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Self-powered suppliers and China’s start-up slowdown

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Column chart of PC shipments (mn units) showing Global PC industry shows little recovery after 2 years of slump

Hello everyone! This is Lauly from Taipei. It’s been a while since the last time I hosted the weekly #techAsia. I took annual leave and took my toddler, who had just begun to walk, to Okinawa, Japan. Travelling abroad with a one-year-old is never easy, but it was only a one-hour flight, and seeing him smile at the schools of colourful fish and large whale shark at the Okinawa Churaumi Aquarium, and clapping his hands when he had a bit of tofu at a downtown izakaya made it all worthwhile.

One very interesting thing I noticed while in Okinawa was that wherever we went, we could hear people speaking Taiwanese. It seemed like 80 per cent of the tourists at the aquarium were Taiwanese, and the hotel where we stayed was full of other Taiwanese families.

It all reminded me of my interview with Chiao Yu-heng, chairman of Passive System Alliance, a leading Taiwanese electronics component maker. Chiao, who speaks fluent Japanese, spent years studying and working in Japan in his youth and has recently initiated many investments in the country to forge closer collaboration between Taiwanese and Japanese tech suppliers. “I really like Japan and there are many aspects where Japanese and Taiwanese companies complement each other,” he said.

Apart from taking a holiday, I also recently wrapped up a deep-dive with my colleague Annie Cheng Ting-Fang into Asia’s shortage of renewable energy. The theme keeps cropping up in interviews and at events. Leading Nvidia AI server maker Foxconn said at its annual tech day that it is building a superpower computing centre in the southern Taiwanese city of Kaohsiung, which will require newly designed buildings, new layouts of water pipelines and additional electricity supplies. Most striking of all, I learned that operating a rack of AI servers uses roughly as much electricity as 300 households.

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Statistics like this are why the tech supply chain, from semiconductor and component makers to system integrators, are working to make AI computing more energy-efficient. The supply of energy, especially low-carbon emission energy, is going to be a key challenge for the global tech supply chain.

Going green

Delta Electronics is planning to build its own renewable power plants in India and Thailand, as the power and thermal management solutions provider steps up efforts to decarbonise its supply chain, Jesse Chou, Delta’s vice-president and chief sustainability officer, told Nikkei Asia’s Lauly Li and Cheng Ting-Fang in an interview.

Delta, a key power and thermal management system supplier for Nvidia’s GB200 server system, has identified that Thailand and India are the most challenging places for it to access sufficient renewable electricity.

“We can’t always rely on local governments to solve the issue,” Chou said. “We plan to build our own renewable energy plants to take a more active role to achieve our ultimate goal.”

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Delta joined the RE100 initiative in 2021, making it one of the earliest companies in the tech supply chain to do so.

Delta’s move comes as its home market of Taiwan looks to raise its emissions-cutting target for 2030 as the island looks to secure its position in the global supply chain, according to this exclusive interview by Thompson ChauLauly Li and Cheng Ting-Fang with Environment Minister Peng Chi-ming. The current goal is to cut emissions 24 per cent, plus or minus 1 per cent, by 2030, compared to 2005, which is not ambitious enough, according to Peng.

“We hope to accelerate our net zero goal in Taiwan,” he said.

Popularity pay-off

Xiaohongshu, China’s answer to Instagram, is growing in popularity. The start-up’s revenues surged to $1bn in the first quarter of this year as it ramped up advertising on the platform.

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The Shanghai-based unicorn turned profitable in 2023, a trend it continued in the first three months of the year as it generated $200mn in net profit, writes the Financial Times’ Eleanor Olcott. This is up from $40mn in the same period last year on revenues of about $600mn.

The country’s fastest-growing social media platform is beloved by city-dwelling young women, who flock to Xiaohongshu for restaurant, beauty and travel recommendations.

The start-up is a rare recent success story in a tech sector hit by bankruptcies and falling valuations and is one of a small group of promising tech unicorns that investors are eyeing for a potential initial public offering.

Column chart of PC shipments (mn units) showing Global PC industry shows little recovery after 2 years of slump

Top US computer maker HP is sharply scaling back the procurement decision-making power of its Taiwan team and increasing related positions in Singapore, as part of a major supply chain restructuring to mitigate geopolitical uncertainties, according to this scoop by Nikkei Asia’s Cheng Ting-Fang and Lauly Li.

