AT 969

The Voice of Independent Retailers

Symbol choice

What’s yours?

19th September to 16th October 2025

Volume 37 No. 969

Out & about

Diary and chat

Feature

Nic Pouch knowledge

Fresher’s week

Incoming opportunities

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48

Govt announces age

restrictions on Energy drinks

Sport & Protein products

Student Opportunities

30

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4 NEWS

Leader: Last of the summer whine

Govt announces age restrictions on Energy drinks

Co-op Wholesale and Costcutter sign new

agreement

Snappy Shopper launches 24/7 delivery

nationwide

Snappy Shopper integrates with Google

Merchant Center

Food prices in UK to rise as manufacturing

costs soar

Guest column: Spice, cream & rum: autumn’s

winning spirits

Guest column: Keeping the high street unique

– your time to shine

10 NEWS FEATURE: Always on:

remotely restless vacations

Unlike most Brits, independent retailers’

holidays are less about rest and more about trust

12 Out and About

See what’s been happening in Grocery Land

this month – plus gossip and rumours

13 DATA CART

Your at-a-glance and graphic guide to the big

issues in the sector

14 MOVERS AND SHAKERS

Keeping up with the latest industry moves and

promotions

15 RETAIL CORNER: Lighting

up the community

For this convenience store in Salford, the

business is lighting up its community, whether

through new launches on the shelves or

literally, with fireworks in the sky

16“NOT” TWITTER

The best observations and comments from

retailers (and friends) on the ground

17 WORLD OF WHOLESALE

A regular round-up of news, views and what’s

happening in the wholesale sector

18 AWARD-WINNER

INTERVIEW:

For ex-policeman Priyesh Vekaria, looking

after his store, staff and shoppers is second

nature, and he succeeds wonderfully at putting

community welfare front and centre

20 FEATURE: BIG NIGHT IN

Big nights in mean big business, and as the

nights draw in and Britain settles back for a

stay-at home season it’s time to buckle up and

cash in with all the goodies required

30 FEATURE: SPORTS AND

PROTEIN PRODUCTS

Great changes are occurring in the functional

and performance categories, from drinks to

dairy to snacks – with reformulations tailored

to changing consumer demands

37 FEATURE: NICOTINE POUCHES

A new product with a long history, nicotine

pouches have shed the ‘tobacco-plug’ image

of cowboys and sailors to emerge as the ‘clean

nicotine’ option for Next Gen

44 ME AND MY BRAND – PML

Anthony Loinsard explains the technology,

flavour-forward portfolio and nicotine

experience that have made IQOS the world’s

number-one tobacco heating system

45 MUST STOCK

The latest product news

48 FEATURE: STUDENT

OPPORTUNITIES

The sign of autumn is not falling leaves but

students lugging cases to their new lodgings as

another academic year begins – and they are

all in need of nourishment and good times

55 SYMBOL, FASCIA &

FRANCHISE SUPPLEMENT

Our latest look at the variety and role of

symbol groups that are currently available,

performance, conditions, terms and their offers

to retailers

19th September to 16th October 2025

THE VOICE OF INDEPENDENT RETAILERS

VOLUME 37 NUMBER 969

NEWS

4 ASIAN TRADER 19 SEPTEMBER 2025

It is reported that Coca-Cola is

working with investment bank

Lazard to review options,

including a potential sale, of

British coffee chain Costa.

The company has held initial

talks with a small number of

potential bidders for Costa,

including private equity firms,

Sky News first reported, citing

unidentified sources.

Indicative offers are

expected in early autumn, but a

sale is not definitive, Sky

reported.

Coca Cola acquired Costa

Coffee in 2018 for over $5

billion, to strengthen its

position in the global coffee

market, competing with

Starbucks and Nestle.

In an earnings call last

month, the Coca-Cola CEO

James Quincey hinted at

changes to Costa’s operations,

saying “Our investment in

Costa is not where we wanted it

to be from an investment

hypothesis point of view.”

“We’re in the mode of

reflecting on what we’ve learnt,

thinking about how we might

want to find new avenues to

grow in the coffee category,

while continuing to run the

Costa business successfully.”

Coca-Cola explores

sale of Costa Coffee

Last of the summer

whine

ummer is over and the country is awakening to a new

cycle of seasons, alongside an ongoing set of economic

and social challenges, many of them courtesy of our

elected representatives.

This time of the year marks the beginning of “the season”

for media and grocery, as the long build-up to Christmas

begins. For Asian Trader, our festive and awards season is

jump-started by the Diwali issue next month, when we will be

announcing concrete details concerning our upcoming awards

in November – so, very exciting, with lots to look forward to as

the evenings darken and the air freshens.

What’s been put back to the last minute is the Chancellor’s

upcoming budget, which will now take place on 26 November

– the very latest possible date, and the Government’s only

major fiscal event this year (there was merely a “statement”

back in March). One would guess that this is to delay bad news

or perhaps extend the time available to pray for a miracle. In

truth, the country is not doing too badly. UK public and private

debt has fallen to “just” 225% of GDP, while it is 249% in the

Land of Trump, 287% in Xi Jinping’s communist paradise and

323% in France – a number to warm the cockles of a Brit’s heart

as the nights draw in.

However, the discount rate on 10-year UK gilts reached

4.7% recently, meaning we are looking at over 5% inflation in

store and mortgage rates eventually a couple of percentage

points higher, unless Rachel Reeves can find a way to cut

government spending – which is probably why she is putting

off the day of reckoning for as long as possible. This is despite

tax revenues jumping by over half since 2019, inflation by

contrast by only 24% - and during the same period there was an

increase in GDP by 28%. The mystery, then, is why investors

are reluctant to lend money to the UK by buying bonds – and

the answer to this looming crisis is that they do not think the

government will be able to cut spending. It’s a confidence

thing, and the recent Cabinet resignations and reshuffling is

not really helping.

Also, though, the nature of recent legislation is degrading

the outlook – NI increases, business rates support withdrawn,

punitive restrictions on trade across the board making

commerce more expensive, adding friction and costs – and

perhaps above all, employment legislation that shows zero

awareness of second-order, or unintended effects, of new rules

and regs. As somebody wrote a few weeks ago, a hidden

calamity awaits retailers even after its author, the fragrant

Angela Rayner, has left the stage.

The Employment Rights Bill not only cripples employers

but places them in endless legal jeopardy. It turns out that the

bill could mean retailers will be obliged to listen in to custom­

ers’ chat to ensure nothing “illegal” (an ever-widening area of

speech, it seems) is being discussed, no so-called “contentious

beliefs” aired. If an employee overhears any hurty-words, it’s

employers’ liability for damages and therapy. You have been

warned.

Convenience stores have

welcomed a new

consultation from the

Department of Health

and Social Care on the

introduction of a legal

age restriction on energy

drinks.

Under the proposals,

announced today, drinks

that contain more than

150mg of caffeine per

litre would be illegal for sale to

anyone aged under 16. Tea, coffee

and lower caffeine soft drinks are

not affected by the plans.

ACS polling of independent

retailers in 2022 showed that 80

per cent already had a voluntary

policy in place to restrict the sale

of energy drinks to young people.

High caffeine soft drinks are

currently labelled as ‘not

recommended for children’, but

to date there is no legal restric­

tion in place on these products.

Association of Convenience

Stores CEO James Lowman said,

“The majority of convenience

stores already have a voluntary

age restriction in place on energy

drinks and will welcome the

clarity of regulation on this issue.

“Our members have a

longstanding track record of

enforcing age restricted sales on

different products, but it is

essential that the

“Government effectively

communicates the details of the

ban to consumers to avoid the

risk of confrontation in stores.”

ACS works with Surrey and

Bucks Trading Standards

through one of the UK’s leading

primary authority partnerships

to provide Assured Advice on age

restricted sales, along with other

areas of regulation, to conveni­

ence retailers.

ACS recommends the use of

Challenge25 policies to help

reduce the potential for confron­

tation when enforcing the law

on the sale of age restricted

products.

Convenience stores welcome new consultation

Govt announces age

restrictions on Energy drinks

NEWS

19 SEPTEMBER 2025 ASIAN TRADER 5

The 2025 biennial

workforce survey

carried out by the

Society of Chief

Officers of Trading

Standards in Scotland

(SCOTSS) across all

local authorities

revealed a drop in

numbers below 250 for

the first time, and a worsen­

ing age demographic that

shows 60% of staff are over 50

years of age, suggesting that

Trading Standards in

Scotland is facing crisis.

According to SCOTSS, very

low numbers of younger

officers are coming into the

service, and in addition there

is inadequate support for

modern apprenticeships,

training and development of

other staff.

It said without immediate

government support, and

action to increase resources,

there is a clear risk that

services will fail to adequate­

ly protect consumers

across an ever-growing

range of legislation and

be able to offer little or

no support to business

in Scotland against a

complex landscape of

regulation.

The survey echoes

the findings of a Which?

investigation from February

2025 that exposed a trading

standards postcode lottery,

with woefully inadequate

staffing levels in many areas,

leaving millions of people

exposed to crime, fake, illicit

tobacco and dangerous

products and scams.

Trading Standards in Scotland

facing resource crisis

Spice, cream & rum:

Spice, cream & rum:

autumn’s winning spirits

autumn’s winning spirits

Nick Gillett is

Co-founder and

Managing

Director of

successful

spirits

distributor

Mangrove Global, as well as an

industry expert and

commentator. In his column for

this issue, Nick explains how to

indulge in the range of flavours

and feels that autumn brings to

the spirits shelf

Even when summer sales are still in full

swing, the team is already looking

ahead to what will be driving spirit

sales this autumn. Here’s a heads up on

clear opportunities for retailers to

capitalise on.

As the nights are beginning to draw

in, shoppers will reach for richer,

warmer flavours. Cinnamon, ginger

and nutmeg will replace summer’s

zestier notes – though the Espresso

Martini will hold its ground. Cream-

based serves will make a comeback,

but simplicity wins: quality liquids, neat

pours, and showing customers there’s

more to cream liqueurs than the

obvious big names.

