LONDON - Kingfisher
"As we look to next year, we have to recognise, particularly around the UK, a level of uncertainty," Chief Executive Ian Cheshire told reporters, after the company beat forecasts with a 28 percent rise in third-quarter profit and a reduction in debt.
"This could go either way next year, either taxes and unemployment will hit, or potentially post an election budget there may be an end to uncertainty and people can start to focus on the positives," he said.
Kingfisher, which runs market leaders B&Q in Britain and Castorama in France, would focus on the self-help initiatives of cutting costs, revamping stores and improving its supply chain rather than count on a rebound in markets.
"We're well positioned if that happens but not relying on it," said Cheshire.
Despite its caution, Kingfisher's performance added to evidence that consumer spending is picking up after a brutal downturn in late 2008 and early 2009.
British retail bellwether John Lewis
But the evidence is far from conclusive, with a survey on Tuesday confirming an earlier rebound in house prices had slowed.
The recession has meant many consumers have had little prospect of moving home and have instead focussed on making their homes more pleasant to live in. Kingfisher, with over 820 stores in eight countries, has tapped into this but it does better when housing transactions are strong.
The firm made retail profit of 227 million pounds in the 13 weeks to October 31, ahead of analyst forecasts in a 204-225 million pound range, according to a Reuters poll, and up from 176 million a year ago.