Lulu Group’s expansion plans are ‘on track’

Nandakumar Vijayan speaks at the summit. (Lulu/RetailME Tech & Marcoms Summit)
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Updated 29 June 2022
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Lulu Group’s expansion plans are ‘on track’

  • Lulu Group International is one of the few retailers that expanded during the COVID-19

DUBAI: Lulu Group International, the Middle East's largest organized retail chain, has announced that it is on track with its expansion plans. 

The group said it had 91 hypermarkets and smaller stores planned for opening between 2020 and 2023, making it one of the few retail groups to expand during the COVID-19 pandemic.

This brings the total number of hypermarkets, shopping malls, and fulfillment centers in the GCC, India, Malaysia, Indonesia, and Egypt to 235.

“Despite continued headwinds including COVID-19 and other challenges, we have continued to expand our operations across the world; we never stopped growing,” Nandakumar Vijayan, Director of Marketing and Corporate Communications at Lulu Group International, said at the RetailME Tech & Marcoms Summit held in Dubai.Lulu Group opened nine hypermarkets and two stores in 2020 and 24 hypermarkets and three stores at the height of the pandemic in 2021, according to Vijayan. So far in 2022, they have opened 14 hypermarkets and one store, with 11 more set to open by the end of the year.

“We are going to open 11 more hypermarkets this year and a further 27 hypermarkets and stores next year,” he continued.

The company typically invests around Dh125 million ($34 billion) in each hypermarket.

Lulu Group also has sourcing and regional offices in the US, UK, China, Turkey, India, Malaysia, Indonesia, Thailand, the Philippines, Vietnam, South Africa and Uganda and employs 57,000 people worldwide.

It has also partnered with the UAE government to support the UAE's food security program by supplying foodstuffs and consumer goods at low prices in order to protect UAE consumers from inflationary pressures.


Saudi stocks rise above 11,000 as energy shares lead gains  

Updated 11 sec ago
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Saudi stocks rise above 11,000 as energy shares lead gains  

RIYADH: Saudi Exchange’s benchmark Tadawul All Share Index climbed above 11,000 on Sunday, led by energy and materials stocks despite geopolitical uncertainty from ongoing tensions between US-Israel and Iran across the region. 

As of 12:30 p.m. Saudi time, the benchmark index had advanced 224.80 points, or 2.09 percent, to 11,001.12. The MSCI Tadawul Index rose 26.96 points, or 1.84 percent, to 1,488.86, while the Kingdom’s parallel market, Nomu, slipped 0.05 percent to 22,485.78. 

The gains came as Gulf markets reacted to heightened tensions between the US-Israel alliance and Iran, prompting investors to shift toward sectors more resilient to higher oil prices and supply disruptions. 

Saudi Aramco was among the strongest performers, with its share price rising 4.56 percent to SR27.06 as of 12:30 p.m. Saudi time. 

Speaking to Arab News, Tony Hallside, CEO of STP Partners, said: “Energy producers and oilfield services typically outperform on higher crude, while the pain concentrates in airlines, shipping, petrochemicals, and any sector with high fuel or logistics intensity.” 

Century Financial chief investment officer Vijay Valecha told Arab News that energy companies such as Saudi Aramco could see their share prices rise under current market conditions. 

“At the sector level, energy and petrochemical companies are likely to remain relatively resilient due to stronger pricing. In contrast, sectors such as real estate, consumer discretionary, banking, and capital markets would likely see short-term volatility and profit-taking as investors adopt a more cautious stance,” said Valecha. 

He added that elevated energy prices could also increase global inflationary pressures and create uncertainty in supply chains, potentially weighing on broader economic activity. 

Stock exchanges across the Gulf Cooperation Council also showed signs of recovery on March 6, with the Bahrain Bourse edging up 0.24 percent and the Muscat Stock Exchange gaining 1.44 percent. 

The Qatar Stock Exchange, however, declined 0.15 percent. 

UAE equities were closed on Sunday due to an official holiday. 

On March 6, the Dubai Financial Market index fell for a fifth straight session, down 3.2 percent, or 197.49 points, to 5,917.22. It declined 9.01 percent for the week. 

The Abu Dhabi Securities Exchange general index fell for a seventh consecutive session, dropping 1.4 percent, or 141.49 points, to 9,903.36 on March 6. 

“UAE equities ended the week lower as the widening conflict involving the US, Israel, and Iran continued to weigh heavily on risk sentiment. Dubai and Abu Dhabi stocks slid further upon reopening on Wednesday, pressured by regional tensions after the two-day break,” Valecha said in a separate statement. 

He added: “Banking and property stocks have been the largest drags as investors reassessed and questioned whether the market had priced in too much resilience. The shift in perception followed missile and drone attacks on Dubai over the weekend, which undermined the idea that the city remained insulated from global tensions.”