Fruit stays on trend, but in a more

refined way – cherry, sloeberry, pear

and acai. Stock spirits, RTDs and

mixers that let shoppers recreate these

elevated flavours at home.

It’s also the perfect time to switch up

your shelf display. A small seasonal

shake-up can put a spotlight on bottles

carried over from summer, giving them

fresh appeal. Position seasonal flavours

and premium options where they’ll

catch the eye – and prompt a purchase.

Rum remains the standout success

story. Growth is strong in both the

on-trade, with rum taking a bigger role

on cocktail menus, and the off-trade,

where shoppers are trading up to

better bottles. Premium and spiced

expressions with provenance lead the

charge. Chairman’s Reserve and

Bounty, both distilled in Saint Lucia,

keep winning UK fans with tropical

depth and quality.

Refresh your range early, lean into

the seasonal shift, and choose products

that tell a story – your shelves, and your

customers, will thank you.

Co-op Wholesale and Costcut­

ter Supermarkets Group (CSG)

have joined together in a new

agreement, Bestway Wholesale

has announced.

According to Bestway, this

partnership signals the start of a

new opportunity, bringing the

collaboration and strength of

both businesses, to unlock

greater value for independent

retailers.

“I am delighted to announce

this new agreement which goes

further than just a supply deal;

we are jointly focused on true

partnership as the key ingredi­

ent for mutual success, as we

collectively support Independ­

ent Retailers to grow through

our market leading proposi­

tions,” said Katie Secretan, MD

of Co-op Wholesale.

Dawood Pervez, Bestway

Wholesale MD, said, “The

continuation of our collabora­

tion will see Costcutter stores

continue to benefit from the

market-leading full-service

convenience model from Co-op

Wholesale, including access to

the iconic and best in class

Co-op own brand products.

“Both businesses are

committed to working together

to continuously improve the

offer, supporting retailer

growth in an evolving market.”

What exact changes were

made to the existing agreement

is still unknown.

The announcement breaks

the silence spanning months

after it emerged earlier this year

that Co-op Wholesale had

decided not to renew the

long-term supply arrangement

to Costcutter stores.

The arrangement was ending

Dec 31 thus year, thus implying

that Co-op Wholesale would

have ceased supplying fresh,

chilled and own-label to

Costcutter stores from Jan 1,

2026, bringing an end to the

long-term supply arrangement.

The exact cause was not

known.

Bestway repeatedly assured

that it was working out the best

deal for Costcutter stores and

would soon announce “an

improved offer for Costcutter

retailers”.

New era begins as past doubts about partnership laid to rest

Co-op Wholesale and Costcutter

Co-op Wholesale and Costcutter

sign new agreement

sign new agreement

NEWS/COMMENT

NEWS

6 ASIAN TRADER 19 SEPTEMBER 2025

Snappy Shopper has rolled out its

new 24/7 delivery capability

across the UK, enabling

independent convenience stores

to offer round-the-clock grocery

delivery for the first time at scale.

Following successful trials

earlier this year, the q-commerce

technology platform says the

development marks a significant

step forward in helping retailers

meet customer needs outside

traditional trading hours.

The service allows local

stores to deliver essentials such

as milk, bread, snacks and

household goods at any hour of

the day or night, with orders

placed via the Snappy Shopper

app. The platform positions

itself as the first conveni­

ence-focused solution to offer

nationwide 24/7 delivery

functionality.

“This is a huge step forward

for independent retail,” Mike

Callachan, CEO of Snappy

Shopper, said.

“We’ve developed and tested

the technology and now we’re

rolling it out to help local stores

meet real, everyday needs

around the clock. We’re proud to

lead this innovation for the

benefit of both retailers and their

communities.”

One of the early adopters,

Girish’s Premier Barmulloch in

Glasgow, became the first store

in Scotland to launch 24-hour

deliveries in February. Owner

Girish Jeeva said the response

had exceeded expectations, with

25 overnight orders placed on

launch night and a growing base

of regular late-night customers.

His store recently surpassed

£100,000 in GMV in a single

30-day period, boosted by

overnight trade.

Retailers who want to offer

24/7 delivery must meet

eligibility criteria set by Snappy

Shopper, ensuring operational

standards and customer service

can be maintained. Licensing

restrictions will also apply, with

alcohol and other restricted

products automatically

unavailable during prohibited

hours.

New tool announced to help indies thrive round-the-clock

Snappy Shopper launches

Snappy Shopper launches

24/7 delivery nationwide

24/7 delivery nationwide

Disposable incomes fell for

most households last

month, according to Asda’s

Income Tracker, raising

concerns for retailers.

The report, produced in

partnership with the Centre

for Economics and Business

Research (Cebr), shows that

60% of households experi­

enced a decline in spending

power. Inflation climbed to

3.8% – the highest level this

year – driven largely by food,

drink and transport costs.

The cost of essentials rose

by 5.1% year-on-year, putting

further pressure on household

budgets.

The squeeze was most

acute for lower-income

households, who saw an 11.1%

decline in disposable income,

leaving them £73 short each

month after covering essential

bills. Middle-income families,

earning around £41,000

annually, also registered a 1.6%

fall in disposable income –

their first drop in nearly two

years.

While higher earners

remain comparatively

protected, the report

highlights that the gap is

narrowing as earnings

growth slows and tax

contributions increase.

With inflation forecast

to stay above the Bank of

England’s 2% target until well

into 2026, retailers may need

to prepare for increased

trading down, stronger

demand for value ranges, and

shifting shopper behaviours in

the months ahead.

Disposable incomes shrink for

60% of UK households

Kraft Heinz to

Kraft Heinz to

split in two

split in two

Packaged-food giant Kraft Heinz said

it will separate into two firms, dividing

up famous brands including Philadel­

phia cream cheese and cold-cut brand

Oscar Mayer.

The company, born in a 2015

merger between two longstanding

American food brands, said splitting

will allow better-targeted investments

to maximise brand value, according to

a Kraft Heinz press release.

But shares of the food company

fell sharply after major holder

Berkshire Hathaway signalled its

disagreement with the announce­

ment.

CEO Warren Buffett said he was

“disappointed” by the decision to split

up the companies.

Co-op Wholesale inks

Co-op Wholesale inks

Sewell forecourt deal

Sewell forecourt deal

Co-op Wholesale has announced a

new partnership with Sewell on the go,

one of East Yorkshire’s most respect­

ed independent forecourt retailers.

Under a newly signed five-year

agreement, Co-op Wholesale will

become the full supply partner for 12

Sewell on the go convenience stores

across Hull and East Yorkshire.

The business said the new

partnership marks a “major milestone”

in its strategy to support independent

forecourt operators with market-lead­

ing products and convenience retail

expertise. “We’re thrilled to be

working with Sewell on the go,” said

Co-op Wholesale MD Katie Secretan.

Molson Coors Q2 beer

Molson Coors Q2 beer

sales slip

sales slip

Molson Coors Beverage Company has

reported a 1.6% decline in sec­

ond-quarter net sales as it warned of

continued headwinds from weaken­

ing industry demand, volume losses in

the US, and indirect tariff costs.

The global brewer has revised its

full-year guidance downwards, citing

a tougher macroeconomic climate

and higher aluminium pricing driven

by Midwest Premium tariffs.

While underlying diluted earnings

per share rose 6.8% to $2.05, the

company now expects full-year

underlying income before taxes to fall

by up to 15% – a steeper decline than

previously forecast.

NEWS

19 SEPTEMBER 2025 ASIAN TRADER 7

NEWS

As we head into autumn and the

crucial Christmas trading

period approaches, there’s

never been a more important

time for independent retailers

to showcase what makes them

special. The recent success of

our inaugural Love Your High

Street Awards demonstrated

just how much the British

public values businesses that

dare to be different.

When Headhunters Barber

Shop & Railway Museum in

Enniskillen, Northern Ireland,

was crowned our winner at the

start of September, it wasn’t just

because they cut hair well, it was

because they had the vision to

create something genuinely

unique. Who else would think

to combine traditional barber­

ing with railway heritage?

The lesson here is profound:

uniqueness isn’t about

following trends or copying

what works elsewhere. It’s

about understanding your

community, your passion, and

finding creative ways to bring

them together.

So how can you make your

business shine in the months

ahead?

Tell Your Story - Every

independent retailer has a story

worth telling. Whether you’re a

family business passed down

through generations, a

passionate specialist who left

corporate life to follow your

dream, or an innovator solving

problems in your community –

share that story. Customers buy

into narratives that resonate

with them.

Embrace Your Expertise –

Your knowledge and passion are

your greatest assets. Big chains

can compete on price and

convenience, but they can’t

compete with specialist

knowledge, personal service,

and genuine enthusiasm for

what you do. Make this

expertise visible – through

demonstrations, workshops, or

taking time to educate custom­

ers about your products.

Create Experiences, Not Just

Transactions – Headhunters

doesn’t just cut hair – it provides

an experience that children

with autism find comforting

and that brings families

together across generations.

What experience does your

business create? How do you

make customers feel special

from the moment they walk

through your door?

Be Proudly Local - Your

connection to the local

community is irreplaceable.

Celebrate local history, support

local causes, stock local

products, and become an

integral part of the neighbour­

hood fabric. This isn’t just good

business – it’s what makes high

streets vibrant and alive.

Invest in Your Presence - As

we approach the golden quarter,

now is the time to refresh your

window displays, update your

social media, and ensure your

shopfront truly reflects the

quality of what you offer inside.

First impressions matter, and

your exterior should tell

customers they’re about to

discover something special.

The high street needs

businesses that are proud to be

different. In an increasingly

homogenised retail landscape,

your uniqueness isn’t just an

asset – it’s essential for survival

and success.

This month, in his regular column, Bira CEO Andrew Goodacre

explores what it means to be unique on the high street

Keeping the high

Keeping the high

street unique –

street unique –

your time to shine

your time to shine

Parfetts extends

Parfetts extends

own-label medicines

own-label medicines

range

range

Wholesaler Parfetts is stepping up

its push into own-label medicines

with the launch of Go Local

Paracetamol Tablets, following the

successful debut of its Go Local

Ibuprofen line in January.

