflation continued to shape consumer habits during the company's third quarter. Shoppers increasingly opted for discount grocery stores, switched to cheaper house brands and sought out cheaper protein choices. “We saw the shift from conventional to discount (stores) accelerate when compared to the previous quarter,” La Flèche said. “We also saw a shift to private labels (and) trading down on proteins ... there's a shift for sure to value.”
The price of food purchased at stores increased 9.4% in June, Statistics Canada said last month.
Metro also said it expected same-store food sales to grow at a higher rate than in recent quarters and for growth in prescriptions on the pharmacy side of the business to moderate.