The company has transferred responsibility for procurement and sourcing decisions to US-based executive Jonathan Jennings, who was newly hired this year and reports to HP’s chief supply chain officer, Ernest Nicolas. Taiwan, home to important suppliers in the laptop and desktop computer supply chains, has been a critical market for PC development and component procurement.

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Tensions between Taipei and Beijing have led some tech companies to set up production or operational hubs in third countries, particularly in south-east Asia. US-China tech tension is also driving the supply chain shift.

HP’s move comes as the global PC industry has been in inventory correction mode since the second half of 2022, when demand from the work- and study-from-home boom ebbed. Worldwide shipments plunged nearly 14 per cent in 2023.

Start-up slowdown

China’s fervour for entrepreneurship is fading as Beijing shifts its strategic focus to semiconductors, autos and other more job-heavy industries, writes Nikkei Asia’s Wataru Suzuki.

Venture capital and private equity investment in China fell 38.7 per cent on the year in the first half of 2024, to Rmb196.7bn ($28bn), according to research company Zero2IPO. Money raised by fund managers also dropped 22.6 per cent to Rmb622.9bn. By comparison, venture capital and private equity investment in the US fell 3 per cent to $418.5bn during the same period, while fund managers raised 3.3 per cent more.

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Local governments, another key source of funding, are increasingly backing companies that build factories, such as robot and drone makers, and companies in the semiconductor supply chain, rather than start-ups that often keep investors waiting for returns.

Ripples from the slowdown are spreading to businesses like the Shenzhen innovation centre and to Beijing’s Zhongguancun district, once known as the “centre of the universe” for its proximity to top universities, where empty cafés testify to the chill in networking and start-up hustle.

Suggested reads

  1. China cyber security body calls for Intel review over security (Nikkei Asia)

  2. Elon Musk battles Indian billionaires over satellite internet spectrum (FT)

  3. Thailand to move up semiconductor value chain with first front-end fab (Nikkei Asia)

  4. Rapidus’s Japan chip plant may bring $120bn economic windfall, but doubts remain (Nikkei Asia)

  5. Head of Saudi tech institute pledges to limit China AI collaboration (FT)

  6. Chinese carmakers deny intent to ‘overthrow’ western rivals (FT)

  7. AMD, Intel team up as semiconductor stocks slump on ASML outlook (Nikkei Asia)

  8. ‘800lb gorilla’: luxury brands battle China’s hit grey-market app (FT)

  9. Huawei trifold phone’s resale frenzy cools shortly after launch (Nikkei Asia)

  10. $1bn US battery plant plan shows race to reduce reliance on China (FT)

#techAsia is co-ordinated by Nikkei Asia’s Katherine Creel in Tokyo, with assistance from the FT tech desk in London. 

Sign up here at Nikkei Asia to receive #techAsia each week. The editorial team can be reached at techasia@nex.nikkei.co.jp

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Rentokil shares rally after cost cuts and growth at US unit

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Line chart of Share price, pence showing Rentokil shares rise following recent declines

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Rentokil Initial reported progress in cutting costs and restoring growth in its struggling North American business on Thursday, sending the pest control group’s shares up 9 per cent.

The FTSE 100 company has come under the spotlight after activist investor Nelson Peltz’s New York-based Trian partners took a seat on its board last month. The group announced on Thursday it would deliver annual cost savings of about $22mn after cutting 250 sales, services and administrative jobs.

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Shares in Rentokil, a provider of pest control chemicals and technicians globally, have shed about half their value since mid-2023 as it has grappled with the integration of its US business, which has underperformed since the $6.7bn acquisition of US-based Terminix in 2021.

On Thursday, the group said that revenues rose 4 per cent during the three months to September, supported by sales growth in its North American unit.

It added, however, that demand had still been lower than expected as the group struggled with a “weaker termite season”. It also warned that costs in North America had been higher than anticipated and that a planned integration of its businesses next year would come up to three months later than previously hoped, following a review of its branch network and pay plans.

Line chart of Share price, pence showing Rentokil shares rise following recent declines

Rentokil’s expectations for full-year profit remained unchanged from last month’s reduced estimate of £700mn.

Trian’s involvement has suddenly drawn attention to the company, whose headquarters are in Crawley, West Sussex, and its unglamorous business of exterminating insects and rats.

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The activist group, founded by US billionaire Peltz, secured a seat on Rentokil’s board for its head of research Brian Baldwin following a profit warning last month.