Available in 16-pack tablets, the

new SKU is positioned to give

retailers industry-leading returns,

with a POR of 62.1% at a £1.00 RRP,

which is more than double the

average achieved on branded

equivalents.

The move reflects Parfetts’

growing ambitions in own label. Its

range has now surpassed 250

lines, accounting for 22% of total

sales.

EG Group exits Italy and

EG Group exits Italy and

Oz in latest sell-off

Oz in latest sell-off

EG Group has announced the sale of

its businesses in Italy and Australia,

marking another phase in its

strategy to refocus on core markets

and cut debt.

The company confirmed that it

has agreed to sell its Australian arm

to fuel retailer Ampol in a deal worth

A$1.1 billion (£580m), comprising

A$850m in cash and A$250m in

Ampol stock. Completion is

expected by mid-2026, subject to

regulatory approval.

This follows EG’s announcement

of a €425 million (£360m) sale of its

Italian operations to a consortium of

local players.

Man jailed for Devon

Man jailed for Devon

knifepoint raid

knifepoint raid

A man who robbed c-store staff at

knifepoint in a Devon seaside

town has been jailed for 4 years.

According to Devon and

Cornwall Police, Ben Fone, from

Torquay, admitted robbery and

possession of a knife after the raid

at the Post Office and conveni­

ence store on Union Street in

Torquay on Oct 17 last year.

Fone forced his way into the

employee area and forced the

staff member to open the cash

drawer. He then grabbed £2,305

cash and fled the scene on a

push-bike.

By Andrew

Goodacre, CEO

of Bira (British

Independent

Retailers

Association)

NEWS

8 ASIAN TRADER 19 SEPTEMBER 2025

Selected Snappy Shopper

retailers are now listed on

Google Shopping, the ser­

vice provider, putting

local convenience stores

in front of high-intent

customers and powering

the next chapter of the

UK’s digital high street.

Snappy Shopper is the

first UK-based quick

commerce platform to

fully integrate with

Google Shopping via the

Google Merchant Center,

unlocking a significant new

sales channel for local conveni­

ence stores and establishing a

competitive advantage in the

market.

Snappy Shopper retailers

now have the opportunity to

appear in top Google results,

showcasing live product

listings, real-time pricing and

delivery within the hour.

“This is a game-changer for

local retail,” said Snappy

Shopper CEO Mike Callachan.

“Integrating with Google

means we’re helping local stores

stand shoulder-to-shoulder

with the biggest online players,

capturing customers at the

exact moment they are ready to

buy.”

The new integration with

Google allows retailers to

showcase their stores and stock

across Google platforms

including Search, Maps and

more.

This aims to enhance

visibility through free

listing, richer store

profiles and, most

importantly, drives

real-time customers in

the purchasing mindset

straight to Snappy

Shopper stores, unlock­

ing a wave of new

customers.

The integration marks

a major milestone, not

just for Snappy Shopper,

but for every retailer on its

platform. By integrating with

Google, Snappy Shopper is

helping local stores tap into new

streams of high-intent digital

footfall and driving increased

order volumes across the board.

This breakthrough feature is

available for all existing Snappy

Shopper retailers. New stores

can join the platform today to

unlock access and start reaching

more local customers through

Google.

Industry first for c-stores unlocks new sales channel

Snappy Shopper integrates

Snappy Shopper integrates

with Google Merchant Center

with Google Merchant Center

Asda is resuming its

Express convenience

store expansion, with

up to 20 new locations

set to open from

October.

The programme will

restart with an opening

in Castleford in early

October, followed by a

rapid rollout of further

stores in high-footfall urban

areas, residential communi­

ties, and transport hubs.

The move marks a return

to standalone Asda Express

store launches after a pause

during which the retailer

focused on integrating the

469 fuel and convenience

sites acquired from the

Co-op and EG Group.

Each Express store will

offer up to 3,000 branded and

own-label products, covering

everyday essentials, food-to-

go, and meal solutions. Asda

says its pricing remains

“notably lower” than rival

convenience operators,

helping Express sales

outperform the wider

market.

David Lepley, Asda’s

chief supply chain

officer, said: “In just

three years, we’ve

grown from zero

convenience stores to

establishing a major

presence in the channel,

with almost 500 stores by

the end of the year. This

continued investment

reflects the confidence we

have in our convenience

strategy and our focus on

bringing Asda’s low prices to

more local communities.”

Asda resumes Express store

rollout: 22 new sites planned

Co-op Wholesale deal

Co-op Wholesale deal

with Griffiths

with Griffiths

South Wales retailer Griffiths

Forecourts has signed a new five-year

supply agreement with Co-op

Wholesale, reinforcing a long-term

partnership.

Operating three Nisa Locas – in

Llantwit Fadre, Bridgend and Miskin

– Griffiths Forecourts has been serving

local communities for generations.

The business remains fami­

ly-owned, with directors Brett and

Daniel Griffiths continuing the

tradition of delivering great service,

quality products and strong

community connections.

The renewed agreement with

Co-op Wholesale will see Griffiths

Forecourts continue to benefit from

an extensive product range, including

the Co-op own brand.

Premier Foods acquires

Premier Foods acquires

Merchant Gourmet

Merchant Gourmet

Premier Foods has agreed to acquire

healthy meals brand Merchant

Gourmet for £48m, in a move that

strengthens its portfolio of premium,

convenient food brands.

The deal will see Premier Foods take

full ownership of the fast-growing brand

on a cash- and debt-free basis, with

completion expected on 1 September.

Merchant Gourmet, known for its

ready-to-eat pulses, grains, microwave­

able rice and ‘meals in minutes,’ is

projected to generate around £28m in

revenues for the year to 28 March 2026,

following strong double-digit growth

over the past two years.

Mults slammed over ham

Mults slammed over ham

cancer chemicals

cancer chemicals

Retailers including Tesco, M&S,

Sainsbury’s and Morrisons are under

fresh scrutiny after new laboratory

tests revealed that their Wiltshire ham

products still contain nitrites,

chemicals linked to cancer risk., almost

a decade after the WHO classified

them as a Group 1 carcinogen.

Commissioned by the Coalition

Against Nitrites, the independent

analysis found nitrites in all 21

processed meat samples tested.

The findings show that while

nitrite levels remain below the legal

UK and EU limit of 150mg/kg,

campaigners argue that even these

quantities pose a health risk.

NEWS

19 SEPTEMBER 2025 ASIAN TRADER 9

Convenience retailers face

more challenges ahead, with

the food and drink manufactur­

ers warning that mounting

pressures on manufacturers

will push food prices in UK

even higher.

According to the latest State

of Industry survey released by

Food and Drink Federation

(FDF), confidence among food

and drink manufacturers

remains concerningly low,

with negative confidence for a

fifth consecutive quarter.

At -40%, confidence among

manufacturers has remained

low and failed to recover since it

plummeted to -47% following

the Autumn Budget at the end

of 2024.

The study highlights that

the impact of that Budget and

other recent policy decisions

continues to concern food and

drink manufacturers.

More than eight in ten

(84%) said that the ongoing

financial impact of recent

government policies – such as

National Insurance changes

and the Upcoming Extended

Producer Responsibility (EPR)

packaging levy – was one of

their biggest concerns for the

year ahead, while nearly

two-thirds (63 per cent) said it

was a decline in consumer

confidence.

The cost of ingredients and

commodities (50%), a

shortage of skilled workers

(37%), the cost of energy

(32%), and government

prioritising other sectors for

support (21%) were all also

major causes for concern for

the UK’s food and drink

manufacturers.

With these mounting

pressures, average production

costs increased 6.3% in the last

12 months and are expected to

rise a further 3.6% in the year

ahead. This comes after a

period of record high inflation,

with food prices in UK went

36% higher than they were five

years ago and with rates of

inflation steadily on the rise

over the last year.

New challenges ahead for c-store retailers – FDF survey

Food prices in UK to rise as

Food prices in UK to rise as

manufacturing costs soar

manufacturing costs soar

More retail staff were at

risk of leaving their jobs

at the start of this

summer than at any other

time in the last two years,

new data shows, as

concerns around the

insecurity of retail

employment in conveni­

ence stores deepened.

The latest Retail

People Index from the

Retail Trust and AlixPartners

found that 54% of retail

workers were a “flight risk”

between April and June

2025, which is a 19% increase

from the previous year.

More than 600 employ­

ees were surveyed, and

answers to questions about

pay, recognition, develop­

ment and work-related

anxiety were among those

used to help calculate the

flight risk score.

Overall, wellbeing fell

seven points year-on-

year, from 66 to 59, and

the number of retail

staff working while

feeling physically or

mentally unwell rose by

12%, to 44% of all

employees.

Separate data from

the ONS shows that

there were 93,000

fewer retail jobs in

March 2025 than in March

2024. The ONS also recently

revealed that retail saw one

of the largest drops in job

vacancies between May and

July 2025 compared to any

other sector.

More retail staff at ‘flight

risk’ as job fear rises

KitKat marks 90 years

KitKat marks 90 years

with new formats

with new formats

Indies could see new shopper

interest and incremental sales as

Nestlé’s flagship confectionery

brand, KitKat, celebrates its 90th

anniversary with a wave of

innovation and global campaigns.

KitKat, which began life in 1935,

has grown into its leading

confectionery brand by both

revenue and brand value, selling

over 5 billion bars annually in more

than 85 countries.

For retailers, the latest

development is the KitKat tablet,

recently launched in Europe, with

chocolate tablets now the second

most popular format in the region

– valued at £7 billion.

BAT US vape U-turn

BAT US vape U-turn

despite illicit trade

despite illicit trade

British American Tobacco is

preparing to launch its first

disposable vape in the US,

reversing years of opposition to

unlicensed single-use products.

The new Vuse One device will

use synthetic nicotine and go on

pilot sale in three US states,

despite lacking FDA authorisation.

“Not having access to this

world weighs on our company’s

bottom line,” said Luis Pinto,

spokesman for BAT’s US unit

Reynolds American, as it prepared

to test launch its first new

disposable product in the United

States since after unregulated

rivals hammered its sales.

