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Tesco (LSE: TSCO) shares have had a terrific run. They’ve climbed 102% within the final 5 years, with dividends on high. I didn’t see that coming. Because it’s the dominant UK grocer, I believed it may fall prey to smaller, hungrier rivals, together with German discounters Aldi and Lidl. How unsuitable are you able to be?
Newest Worldpanel information exhibits its market share is holding up properly at 28.1%. That’s streets forward of second-placed Sainsbury’s at 15.5%. However as ever when a high blue-chip inventory does this properly, it raises the identical query in my thoughts. Can it continue to grow at this velocity?
Does this FTSE 100 inventory nonetheless provide good worth?
Earlier this 12 months, I made a decision Tesco was beginning to look a bit costly, because the price-to-earnings ratio crept above 17. At present, it’s a fraction much less difficult at 15.5. Which displays a dip within the share value. Three weeks in the past, on 22 April, the shares have been doing properly at round 495p. At present, they’re down 9.% to 452p, which might have diminished a £10,000 stake to £9,050.
It’s been a unstable time for shares usually, because the Iran struggle drives up oil costs and inflation. This threatens Tesco from two sides, elevating its prices whereas squeezing customers. It runs to tight revenue margins, now as little as 2.4%. That’s frequent throughout the aggressive grocery sector, however doesn’t go away a lot room to manoeuvre.
Tesco highlighted the hazard in its 2025/26 outcomes on 16 April. These confirmed underlying working revenue up simply 0.6% to £3.2bn, with value inflation in charge. Revenue steering steered a small decline within the present monetary 12 months. So how fearful ought to we be?
As oil shortages loom, this could possibly be a troublesome summer time. I’m additionally involved by the EY Merchandise Membership’s warning that that the UK would lose 160,000 jobs this 12 months. But Tesco is arguably higher positioned than most to resist no matter is heading our means, due to its mighty scale and deep provider relationships.
Might summer time throw up a greater shopping for alternative?
The runaway success of Tesco Clubcard, now held by 24m households, a staggering 80% of the entire, helps. The group additionally generates loads of free money circulate, round £1.75bn final 12 months, with comparable probably in 2026/27. That ought to safe the dividend. At 3.2%, the trailing yield is stable however not spectacular. Current historical past has been a bit patchy. Shareholder payouts have been frozen each in 2021 and 2023, however subsequent progress has been robust, as my desk exhibits.
| Dividend per share | % progress | |
| 2026 | 14.5p | 5.84% |
| 2025 | 13.7p | 13.22% |
| 2024 | 12.1p | 11.01% |
| 2023 | 10.9p | 0.00% |
| 2022 | 10.9p | 19.13% |
I’ve been following Tesco shares for some years, however felt I’d missed my second. The current dip has revived my curiosity, and I believe it’s value contemplating once more. I’m holding again for now as I believe we’re in for a troublesome summer time, and that might provide traders a greater entry level. I’ll be monitoring occasions carefully to see if we get one.