Rentokil, which has welcomed Trian’s intervention, warned at the time that annual profits would be lower than expected due to a poorly executed turnaround plan, including the integration of its US branches, immediately sending its shares plunging by a fifth and wiping £2bn off its market value.

Analysts at Peel Hunt said that “the heavy lifting phase of the branch integration of Terminix [had] only recently started” and that Rentokil must “reinvigorate sales growth at the same time”.

But they added that more immediate risks were now compensated by longer-term opportunities “and a highly regarded activist on the board”.

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DWP update for thousands on State Pension who could miss out on £300 Winter Fuel Payment

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DWP update for thousands on State Pension who could miss out on £300 Winter Fuel Payment

THE Department for Work and Pensions (DWP) has issued an update to state pensioners who could miss out on the Winter Fuel Payment.

The Government department said it will get in touch with those claiming Housing Benefit but not Pension Credit.

Housing Benefit claimants can also get Pension Credit to cover the cost of living

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Housing Benefit claimants can also get Pension Credit to cover the cost of livingCredit: Getty

You can claim the two benefits at the same time, with Pension Credit unlocking the up to £300 Winter Fuel Payment, but tens of thousands who can are not.

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In response to Labour MP Paula Barker, Sir Stephen Timms, a minister at the DWP, said it was working with councils to boost the uptake of Pension Credit.

Sir Stephen also said the DWP will be directly contacting pensioners who are receiving Housing Benefit that may be eligible for Pension Credit in November to encourage them to claim.

A DWP spokesperson added: “We will be writing to 120,000 pensioner households in receipt of Housing Benefit but who are not currently claiming Pension Credit as they may be eligible.

“We urge anyone who thinks they may be entitled to Pension Credit to check their eligibility and apply.”

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It comes after the Government announced a major change to the eligibility criteria for the Winter Fuel Payment.

The up to £300 payment used to be issued to anyone of state pension age, currently 66, or older.

But the Government has now made it means-tested meaning only those on certain benefits receive it.

You now only receive it if you are on one of the following benefits:

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  • Pension Credit
  • Universal Credit
  • income-related Employment and Support Allowance (ESA)
  • income-based Jobseeker’s Allowance (JSA)
  • Income Support
  • Child Tax Credit
  • Working Tax Credit
Winter Fuel Payment Changes

The Social Fund Winter Fuel Payments Regulation 2024 reduces the number of people receiving a Winter Fuel Payment in England and Wales from 10.8million to 1.5million.

The Government estimates the move will save it £1.3billion this financial year and £1.5billion per financial year after this year.

However, hundreds of thousands will miss out on the Winter Fuel Payment because they are not claiming Pension Credit despite being eligible.

The Government is in a drive to get as many people on to the benefit which not only unlocks the £300 payment but is worth on average £3,900 a year.

What is Pension Credit and who is eligible?

Pension Credit is a Government benefit designed to top up your weekly income if you are a state pensioner with low earnings.

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The current state pension age is 66.

There are two parts to the benefit – Guarantee Credit and Savings Credit.

Guarantee Credit tops up your weekly income to £218.15 if you are single or your joint weekly income to £332.95 if you have a partner.

Savings Credit is extra money you get if you have some savings or your income is above the basic full state pension amount – £169.50.

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Savings Credit is only available to people who reached state pension age before April 6, 2016.

Usually, you only qualify for Pension Credit if your income is below the £218.15 or £332.95 thresholds.

However, you can sometimes be eligible for Savings Credit or Guarantee Credit depending on your circumstances.

For example, if you are suffering from a severe disability and claiming Attendance Allowance, as well as other benefits, you can get an extra £81.50 a week.

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Meanwhile, you can get either £66.29 a week or £76.79 a week for each child you’re responsible and caring for.

The rules behind who qualifies for Pension Credit can be complicated, so the best thing to do is just check.

You can do this by calling the Pension Service helpline on 0800 99 1234 from 8am to 5pm Monday to Friday or by using free online calculators.

Those in Northern Ireland have to call the Pension Centre on 0808 100 6165 from 9am to 4pm Monday to Friday.

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It might be worth a visit to your local Citizens Advice branch too – its staff should be able to offer you help for free.

Pension Credit is known as a “gateway” benefit which means it opens up a host of perks, like the winter fuel payment and a free TV licence if you are 75 or older.

It also unlocks discounts on your council tax and the Warm Home Discount, if you are on the Guarantee Credit part of the benefit.

What is the Winter Fuel Payment?

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Consumer reporter Sam Walker explains all you need to know about the payment.