100 big supermarket

100 big supermarket

stores risk closure

stores risk closure

UK grocery sector is facing a

significant shake-up as more than

100 large-format stores risk

closure due to impending business

rates increases on properties with

a rateable value above £500,000.

About 50 of Sainsbury’s 600

supermarket outlets will become

unprofitable as a result of the

higher property charges, accord­

ing to people in the industry.

For Tesco, the changes would

tip tens of stores into the red,

according to a senior figure at the

company and 90% of Asda’s 600

supermarkets would be affected

by the business rate rise.

NEWS FEATURE

10 ASIAN TRADER 19 SEPTEMBER 2025

unning a convenience store in

Britain rarely ends when the

shutters roll down. Be it keeping an

eye on CCTV or answering supplier calls, for

independent convenience retailers,

vacations are rare and even when they

occur, it is usually more of a balancing act

rather than a welcome break.

For thousands of independents, holidays

are not just about sunshine and rest; rather,

they are a litmus test of trust in staff,

systems, and the communities they serve.

Asian Trader checked in to find out how

indies unwind. It turns out only a few

manage to go completely off-grid, but most

admit they can’t resist peeking.

Salford-based

retailer Amit Patel,

who has run his

family’s store

Duchy Stores since

his teens, knows

the drill.

“I find it hard to

switch off com­

pletely,” he told

Asian Trader.

“Even 1,000

miles away, I still log onto the CCTV system

and have a quick glance. We’ve got a

WhatsApp group, so we have a good idea of

what’s happening back at the shop.”

For Patel, planning a break is like plotting

a small military operation, weighing staff

cover, checking how busy the calendar

looks, and ensuring there’s a point of

contact if things go wrong.

“We’d rather wind down in one spot

rather than have the effort of tours or

excursions. I know sitting a thousand miles

away, I won’t be able to do much but even

then, I am happy keeping an eye on what is

happening than rather going completely off

the grid.”

Technology, he said, is the

unsung hero of modern retailer

holidays. And Patel has a very

good reason to be thankful for it.

For being a child of a retailer-

couple, he never got to enjoy a

single vacation as a whole

family.

“When we were younger it

was either Dad or Mum who

took us (my brother, sister and I)

Pooja Shrivastava finds out that unlike

most Brits, independent retailers’ holidays

are less about rest and more about trust...

“When on a rare holiday, it’s a blended

approach where I will respond to messages

and calls when I’m free. But I still tend to

place orders so that staff can do the day-to-

day running of the store.

“Also, preparing the store for the holiday

is key, for example we will stock up on most

popular ambient lines to avoid big deliveries

when I am away to make it easier for staff to

focus on customer service,” Pandya told

Asian Trader.

Cost of a break

Some retailers have not taken a vacation for

a long time because they fear it

will mean a loss of business.

For independent retailer

Christine Hope, the decision to

step away is brutally tied to

numbers. She runs Hope of

Longtown in a village in

Hereford, a lifeline for the

community as the village

depends on the store for the

essentials.

“Time away from the business has been

vastly reduced to reduce business debt

created by numerous factors,” she says

frankly.

“Right now, I am focused at break-even,

followed by reinvesting. A holiday cannot

replace the sanity of profit.”

Her statement captures the dilemma

many independents quietly live with: when

margins are wafer-thin, leisure is the first

luxury to go.

However, she is now determined to figure

out a way to draw a boundary soon.

“I know it is not sustainable long term.

When this happens, I rarely take work home

to provide some home-life balance and bring

back some sanity,” she revealed.

Always on, remotely restless

away, but never together

since one of them had to

stay back to take care of the

store.

“In fact, I cannot recall

even a single family

vacation that we had taken

together to this day, which

is kind of sad now that I

think about it,” he said.

“But that was their time;

they had no other option.”

Patel’s reflection isn’t an

isolated one.

Local convenience stores like these are

extensions of households, which makes

all-family holidays especially hard.

Generational shifts in many Asian-

owned independents mean adult children

often work side by side with parents. In

many family-run stores, children spend

their summers stacking shelves and

manning the till.

Today, technology has changed the

scenario by enabling remote control and

connectivity, yet vacations for most

retailers remain rare.

For newbies like retailer Vidur

Pandya, it is still a luxury to take

an extended break.

“As both my father and I are

involved in the business, it’s

either me or him who can go on

holiday. This makes taking

family holiday tricky.

“This mainly comes down to

staffing and operations as we are

still new in the business. One key

aspect, I have now realised, is hiring a store

manager to whom one can hand over the

business while on a break.”

Considering that Pandya’s Kislingbury

Village Store is the only one in the entire

village, not opening up for a

couple of days has wider

repercussion on the community

– hence it is never an option.

“I have been in business for

3.5 years so very early in building

the business. I am still training

employees to be independent

which of course takes a while.”

On whichever days Pandya

had managed to get away, he still

found himself working remotely.

Vidur Pandya

Christine Hope

Amit Patel

NEWS FEATURE

19 SEPTEMBER 2025 ASIAN TRADER 11

It’s a reminder that for many

shopkeepers, the most meaning­

ful holiday might simply be an

uninterrupted evening at home.

The Local Shop Report 2025,

published by ACS, captures this

picture.

About 19 per cent of retailers

take no holiday ever in the entire

year, states the report. It also

mentions that some shop owners

(five per cent) end up working more than 70

hours per week.

The buzz beginning is that Labour is set

to change Sunday trading laws to appease

big supermarkets in the wake of their uproar

over higher tax bills, and let them open for

longer hours. If this goes through, it is likely

to have further ripple effects on smaller-

format convenience stores, hampering their

Sunday evening rush.

But when the spending is low and costs

are high, each hour of trade counts.

Always an eye on the ball

And yet, despite the relentless hours,

retailers remain deeply embedded in their

communities with 80 per cent of independ­

ents known to engage in some

form of community activity in

the past year.

When it comes to the

convenience sector, the cultural

element is also strong. For many

families, the store is not just a

job but a legacy, something built

over decades of long hours and

personal sacrifice. To leave it

unattended feels like neglecting

both business and family duty.

Croydon-based retailer Benedict

Selvaratnam admits he does not get away as

often as he would like to.

“Running the store, e-commerce, and

community projects keeps the calendar

pretty full. When I do carve out time, I try to

make it count. I usually catch short breaks

rather than long escapes.

“On holiday I’m not completely MIA. I

always check in, make sure things are

running smoothly, but I have eventually

learnt not to micro-manage.

“A good team makes that possible. My

way of unwinding is simple:

family, good food, and time

outdoors. That balance clears

the head and keeps me ready for

the next big push,” he told Asian

Trader.

For some, like veteran

retailer Atul Sodha, unwinding

means partly detaching from

the trade owing to the support

system that they have created.

At the time of this conversa­

tion with Asian Trader, Sodha

had just returned from Kenya

where he had gone for a family

wedding with his mother. It had

been four years since his

previous holiday.

“I used to take vacations as

often as possible,” he says. “Even

when I am not on holiday, I am

away at awards or networking

events or brand activities, it is

my team that takes care of

everything.

“I have not taken a long proper vacation

in four years due to personal

reasons. But it was because of

this all-empowered and efficient

staff that I was able to balance

work, family responsibilities

and networking easily.”

Balancing act

There are some retailers who

have built super-efficient

systems that allow them to step

back completely.

Hampshire-based retailer

Imtiyaz Mamode, who runs a busy store in

the Midlands, admits he can never fully let it

go.

Mamode said, “On vacations,

I don’t completely switch off, I

still work remotely, place orders

and stay in touch with suppliers.

But I also make sure to spend

time with family and enjoy

myself.

“I usually take one proper

vacation a year, and most of the

time it’s about visiting family

and exploring food.

“So it’s a bit of a balance.

Work doesn’t stop, but I still

manage to recharge.”

Glasgow-based retailer Girish

Jeeva has a solid support system

in place, which ensures that he is

not involved in day-to-day

operations of either of his two

stores.

In fact, the operations part of

the store is taken care of by his

trusted employee, a common

scenario in independent

convenience but with a rare

twist.

“I don’t do anything anymore

since Sneha takes care of

day-to-day operations and that,

too, remotely from India.

“So, in a way, this remains the

same whether I am here in

Glasgow or on holiday.”

“But yes, retailing is a

24-hour, 365-days job. Vacations

are always unplanned, just

whenever we feel like it – yet

that happens not very often,” Jeeva

admitted.

Such a sentiment echoes across the

industry. Even when technology and

trusted staff take the wheel, retailers

remain tethered, anxious, unsure.

And then there are a rare few who are

able to go completely off the grid and relax.

Manchester-based retailer Priyesh

Vekaria, one of the leading award winners at

Asian Trader Awards 2024, feels fortunate to

have a trusted and experienced team due to

which he can step away knowing everything

is in safe hands.

“That freedom allows me to

fully recharge and come back

with fresh energy and perspec­

tive.

“Every six weeks or so, I try to

take a couple of days for a short

break, and every four months I

make sure to plan a week away. I

especially value the quality time

with my younger children, those

moments are what keep me

grounded and remind me why I

work so hard in the first place.

“In the end, balance is everything.

Whether it is family, friends or colleagues,

those relationships give me the energy and

clarity I need to thrive both at work and at

home,” he said.

Echoing his brother’s thoughts earlier,

Vekaria added, “There were so many times

when either Mum or Dad had to stay behind

to look after the store. Sadly, with Dad passing

in 2021, we lost the chance to ever have that

holiday as a complete family. That experience

has shaped me and is one of the reasons I run

my business the way I do today.”

Convenience stores might

often be family-run and modest

in size, yet collectively they

generate £48.8bn in sales

annually, support 443,000 jobs,

and contribute over £10.5bn in

GVA to the economy.

That scale means holidays are

never just personal decisions.

When a retailer steps away, he is

not always in a position to put

down the shutters.

This explains why many

owners like Patel and Pandya plan holidays

with military precision and why some, like

Hope, choose not to take them at all.

Clearly, for British convenience store

owners, holidays may never mean complete

escape, but they do mean renewal enough to

return and keep the doors open for the

millions who rely on them.

