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Australia’s Woolworths shares plunge nearly 10% as grocer trims food earnings outlook

By Thomson Reuters Apr 29, 2026 | 6:00 PM

April 30 (Reuters) – Australia’s Woolworths warned that fiscal 2026 domestic food segment earnings growth would no longer reach the upper end of the range due to fuel ​price pressures and customer retention investments, sending shares to ‌a two-month low.

Shares of the Australian grocery chain slipped as much as 9.8% to A$33.63 in early trade, their worst intraday drop since August 2025.

Woolworths said the Middle East conflict has created significant uncertainty for customers ‌and ​suppliers, compounding already acute cost-of-living pressures.

“While ⁠the impact on the Group ⁠to date has been limited, higher fuel costs and secondary effects are likely to have an increasing inflationary impact as we move through the calendar year.”

Woolworths expects fiscal 2026 ​operating earnings growth in its Australian Food unit to be in the mid- to high-single-digit range, albeit no longer at ⁠the upper end of the market ⁠view.

“We are seeing early signs that the conflict ​in the Middle East is impacting our customers and team, ​many of whom were already experiencing significant cost-of-living pressures,” CEO ‌Amanda Bardwell said.

Woolworths will freeze shelf prices for three months on 300 household staples from May 1 as conflict-driven cost pressures on Australian suppliers affect prices across supermarkets.

The company will absorb ⁠any agreed-upon supplier cost increases to maintain the price freeze, with weekly specials and promotions remaining in effect.

For the 13-week period ended ⁠April 5, Woolworths ‌reported a roughly 6% in its Australian Food ⁠business sales, driven by pantry stocking in ​March and ‌the impact of cycling industrial action in ​the prior ⁠year.

Woolworths posted group sales of A$18.10 billion ($12.89 billion) for the reported period, ahead of Visible Alpha consensus of A$17.98 billion and above A$17.31 billion reported a year earlier.

($1 = 1.4043 Australian dollars)

(Reporting by Sneha Kumar and Roushni Nair in Bengaluru; Editing by Tasim Zahid ​and Sherry Jacob-Phillips)