The Winter Fuel Payment is an annual tax-free benefit designed to help cover the cost of heating through the colder months.

Most who are eligible receive the payment automatically.

Those who qualify are usually told via a letter sent in October or November each year.

If you do meet the criteria but don’t automatically get the Winter Fuel Payment, you will have to apply on the government’s website.

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You’ll qualify for a Winter Fuel Payment this winter if:

  • you were born on or before September 23, 1958
  • you lived in the UK for at least one day during the week of September 16 to 22, 2024, known as the “qualifying week”
  • you receive Pension Credit, Universal Credit, ESA, JSA, Income Support, Child Tax Credit or Working Tax Credit

If you did not live in the UK during the qualifying week, you might still get the payment if both the following apply:

  • you live in Switzerland or a EEA country
  • you have a “genuine and sufficient” link with the UK social security system, such as having lived or worked in the UK and having a family in the UK

But there are exclusions – you can’t get the payment if you live in Cyprus, France, Gibraltar, Greece, Malta, Portugal or Spain.

This is because the average winter temperature is higher than the warmest region of the UK.

You will also not qualify if you:

  • are in hospital getting free treatment for more than a year
  • need permission to enter the UK and your granted leave states that you can not claim public funds
  • were in prison for the whole “qualifying week”
  • lived in a care home for the whole time between 26 June to 24 September 2023, and got Pension Credit, Income Support, income-based Jobseeker’s Allowance or income-related Employment and Support Allowance

Payments are usually made between November and December, with some made up until the end of January the following year.

Do you have a money problem that needs sorting? Get in touch by emailing money-sm@news.co.uk.

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Plus, you can join our Sun Money Chats and Tips Facebook group to share your tips and stories

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ECB lowers rates to 3.25%

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The European Central Bank has cut interest rates by a quarter-point to 3.25 per cent, amid signs that growth and inflation in the Eurozone are weakening.

Thursday’s move took Eurozone rates to their lowest point since May 2023 and followed a cut of the same size at the ECB’s meeting last month

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While the cut was widely anticipated, the ECB said it was based on an “updated assessment of the inflation outlook”.

That suggested price pressures could now be weaker than the central bank forecast last month, when it predicted inflation would rise towards the end of the year but dip back under its 2 per cent target in 2025.

The euro was slightly weaker in early trading after the announcement, at $1.084.

Cutting rates just five weeks after the previous move and with little additional economic data indicated that “the ECB must have become much more concerned about the Eurozone’s growth outlook and the risk of inflation undershooting the target”, Carsten Brzeski, global head of macro at ING, wrote in a note to clients.

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Eurozone inflation fell to 1.7 per cent in the year to September, sinking below 2 per cent for the first time in more than three years.

“The incoming information on inflation shows that the disinflationary process is well on track,” the ECB said. “The inflation outlook is also affected by recent downside surprises in indicators of economic activity.”

German officials have warned Europe’s biggest economy is set to shrink for the second consecutive year.

Traders in swaps markets price in another four or five quarter-point rate cuts by the middle of next year, including the near-certainty of a reduction in December. The euro has fallen by more than 2 per cent against the dollar over the past month as expectations grew of faster rate cuts.

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The ECB itself gave little guidance over the future path of its monetary policy on Thursday. It reiterated it was taking “a data-dependent and meeting-by-meeting approach” and was “not pre-committing to a particular rate path”.

Deutsche Bank’s chief European economist Mark Wall said Thursday’s decision could represent a “pivot” towards a faster return to lower rates.

The US Federal Reserve reduced its benchmark interest rate in September for the first time in more than four years, lowering borrowing costs by a half-point and signalling more reductions on the way.

The Bank of England is also expected to lower rates again in November, after cuts earlier this year.

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The ECB started to cut rates in June and has now lowered borrowing costs three times. Thursday’s decision was made in Ljubljana, at the Slovenian central bank.

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Ardian and Rockfield seed pan-European student fund with €500m CBRE IM commitment

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Ardian and Rockfield seed pan-European student fund with €500m CBRE IM commitment

Ardian will act as investment manager for fund targeting best-in-class assets in undersupplied European markets.

The post Ardian and Rockfield seed pan-European student fund with €500m CBRE IM commitment appeared first on Property Week.

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Blackstone plans to list some of its largest investments

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Blackstone plans to list some of its largest investments

Sluggish asset sales hit third-quarter profits at world’s biggest private capital group

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Sainsbury’s introduces new self-service checkout rule at store as customers threaten to boycott

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Sainsbury's introduces new self-service checkout rule at store as customers threaten to boycott

SAINSBURY’S has provoked customer backlash after making a major change at one of its stores.