Clearly, for independent retailers, the

difference between a restless break and real

renewal comes down to a team strong

enough to keep the tills ringing while they

recharge.

Girish Jeeva

Benedict Selvaratnam

Imtiyaz Mamode

Priyesh Vekaria

Atul Sodha

OUT & ABOUT

12 ASIAN TRADER 19 SEPTEMBER 2025

Current affairs

It’s official – business is not boring, although

quite a few corporates are wishing that it

was. The latest embarrassing hoo-ha was

at Nestlé, where CEO Laurent Freixe was

booted out after having an affair with a

colleague. Before we lament that nothing

is permitted any more, it has to be said that

while you might meet your eventual spouse

at work, affairs are frowned on – think of

the recent “Cold Play Cam” incident, where

tech CEO Andy Byron fell on his sword after

a starring role at the concert smooching

with his head of PR, Kristin Cabot. Twisting

the knife, his wife subsequently left him.

While we might suppose that Nestlé’s

Freixe was just being typically French, CEOs

who attach themselves to subordinates risk

lawsuits from spurned lovers and damaging

the reputations of their firms (which means

share price plunges and angry investors).

What’s more, power can be portrayed as

coercive – and often is. Freixe’s case is par­

ticularly bad because he lied about the affair

to two separate internal investigations, and

it now appears that he also promoted his

lover.

Here in the grocery sector, though,

scandal seems to be a bit thin on the ground.

Again and again, we hear tales of happy

families running stores, of loving couples

working all hours, and of endless devotion

to the local community. Desperately we

seek dirt in the wholesale sector but all we

get is discounts and PMPs. Come on people,

up your game!

Better eating

– Speaking of wholesalers, we were out and

about around Blackfriars here in London the

other day (mere minutes away from Asian

Trader Towers) to attend the official launch

of Good Food Retail Network by two organi­

sations: Impact on Urban Health and Rice

Marketing. It’s been supported Bestway

as a wholesale partner since 2021 and has

been working with convenience stores to

promote and sell good wholesome food to

inner city families in place of HPFs and junk

meals – at prices that are not expensive by

comparison, and that match Tesco’s. After

a pilot period of over 100 skus out of two

Bestway depots, it was proven that poorer

people will happily eat healthier if they

have access to affordable ingredients. Now,

coinciding with the government’s plans to

extend HFSS restrictions to the c-channel,

Westminster interest in the project is

growing and the scheme is extending out

of London and across the UK, again using

Bestways many nationwide depots. Above

all, it’s been proven that indies can increase

sales by stocking healthier options, and that

people really want to learn to eat better. Still

no scandals, though.

Beware bubbles

– But back to Nestlé: there was a flap last

week about Nestlé’s Aero choc bar contain­

ing beef gelatine – it’s what helps create the

bubbles – and a Hindu organisation in the

USA was outraged that people hadn’t been

warned that they might be eating Cow.

Preliminary investigation by our intrepid

investigator Hooda Thunkit (see below)

reveals that there is in fact no beef gelatine

in Aero – although perhaps, as with certain

chocolate mousses on sale in various retail­

ers – there might well be “animal protein”

in the ingredients of some “non-meat”

products, which would not be ideal for strict

vegetarians, to say the least. Worth check­

ing the labels, as always!

Open all hours

– We’re hearing rumours that the gov­

ernment is thinking of relaxing Sunday

trading laws for the mults, as a sop to the

higher business rates imposed by Chancellor

Reeves. Buckle up, indies, it’s going to be a

rough ride.

About

Out &

Hooda Thunkit’s Factoid Korner

Hooda Thunkit, our intrepid researcher and amateur detective, discovered

that way back when – we’re talking over a thousand years ago – whoever

was then resident here (Germans, Vikings, leftover Romans who hated the

sun, as well as Picts, Celts and even a few Anglos), the words “lord” and

“lady” both emerged … from the bakery. In fact, the word “Lord” started

life as hlāford (“loaf-ward” or “bread-keeper”) and “lady” as hlāfdige

(“loaf-kneader” or “bread-maker”). These titles were given to the

important folk who would have been in charge of the village or

settlement’s food suppply – those who had the power to dole out vital

calories to their family or community.

Well, think about it: as convenience retailers, that’s exactly what you

folks do. You supply all the “bread” – and bread itself – to your

communities. As far as Hooda is concerned that makes you the real modern

aristocratic lords and ladies of your street (a bit like accountants, who have

“Count” as part of their name). My lords and ladies of convenience, we bow in

your general direction! Is it time for a coat of arms?

Got any gossip,

rumours, scandals,

the low-down on

the latest moves, or

just an interesting

story? Then email

[email protected]

DATACART

19 SEPTEMBER 2025 ASIAN TRADER 13

hoplifting remains one of the most

pressing challenges facing UK

retailers, with sharp regional

disparities highlighting the scale of

the problem. According to the latest

police-recorded crime figures, the national

average rate of shoplifting offences stands at

8.7 per 1,000 people. Yet in some areas,

incidents are almost double this level.

Cleveland tops the list with 14.2 offences

per 1,000, followed closely by Nottingham­

shire (13.0) and Northumbria (12.4). Even

London, where the Metropolitan Police

recorded 10.5 offences, sits well above the

average.

Behind these figures lies a wider picture of

strain on retailers and their staff. The British

Retail Consortium (BRC) reports that only

around a third of violent or abusive incidents

are ever passed on to police, suggesting the

real scale of retail crime is far higher. Shop­

lifting is rarely a victimless crime: beyond

the £2.2 billion in direct theft losses last year,

businesses invested £1.8 billion in security

measures and continue to absorb ris­

ing insurance premiums.

For shop workers, the impact is

deeply personal. Nearly half (47%)

say they fear for their safety at work,

while over two million have expe­

rienced violence or abuse. Worry­

ingly, almost three-quarters of staff

(73%) admit they avoid confronting

shoplifters altogether, a reflection

of both safety concerns and limited

confidence that offenders will face

consequences.

With high-value items such as

meat, alcohol, baby formula and beau­

ty products topping theft lists, the

burden falls on already squeezed re­

tailers to protect stock and safeguard

colleagues. The figures underline

the urgency for stronger collabora­

tion between businesses, police and

policymakers to restore confidence

and ensure retail spaces remain safe

for staff and customers alike.

Shoplifting: the new pandemic

New figures place in stark relief the true

burden on retailers and staff from crime,

including abuse, threats and violence

MOVERS AND SHAKERS

14 ASIAN TRADER 19 SEPTEMBER 2025

Waitrose MD James Bailey

steps down

Keeping up with the latest industry

moves and promotions

Movers and Shakers

Unitas Wholesale, the largest

network of independent cash

and carry and delivered

wholesalers in the UK, has

announced the appointment of

wholesale figure David Cooke as

its first Chief Operating

Officer (COO).

As part of a restruc­

ture of the executive

team, the move sees

John Kinney step into

the role of Chief Executive

Officer, following the recent

appointment of Gurms Athwal

as Trading Director. Gurms, who

now reports to David, has also

joined the Unitas Board.

Cooke will officially join

Unitas Wholesale in September

2025, ahead of the Group’s

annual conference in Marbella.

In his new role, he will oversee

Trading, Commercial, Market­

ing and Retail, driving initiatives

designed to deliver even greater

value for members and suppli­

ers.

John Kinney said, “David

brings a wealth of experience

and a proven track record

of driving growth

through strong supplier

and member collabora­

tion. announced the

appointment of whole­

sale figure David Cooke as its

first Chief Operating Officer

(COO).

As part of a restructure of the

executive team, the move sees

John Kinney step into the role of

Chief Executive Officer,

following the recent appoint­

ment of Gurms Athwal as

Trading Director. Gurms, who

now reports to David, has also

joined the Unitas Board.

Unitas Wholesale appoints

David Cooke COO

The John Lewis Partnership

says that James Bailey has

decided to step down from his

role as managing director of

Waitrose later this year.

Bailey joined Waitrose in

2020 and successfully steered

the business through the

pandemic and the cost-of-living

crisis.

“James has done an out­

standing job, overseeing signifi­

cant transformation and

growth during a period of

change. He’s a great colleague

and has been a highly valued

member of the Executive

Team,” Jason Tarry, Chairman

of the Partnership, said.

“We will be sad to see James

go but understand and respect

his decision to step down after

five and a half years at the

helm. James will leave

Waitrose in a much stronger

position and I know will be

missed by everyone.”

Bailey previously spent 18

years at Sainsbury’s.

At Waitrose, he spearheaded

a push into the convenience

market, as the upmarket chain

opened its first convenience

store in six years in November

last year.

Bailey will continue in the

role through to the end of

September, and Tina Mitchell,

retail director for Waitrose, will

serve as the interim managing

director once he leaves.

John Lewis Partnership said

it has started the process to find

Bailey’s successor.

Jo Whitfield becomes

first female chair of BRC

Jo Whitfield, former chief execu­

tive of Co-op Food, has been ap­

pointed to succeed Andy Higgin­

son as British Retail Consortium

(BRC) chair, when his tenure

comes to an end on 2 October.

She will be the first female

chair of the trade body, that

represents over 200 retailers and

brands and thousands of smaller

retailers through trade association

members.

Whitfield has 25 years’ experi­

ence in retail, including leadership

roles at Matalan, the Co-operative

Group and Asda.

She is currently a non-execu­

tive director and audit chair at Asda

and a non-executive and chair of

ethics committee at Factory Inter­

national, host of the Manchester

International Festival.

Whitfield pre­

viously founded

and chaired The Grocery Girls

network and was an Advisor and

Retail Sector Lead on the Women’s

Business Council. Whitfield also

played a leading industry role

campaigning alongside the BRC to

achieve better safety recognition

and a change to the law to protect

retail shopworkers.

“I’m honoured to be joining the

BRC as its first female Chair, and to

be supporting Helen and her team

at such a pivotal time,” Whitfield

said.

“I look forward to working

closely with Helen (Dickinson,

chief executive at the BRC) and

the team to ensure the interests of

our industry are championed and

protected.”

