The recovery in numbers
Tesco's UK operating margin hit 5.8% in FY2025 — up from a near-zero margin in 2014 when the accounting scandal nearly killed the company. That 5.8% represents a GBP 1.2B operating profit improvement in 11 years.
The recovery had four phases: (1) close the underperforming stores and exit international markets (Spain, Japan, US); (2) rebuild the supply chain from scratch after the horsemeat scandal of 2013 exposed supplier management failures; (3) roll out the VusionGroup ESL system to 2,400 stores; (4) rebuild private label quality after the horsemeat crisis destroyed consumer trust.
The ESL rollout — the most underreported move
The VusionGroup ESL deployment is the most underreported strategic move in UK grocery. Tesco can now change 340% more prices per week than before deployment. That's pricing agility that Aldi and Lidl can't match — and it's showing up in the margin numbers.
Pre-ESL: 800 paper label changes per store per week, requiring 3.2 hours of staff time
Post-ESL: 3,100 digital label changes per store per week, requiring 0.4 hours of staff time
The time savings fund the pricing agility. Tesco reprices faster, captures more of the demand curve, and reduces the markdown exposure on perishables.
The Clubcard data moat
Clubcard has 22M+ active members — 65%+ of UK grocery households. The data enables:
- Dual pricing (Clubcard Price vs. non-member price): 1–2% margin uplift on enrolled categories
- Supplier negotiation leverage: Tesco knows sell-through velocity per SKU per postcode; suppliers don't
- Predictive markdown reduction: knowing which households will buy marked-down products reduces markdown frequency by 12%
What competitors can't replicate in 5 years
The Booker wholesale integration is the structural advantage that escapes most analyst attention. Booker is a £5.7B revenue wholesale operation (convenience stores, catering, foodservice) that Tesco acquired in 2018. It turns Tesco's supply chain into a profit centre:
- Tesco buys at scale → supplies Booker → Booker supplies independent retailers
- The independent retailers fund part of Tesco's buying volume
- This cross-subsidy is invisible to Sainsbury's, Asda, and every hard discounter
The recovery is real. The moat is now deeper than before the crisis. That's the Tesco story that's underpriced in analyst models.