One of the UK’s biggest retailers has added more self-service checkouts at its branch in Chippenham, Wiltshire.

Sainsbury's has sparked a backlash after making a major change at one of its stores

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Sainsbury’s has sparked a backlash after making a major change at one of its storesCredit: Getty – Contributor

A spokesperson for the supermarket chain said it had made the change to meet “customer demand”.

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But some customers on Facebook have been left fuming, saying the move has made the manned tills backlogged.

Some have gone as far to say they won’t shop at the branch again.

One said: “It’s awful. I went there the other day for a big shop, the queues were down the aisles for the manned tills so we were forced to use the new trolley self scanner.”

Another added: “I went yesterday there is no room at the self scanners especially if everyone has trolleys, think they will lose a lot of customers.”

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A third chimed in: “I get why they’re doing it – I was told people walked out with £4K of shopping a few weeks ago but it’s now a very annoying and poor experience going there

“I will not use the self-checkouts – I prefer dealing with people not machines.”

Meanwhile, a fourth commented: “I won’t use the self checkout, I expect human service when (I am) spending my hard earned money in their stores and if they won’t serve me I am happy to leave my trolley and go somewhere else.”

A Sainsbury’s spokesperson said: “We regularly review the services available in our stores to make sure we offer the most convenient experience for our customers.  

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“We have slightly increased the number of self-service checkouts at our Chippenham store so that we can meet customer demand for this service.

How to find the best bargains at the supermarket

“Our colleagues are on hand to help anyone who may need support using them and we continue to offer serviced checkouts for our customers who wish to use them.”

Sainsbury’s is not the first supermarket to have made a change to self-checkout rules in recent months to customer frustration.

Asda introduced “self-checkout only hours” at one of its branches earlier this year, restricting customers to automated tills only at certain times of the day.

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Signs in the Bournemouth store showed customers that from 7am to 8am Monday to Saturday, customers can use just self-scan checkouts.

From 8pm to 11pm on Monday, Tuesday and Thursday and from 7pm to 11pm on Wednesday, all manned tills are closed.

Asda told The Sun the move was a “temporary decision” made during quieter shopping hours and not a company-wide policy.

However, the supermarket chain, also said earlier this year that it will put more staff on tills in a bid to get more shoppers back in stores.

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Over the past decade, supermarket bosses have invested in self-scanning tills, convinced customers prefer the speedier style of shopping.

But the move to automated tills has seen some shoppers left feeling left behind and dissatisfied.

Some supermarkets, like Asda, have rowed back on plans to increase the number of self-scan checkouts in stores though.

In August, Rami Baitiéh, the chief executive of Morrisons, announced the supermarket would scale back the number of self-checkouts in stores.

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In an interview with The Telegraph, Baitiéh said the company was “reviewing the balance between self-checkouts and manned tills”.

High-end supermarket chain Booths, based in the North of England, abandoned the technology after discovering customers had a more enjoyable experience when interacting with a cashier.

This move aligns with data previously published by The Grocer which reveals service satisfaction has declined by as much as 8% due to the use of self-checkout machines.

If you want to avoid self-checkouts in your local supermarket or retailer branch, you could try scan-as-you-go tech.

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They let you scan as you browse, either using their smartphone or a handheld device then checkout in a different area from other shoppers.

You often can bag your groceries as you wander around too, saving even more time.

How to save on your supermarket shop

THERE are plenty of ways to save on your grocery shop.

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You can look out for yellow or red stickers on products, which show when they’ve been reduced.

If the food is fresh, you’ll have to eat it quickly or freeze it for another time.

Making a list should also save you money, as you’ll be less likely to make any rash purchases when you get to the supermarket.

Going own brand can be one easy way to save hundreds of pounds a year on your food bills too.

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This means ditching “finest” or “luxury” products and instead going for “own” or value” type of lines.

Plenty of supermarkets run wonky veg and fruit schemes where you can get cheap prices if they’re misshapen or imperfect.

For example, Lidl runs its Waste Not scheme, offering boxes of 5kg of fruit and vegetables for just £1.50.

If you’re on a low income and a parent, you may be able to get up to £442 a year in Healthy Start vouchers to use at the supermarket too.

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Plus, many councils offer supermarket vouchers as part of the Household Support Fund.

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