Parfetts announces new

Southampton GM

Parfetts has announced Graham

Barton as general manager of its

new Southampton depot, ahead of

its highly anticipated opening later

this year.

Barton brings a wealth of expe­

rience from more

than four decades

in the wholesale

and retail sector,

including a 33-year

career at Palmer &

Harvey and a recent

management role at

Bestway’s Fareham

depot.

Parfetts’ ninth

depot marks the first new cash-

and-carry facility in the region in

25 years.

The 113,000 sq ft site at Hedge

End Retail Park will create over 100

jobs, providing a major boost to

the local economy and delivering

a fresh level of service and support

to independent retailers across the

South Coast and Greater London.

Graham Barton said, “It’s

an honour to be leading such a

committed and experienced team

at a time of real momentum for

Parfetts.

“There’s a huge

sense of pride and

excitement about

what we’re building

here, not just bricks

and mortar, but a

new level of service,

support and oppor­

tunity for independ­

ent retailers.

Joining Barton at

the helm of the Parfetts South­

ampton depot is a strong senior

management team, including Stu­

art Clark and Glenn Underwood

as supply chain managers, Hollie

Whitfield as delivered manager,

Nigel Drake overseeing goods-in,

and Elaine Walker managing front-

of-house operations.

RETAIL CORNER

19 SEPTEMBER 2025 ASIAN TRADER 15

here are convenience stores that

simply serve their neighbourhood,

and then there are those that

become part of its identity. Duchy

Stores in Salford falls firmly into the second

category, a shop that combines new product

launches, old connections and year-round

community events to create a loyal following

that stretches far beyond its postcode.

The Patel family has been at the helm of

the store since its takeover in 1992. Today,

under the sharp eye of second-generation

retailer Amit Patel, Duchy Stores is increas­

ingly strengthening its mark not only in the

community but also in the wider retail sector

as well.

Speaking exclusively to Asian Trader, Amit

explained how, over a span of more than three

decades, the site has evolved from a basic

convenience store into a community hub as

well as a shopper destination in its own right.

“Over the past 33 odd years, a lot has

happened. Once my parents were settled and

got the hang of customers, their require­

ments, what works and what not, they started

introducing little changes in the store, both in

terms of the structure, looks as well as range,”

he says.

Amit has been officially involved in the

store since he was 17, though he remembers

spending his days in the store for what seems

like forever.

Being a part of retailers’ family dedicated

to their business, he recalled visiting the cash

and carry at weekends, learning how to serve

customers and stock shelves, and handling

the till.

“Our childhood revolved around the store.

My brother [retailer Priyesh Vekaria – see this

issue’s Award-Winner Interview], my sister

and I used to spend time at the shop and

helping our parents as soon as our heads could

pop over the counter.

“When a business is open 365 days a year

and is majorly family-run, the only way to

spend time together is to hang around in the

store. As a child, our world was this shop,” he

recalls.

May be that’s what retail life is like.

Listening to Amit, it is clear that this deep-

rooted trust has become the store’s biggest

asset.

It also shapes the way he makes decisions,

from supplier relationships to the events

For this convenience store in Salford, the business

is lighting up its community, whether

through new launches on the shelves or

literally, with fireworks in the sky

calendar that has become the

shop’s biggest USP.

One of those big changes came with

the switch to Go Local Extra. The shop had

long traded under best-one before Amit made

the decision to switch.

“Customers were asking for more value,

more promotions, more range,” says Amit.

“That’s why we joined Go Local and then

stepped up to Go Local Extra last September.”

The move coincided with a full refit that

has given the store a brighter, fresher look.

“It’s made such a difference to curb appeal.

People walk past and want to come in. Inside,

it looks vibrant and that matters.”

Another emerging USP of Salford’s Duchy

Stores is the in-store activations for new

product launches which keep the store

buzzing. Today, it is known for miles around

that if it is something new, it will be at Duchy

Stores.

“We’re often one of the first stores in the

area to get the latest products,” he explained.

“That keeps customers excited, and it means

they come to us knowing there will be

something new on the shelves.

“Through social media, I connect with

national account managers, I get involved in

product launches. Business isn’t just about

trading anymore; it’s about introducing new

products into the sector and keeping

customers engaged.”

The fireworks category has also become a

defining feature of the store. While many

independents have stepped back from the

category due to regulation and compliance,

Amit leaned in.

“Since we are fully compliant, we never

had an issue with licensing. Customers now

come from further afield because they know

we’ll have the complete range and good

quality,” he says.

But where he really goes above and beyond

is in community engagement. Each summer,

the store hosts a festival in its car park,

complete with inflatables, music, and

giveaways.

“Our wholesaler supports us by supplying

the goody bags,” Amit says. “But they are not

just filled with sweets and snacks. They have

toilet rolls, tea, coffee, cleaning products, the

things people use every day.”

Seasonal events have become a fixture, not

only for the store but for the community.

“Halloween, Christmas, Valentine’s Day,

New Year’s Eve – we try to do something for

all of them,” he says. “At Christmas, I dress up

as Santa; on New Year’s Eve, we put on a

bonfire and fireworks display.”

It’s not just the big events that demon­

strate Amit’s connection to his community.

The store also offers home delivery, but with a

personal human touch.

“There’s no app, no platform,” he says.

People just call or text with what they need,

and we deliver. In some cases, the children of

elderly customers who live away will pay us

later, after we’ve already dropped off the

groceries.

“It’s built on trust, and that’s something

you can only develop over years.”

The store, which covers 1,000 sq. ft., is

supplied primarily by Parfetts through

delivery, alongside local dairy suppliers.

The range is balanced across value,

mid-tier and premium to meet all budgets.

Services such as PayPoint, parcel collection,

lottery and slush machines round out the

offer.

“We try to cover as much as we can,” Amit

says. “That’s what a convenience store is meant

to do – support everyone who walks in.”

Clearly, for this second-generation

retailer, convenience retail isn’t just about

selling products; rather, it is about lighting up

the community, whether through new

launches on the shelves or fireworks in the

sky.

“This store has been part of my family for

over 30 years. It’s more than just a place to

shop – it’s part of people’s lives. That’s what

convenience retail is really about,” he

concludes.

Lighting up the community

SOCIAL MEDIA

16 ASIAN TRADER 19 SEPTEMBER 2025

“Things will only officially be bad when

there are security tags on Freddos.”

Napoleon (@moanaparte)

“‘72-hour antiperspirant protection’ is

the biggest lie ever told.”

Napoleon (@moanaparte)

“In our history, whenever excise duties

have been unreasonably high, the result

has been crime, including smuggling. At

present the duty on a pack of cigarettes is

£8.93. Reduce it to solve the problem.”

Peter Sewell (@portly_pete)

“In 2016 I worked as a Deliveroo rider &

earned the equivalent of £11.20 an hour

– 55% more than min wage of £7.20. In 2024 I

worked as a Deliveroo rider and earned £5.28

– 54% less than min wage of £11.44. Insecure

work has become more precarious …”

Harry Wallop (@hwallop)

“Used the wife’s deodorant because

mine’s run out. I don’t understand this.

We’re made from the same stuff (human),

yet while she smells lovely wearing it, I smell

like a boiled sweet stuck to an old carpet.”

Napoleon (@moanaparte)

“The smoking rate in the EU is twice

what it is in the UK and has barely fallen

in the last decade. It nevertheless thinks it

can create a ‘nicotine-free generation’ by

2040 and is lying about the risks of safer

nicotine products. What a clown show!”

Christopher Snowdon @cjsnowdon)

“Papers today jammed with stories

showing the beginning of the end of the

age of entitlement. And the return of a focus

on needs over wants.”

Merryn Somerset Webb @MerrynSW)

“Seen about 5 new domestic robots

launch in last 3 weeks. All designed to do

laundry or fold laundry. Silicon Valley is

entirely the domain of people who wish they

still lived with their mum. Uber – Mom drive

me around. Uber Eats – Mom, cook for me.

TaskRabbit – Mom please clean.”

Tom Goodwin (@tomfgoodwin)

“Okay so that Miles Davis quote “if you

hit a wrong note, it’s the next note you

play that determines if it’s good or bad”

applies to basically everything.”

Dylan O’Sullivan (@DylanoA4)

“Whenever I’m visiting someone who

has a smart speaker, I like to set random

reminders or alarms for months in advance.

My latest one will happen in 3 months telling

my sister to clean out the rabbit hutch. She

doesn’t own a rabbit.”

Fesshole (@fesshole)

“I just rang the Speaking Clock. What a

nice voice it’s got at the moment! I was

so glad to find it’s still there. Like going to

your grandparents’ old house from childhood

and finding they’re actually at home.”

Victoria Coren Mitchell (@VictoriaCoren)

“Man living alone here. Just burped

quite loud and my google assistant was

activated. I’m now reconsidering my life

choices.”

Fesshole (@fesshole)

“I do care about the environment but

I’m not mad on scratching my eyeball

with the bottle top now attached to my water

bottle.”

Wendy Wason (@Wendy_Wason)

“We have a dumb joke when we go out

for dinner as a family when they say ‘any

allergies’ and the youngest always says ‘cats’

and we all chuckle and so does the waiter.

Today he said it, the waiter looked confused

and said ‘we don’t cook cats’”.

Wendy Wason (@Wendy_Wason)

“Reforming the state is difficult whereas

passing legislation to restrict people’s

freedoms is easy.”

Luke Johnson (@LukeJohnsonRCP)

“‘You don’t have a right to inherit money

from mummy and daddy that you did

nothing to earn.’ @Lewis_Goodall suggests

hiking inheritance tax to 100% in order to

reduce income tax and ‘incentivise work.’”

LBC (@LBC)

“Remember when picking up “a few

bits” at the supermarket didn’t cost £54?”

VeryBritishProblems (@SoVeryBritish)

“How can the Deputy Governor of the

Bank of England be ‘surprised’ by

inflation? It has literally been this govern­

ment’s explicit policy to pile so much more

cost onto businesses that they have no choice

but to increase prices ...”

Kien Tan (@kientan74)

“‘It is almost certain that Rachel Reeves

will extend the freeze on personal tax

thresholds in the autumn budget, which

would hurt working people by taking more

money out of their payslips.’”

Institute of Economic Affairs (@iealon­

don)

“Private equity [PE] curse. UK supermar­

kets Asda and Morrisons crushed by debt

anvil. Asset-stripping to pay for debt and private

equity profits. Staff cuts, low investment,

market share struggles. PE has devoured high

street, care homes, vets, healthcare.”

Prem Sikka (@premnsikka)

“Ai is leading to a lot of people accepting

low standards. Make it stop. If some­

thing is worth doing. Do it well.”

Tom Goodwin (@tomfgoodwin)

“‘Ooh, something smells good, what are

you cooking?!’ It’s always just an onion.”

VeryBritishProblems (@SoVeryBritish)

“First sighting of SPooOooOooKY stuff

in the supermarket. That’s it, folks,

summer’s over. It’s Halloween now, which

means it’s Christmas now.”

VeryBritishProblems (@SoVeryBritish)

“‘Hello. How much are your hotel

rooms?’ ‘Who are you?’ ‘The council.’

‘Two grand a night.’”

Napoleon (@moanaparte)

“Who is Molly May and why should I

take her recommendations on which

fabric softener to use?”

Baron MVT (@VonTrippenhoff)

Asian Trader has rounded up some comments from

our Twitter feed to give a vivid picture of retailers

and friends under inflationary conditions …

X: The World According

to “Not” Twitter

@NoContextBrits

WHOLESALE

19 SEPTEMBER 2025 ASIAN TRADER 17

omentum in the wholesale

sector these past weeks has been

anything but slow and one-

dimensional.

September arrived with a bang as Parfetts

finally threw open the doors to its much-antic­

ipated new 113,000 square feet Southampton

depot. In what appears to be a clear sign of mark­

ing a new territory, the wholesaler made sure to

turn the opening into a mini celebration.

As shared by joint managing directors Guy

Swindell and Noel Robinson in an excited

conversation with Asian Trader, the cash and

carry’s parking lot started filling quite early in

the day and by the time it was noon, there was

already an air of jubilation in the depot among

the visiting retailers, evidenced by full trollies

and happy faces.

The arrival of the depot, the ninth and largest

in the Parfetts’ network, wasn’t just a play for

size. It marked a decisive push towards £1 billion

turnover territory as well as towards geographi­

cal expansion beyond the Midlands. The man­

agement is also focusing on nurturing deeper

ties with the surging Go Local symbol group,

aiming to touch the 2000 milestone soon.

For a sector that trades on relationships as

well as razor-thin margins, this kind of regional

investment is both an economic booster and a

sign that competition for the loyalty of south-

of-England independents is now a full-contact

sport.

With eyes on the target, this employee-

owned wholesaler is gaining pace on own-label

front as well. Testing new waters, the wholesaler

recently introduced Go Local Paracetamol

Tablets at an eye-catching £1 RRP and a headline

62.1 per cent POR.

There is calculated finesse behind Parfetts’

push here, with a considerable share of sales now

flowing through own-label products, and the

new lines landing as prime margin-protectors.

Big moves, bigger bets and renewed

partnerships are reshaping wholesale

sector for a faster, smarter future

It isn’t simply a

numbers game: Parfetts is betting that

private-brand well-priced medicines

will become a signature lever for c-store

operators keen on repeat business and

price credibility with shoppers.

Moves and deals

While Parfetts is betting on consistent expan­

sion, Scottish player United Wholesale Scotland

also continues to rewrite the script north of the

border.

This wholesaler has reported a record turno­

ver £285 million for 2024, a step towards its

target of £500 million turnover by 2030.

It is now gearing up for the next chapter and

has its sights set not only on Scotland, but the

entire UK territory. The move into London with

the Times Wholesale acquisition (now United

Rainham) signposts an intent to create a genu­

inely national footprint.

Over in Northern Ireland, S&W Wholesale,

one of the largest independent wholesalers in

the region, also seems restless for growth. The

company recently unveiled its plans for a new

purpose-built headquarters and distribution

centre in Newry, marking a significant invest­

ment in the future of the employee-owned

business.

The 16,730 sqm development, located just off

the A1 southbound and around three miles from

the company’s current base at Carnbane Busi­

ness Park, will include a large-scale storage and

distribution warehouse alongside modern office

facilities. The move will allow the wholesaler to

consolidate operations currently spread across

multiple sites.

Meanwhile, after months of speculation and

rumour, Co-op Wholesale and Bestway Whole­

sale shook hands once again over the supply

agreement to Costcutter stores.

The official announcement came from

both Co-op Wholesale and Bestway

earlier this month, stating that this new

agreement is “jointly focused on true

partnership” and that the continuation

of the collaboration will see Costcut­

ter stores continue to benefit from the

market-leading full-service convenience,

including access to the iconic and best in

class Co-op own brand products.

The announcement finally broke

the silence spanning months after it

emerged earlier this year that Co-op

Wholesale had decided not to renew

the long-term supply arrangement to

Costcutter stores.

The arrangement was ending Dec 31 this

year, thus implying that Co-op Wholesale would

cease supplying fresh, chilled and own-label to

Costcutter stores from Jan 1, 2026, bringing an

end to the long-term supply arrangement.

The industry buzz was that Bestway was

trying to find another partner for supplying to

Costcutter stores, although the wholesale giant

always assured its retailers that they would get

best deals, come what may.

Wholesale planet

Beyond the big numbers and landscape-chang­

ing deals, the wholesale sector’s transformation

is now shaped by forces well outside the balance

sheets, and climate risks are being taken as seri­

ously as commercial ones.

The Scottish Wholesale Association’s launch

of its climate resilience guide felt quietly mo­

mentous.

Produced in partnership with Adaptation

Scotland, the guide outlines the key risks whole­

salers face, from extreme weather and supply

chain disruption to challenges with storage

infrastructure. The guide sets out practical steps

businesses can take to adapt, covering areas such

as workforce, premises, products, supply chain

and the wider environment. It also includes real-

world examples from wholesalers already taking

action to reduce risk and strengthen resilience.

Wholesalers are asked to see resilience not as

a gimmick but as insurance, protecting not only

their own business, but the communities and

retail partners who rely on deliveries to continue

when the unexpected hits.

As the month draws to a close, there’s little

evidence of complacency or risk aversion in

wholesale. The field is being redrawn by bold bets

on infrastructure and digital tools, new supply

deals that broaden options for convenience and

forecourt retailers, and a sharper climate focus

bringing sustainability into day-to-day thinking.

From Southampton’s thronging aisles to

Newry’s new construction sites; from supplier

partnerships stretching across Costcutter and

Co-op to acknowledgement to climate change

concerns in Glasgow, the sector is proving that

growth, agility and confidence remain tightly

interwoven.

A confident and growing wholesale sector

Noel Robinson and Guy Swindell

18 ASIAN TRADER 19 SEPTEMBER 2025

he alert pierces through the gentle

hum of the radio in Salford’s One Stop

Carlton Convenience store.

“A shoplifting incident may just have

occurred in this store, all team members to

follow protocol and be advised.” Within five

seconds of someone slipping a chocolate bar

into their pocket, artificial intelligence has

spotted the theft, sending video clips to every

staff member’s device.

But this isn’t just another high-tech

deterrent in the endless war against retail

crime. It’s part of a philosophy that has earned

Priyesh Vekaria recognition as Responsible

Retailer of the Year 2024 at the Asian Trader

Awards.

A former police sergeant, Priyesh brings

the insight of a decade spent in the force to

every decision he makes as a retailer. But the

pivotal chapter in his retail journey began

with a simple drive home from work in 2013,

newly married and searching for something

more than his public sector career could offer.

“I was driving home one day, and I saw this

building. It was an old pub, and I thought I

could do something with that,” Priyesh

recalls. That dilapidated pub would become

the foundation not just for a thriving

business, but for a revolutionary approach to

convenience retailing that puts community

welfare at its heart.

An unexpected path

The journey to that moment began when his

parents arrived in the UK as migrants in the

1990s – his father from East Africa, his mother

born in India. They settled briefly in London

before his father spotted opportunities in

retailing and embraced it as the family’s new

beginning in Britain.

The family’s first store, the Go Local

Duchy Stores in Salford, became the

bedrock of their livelihood and the

place where Priyesh and his brother

Amit (featured in this issue’s Retail

Corner) grew up, absorbing the

rhythms of community commerce.

“That was where the foundations

were laid in our minds that it was a

fallback option for us,” Priyesh

explains. “Initially, we were asked to

complete our further education and try

and find professional work, and if we

couldn’t find anything that we enjoyed

or that made us comfortable and

steady, then that was an option for us.”

The professional route seemed

promising. Priyesh qualified in criminal

justice, practiced personal injury law

for seven months, and simultaneously

built a career in policing that would

span a decade across three constabular­

ies – Leicestershire, Cheshire, and Greater

Manchester. Rising to the rank of sergeant, he

managed teams of 30 officers, gaining what

he calls “an insight into the psychology of the

individuals that we serve in the community.”

By 2013, Priyesh found himself question­

ing his path. The realisation that he needed

“to do something that’s now going to feed me

and my family, not benefit a supervisor or a

line manager or someone else’s business” was

crystallising. Then came that fateful drive

past the old pub, followed by a conversation

with his father that would reshape his

understanding of what business could be.

“My dad said to me, ‘Priyesh, you’re not

doing anything that’s going to give you a

comfortable lifestyle, or going to give you

savings in the long term. Why don’t you go

into business, do something?’”

Building from ruins

What followed was a masterclass in vision

over immediate reality. The pub wasn’t just

run-down – professional surveys revealed fire

damage and structural problems that made

restoration impossible. Rather than retreat,

Priyesh and his father went to the drawing

board, securing bank backing for an ambi­

tious reconstruction: demolishing the entire

building and creating a ground-floor commer­

cial unit with two flats above and four

three-storey townhouses.

The property portfolio was impressive, but

the real challenge lay in understanding how to

serve the community that would sustain it. “I

hadn’t really quite grasped how I was going to

deliver convenience retail to this community

that I’m currently serving,” Priyesh reflects.

“So, it was a lot of understanding the

community’s needs, the wants, the demo­

graphics, the dynamics.”

This learning curve led through partner­

ships with symbol groups Select and Save,

then Go Local Extra, before the breakthrough

decision in 2022 to franchise with One Stop.

The results speak volumes: weekly turnover

jumped from £17,000 to £28-29,000, with an

additional £5-6,000 from online services.

But the numbers only tell part of the story.

What truly sets One Stop Carlton Conveni­

ence apart is what Priyesh calls his Dynamic

Risk Assessment approach – a system

borrowed from his police training and adapted

for retail that goes far beyond checking IDs for

age-restricted products.

Heart of responsibility

“Dynamic Risk Assessment is something that

is a skill that we picked up and a training

process that we were taught through the

police force,” Priyesh explains. In policing, it’s

called the national decision-making model,

designed to help officers justify and rational­

ise important decisions. In retail, it becomes

something more profound: a framework for

genuinely caring for customers as

human beings.

The system starts with a core value:

preventing age-restrictive products

from falling into the hands of minors.

But it extends far beyond checking dates

of birth. “They may be of age, but do they

have the mental capacity to buy this

product, and is it safe for them to do so?

Are they already under the influence of

something, and should we be the ones

that intervene?”

PROFILES IN SUCCESS

ASIAN TRADER AWARDS WINNERS

For ex-policeman Priyesh Vekaria, looking

after his store, staff and shoppers is second-

nature, and he succeeds wonderfully at

putting community welfare front and centre

Responsible through and through

Sapna and Priyesh Vekaria

19 SEPTEMBER 2025 ASIAN TRADER 19

PROFILES IN SUCCESS

ASIAN TRADER AWARDS WINNERS

When a customer is refused a sale,

the process doesn’t end with rejection.

Staff offer alternatives, provide support

resources, even signpost customers to

social services when needed. Most

remarkably, they follow up. “After

some time, we will reach out to them.

We’ll have that conversation, or if they

come in again and we can see that

they’re in a better place, or they’re still

struggling, we’ll ask them.”

This approach recently helped

resolve what could have been a

domestic abuse situation. Without

revealing too many details, Priyesh

describes how his team guided someone to

recognise unhealthy relationship dynamics,

leading both parties to return and thank the

store for helping them understand their

impact on each other.

“You know, we have particular behaviour

mannerisms in our family homes, and we

think we know that we’re doing something

for the best for our family members, but

actually we’re putting them in a difficult

position where they feel like they’re trapped,”

he reflects.

Fighting the system

This community-first approach makes

Priyesh’s frustration with current enforce­

ment systems all the more acute. The £200

shoplifting threshold – which designates

theft under that value as a summary offence

– has, in his view, created a monster that

threatens the very foundations of community

retail.

“Government, some years back, almost

legalised shoplifting,” he states bluntly.

“What they’ve done is, they’ve taken away

our management tools.”

The impact goes beyond lost inventory.

“When you steal from me, you’re stealing

from the community because I’m feeding

the homeless. I’m also paying into the

football team that your child supports and

goes to. I’m paying into the dance group

that your child goes to. I’m supporting

local school for breakfast club that your

children also go to.”

His store services a food bank twice weekly

and supports Manchester’s Homeless Aid

every Tuesday and Thursday, regardless of

circumstances. These community invest­

ments become casualties of theft that

enforcement agencies seem unable or

unwilling to address meaningfully.

The AI-powered camera system represents

Priyesh’s technological response to policy

failures, but it’s the human response that

reveals his character. Recent BBC interviews

have highlighted his criticism of enforcement

agencies’ approach, particularly after a

heavy-handed police raid on his store that

treated his community-supporting team like

suspects.

“I know that, having been an officer, if an

allegation is made, you must go and deal with

it. So do a compliance visit, but don’t go and

raid a store in that heavy handed format,

because all that’s done is that’s made my

team, who are doing everything they can to

support that community, feel like they’re

suspects,” he argues.

Innovation through care

Perhaps most remarkably, Priyesh has created

what he calls a graduate sponsorship scheme,

bringing talented individuals from India to

work in his store while supporting their

families’ migration to the UK. It’s an approach

born from practical experience rather than

ideology.

“Having trialled multiple local

individuals for these roles, I just couldn’t

get them to have the same effort. The

work ethic was different, the under­

standing of the relationship just wasn’t

the same,” he explains.

The sponsored employees joined in

2023, and by year’s end, Priyesh was

supporting their dependents’ immigra­

tion, creating not just jobs but genuine

opportunities for families to build new

lives.

“It’s a very proud model to share,

because what you’re doing is you’re

offering opportunities to individuals

from all over the world who have talent,”

he notes.

Core is more

Looking ahead, Priyesh’s philosophy

centres on what he calls “core is more” –

focusing on fundamental excellence

rather than endless expansion. “You

don’t look to have the biggest range of

products in your store. You focus on the

core products that need to be sold

through convenience store providing the

best value to your consumer.”

This approach extends to partnerships,

where One Stop Carlton Convenience has

influenced product launches across the

Tesco family of companies. A successful

Evian water relaunch, mediated by Priyesh

between One Stop and Danone, demonstrates

how independent retailers can drive category

growth across major retail chains.

“If I’ve introduced something new, Booker

introduces it, then it also lands in Tesco. We’re

all pushing the same product. We’re all

shifting huge volumes, and everybody wins,”

he explains.

For young retailers entering the industry,

his advice is clear: choose the right commer­

cial partner, embrace innovation, but never

lose sight of community responsibility.

“Community responsibility is definitely the

big one,” he emphasises. “But also, when a

young retailer is coming into the industry,

they want something that’s innovative,

exciting and new, and if they have concepts

and ideas, they need to make sure to choose

the right trade partner.”

Having worked with both symbol group

and franchise partnership models, he believes

franchise is the way forward, “because it’s a

tried and tested, structured model.”

The bigger picture

Standing in his store, watching the AI cameras

monitor shelves while his sponsored

employees serve customers who increasingly

see the shop as a safe space to share their

troubles and celebrations, Priyesh embodies a

new model of responsible retailing. It’s one

that combines cutting-edge technology with

old-fashioned human care, police-trained risk

assessment with genuine community

investment.

His criticism of enforcement agencies

stems not from a desire to avoid responsibil­

ity, but from frustration at systems that

penalise the compliant while ignoring the

problematic. His Dynamic Risk Assessment

approach represents not just good business

practice, but a blueprint for how retailers can

genuinely serve their communities’ welfare.

“Being a community first retailer, it’s

really important that we understand it’s our

responsibility to ensure the welfare of that

community,” he concludes. “If we do not

ensure the welfare of that community is

looked after, we’re in servitude to that

community, and without that community,

our business does not exist.”

FEATURE

BIG NIGHT IN

20 ASIAN TRADER 19 SEPTEMBER 2025

nce upon a time,

staying in was a

compromise. Now it’s

the main event and convenience

stores are emerging as the real

headliners.

From sofas doubling as cinema

seats to kitchens moonlighting as

takeaway joints to BBQ parties to

families gathering to catch up to

Netflix and chill, the Big Night In

has transformed into one of

retail’s most bankable occasions.

People reached a new

appreciation of the possibilities

for dining in during the pandemic,

and four years after the last

lockdown, the Big Night In is now

an even bigger opportunity for

local stores.

As the public mindset further

shifts due to the cost-of-living

crisis, people are making

themselves feel good in the

comfort of their own homes,

reserving nights out only for

major celebrations.

Convenience plays a signifi­

cant part in this social shift, as

consumers are often looking for

easy-to-prepare food, drinks and

treats which can be served

quickly, leaving more time to

enjoy these at home moments

with friends and family.

This is great news for conveni­

ence retailers and wholesalers,

especially as many of these

occasions are likely to be im­

promptu, so creating dedicated

display in store and promotions

on linked purchases can drive

impulse sales.

The only key is to remain

updated on what is working and

how to make best of this situa­

tion. Dive right in.

Snack Attack

According to Ed Merrett,

Wholesale Controller at PepsiCo,

flavour is the number one

influence on crisp purchase

decisions.

“We recommend retailers

offer well-loved brands such as

Walkers Crisps, Quavers, Wotsits

and Monster Munch, particularly

as core best-sellers can be used as a

category beacon to prompt

impulse purchases,” he said.

PepsiCo is seeing an increased

demand for spicier snacks within

the savoury snacking category,

with the hot and spicy flavour

segment growing even more.

Merrett says, “Our Extra

Flamin’ Hot range can attest to

this. As the top spicy innovation

within the last three years, the

range sold over 4.8m packs

across 2024 within

the impulse channel.

“We believe this

trend will continue to

flourish. That’s why we

recently launched our

new rolled tortilla chip,

Doritos Dinamita Extra

Flamin’ Hot. The product

joins the existing Extra

Flamin’ Hot portfolio

that includes Walkers

MAX, Doritos and

Wotsits Crunchy and rolled out

exclusively to the impulse

channel in a 65g PMP.”

Stuart Graham, Head of

Convenience and Impulse at KP

Snacks, says, “We know there is a

high demand for premium lines as

consumers look to replicate night

out experiences in home.”

Tyrrells 150g Sharing bags are

key products to capitalise on

during those treat occasions or for

when a friend pops in unexpect­

edly.

KP Nuts portfolio offers

delicious flavours and a range of

formats, and is nearly five times

bigger than the nearest

branded competitor.

Another range to

consider here is KP’s

Flavour Kravers range.

Available in three

varieties, Flavour Kravers

look to ignite interest

from younger consum­

ers to drive sales, with

this demographic

over-indexing in bold

flavours.

In convenience, sharing

PMPs remain the core of the

snacking category and a real

favourite when it comes to BNI

and home entertaining.

This main driver of category

growth has slowed as many

brands moved above £1. In

contrast, having remained at £1,

Golden Wonder continues to

Big nights in mean

big business

As the nights draw in and Britain

settles back for a stay-at home

season, it’s time to buckle up and

cash in with all the goodies required

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