Tesco expanded its operations from the United Kingdom to 11 other countries. Tesco pulled out of the United States in 2013, but continued to see growth elsewhere. Tesco's international expansion strategy has responded to the need to be sensitive to local expectations in other countries by entering into joint ventures with local partners, such as
Samsung Group in South Korea (
Samsung-Tesco Home plus), and
Charoen Pokphand in Thailand (
Tesco Lotus), appointing a very high proportion of local personnel to management positions. Tesco also makes small acquisitions as part of its strategy: for example, in its 2005/2006 financial year, it made acquisitions in South Korea, one in Poland, and one in Japan.
Operations The following table shows the number of stores, total store size in area, and sales for Tesco's international operations. The store numbers and floor area figures are .
Czech Republic , Czech Republic In 1996, Tesco expanded to the Czech Republic when they purchased
Kmart's local operations for $117.5 million and rebranded the stores as Tesco. In December 2005, Tesco expanded its operations in the country by purchasing
Carrefour's local operations. Tesco has been a market leader within the Czech Republic and is one of the largest supermarket chains in the country, operating over 322 stores by 2012, upwards of 300 by 2007. Tesco is keen to expand non-food items and has already opened petrol stations and offers personal finance services in the Czech Republic.
Hungary , Hungary with Statue of
Fire Salamander, 2011 In 1994, Tesco entered Hungary when the company purchased the Győr-based chain S-Market. Currently, Tesco operates through more than 200 stores in Hungary with further openings planned.
Slovakia , Slovakia, 2008 In 1996, Tesco entered the Slovakian market by purchasing
Kmart's local operations. In April 2010 the first Tesco Extra in Central Europe opened in
Bratislava –
Petržalka, Slovakia as part of a pilot project for Tesco in the region, including the first self-service cash flow in Central Europe. There are currently seven Tesco Extra stores in Slovakia – three in Bratislava and one each in
Zvolen,
Trnava,
Banská Bystrica and
Spišská Nová Ves.
Ireland In the early 1980s, Tesco first operated in the Irish grocery market, selling its operations there in March 1986. In 1997, Tesco re-entered the Irish market after the purchase of Power Supermarkets Ltd, which operated the
Quinnsworth chain of supermarkets. It now operates from 154 stores across Ireland. Like Tesco stores in the UK, these offer a home delivery shopping service available to 80% of the Irish population as well as petrol, mobile telephone, personal finance, flower delivery service, and a weight-loss programme. Tesco's loyalty programme, Clubcard, is offered in Ireland. Tesco had approximately 21% of the Irish grocery market in 2019 and its main competitors are
Dunnes Stores and
SuperValu. Tesco Ireland claims to be the largest purchaser of Irish food, with an estimated €1.5 billion annually. Tesco Ireland operates a number of Tesco Extra hypermarkets in Ireland, with Clarehall Extra on the
Malahide Road being the first to open in 2006. In November 2010, Tesco's largest hypermarket store in Europe opened in
Dundalk in
County Louth, with a floorspace of . In April 2011, the
Irish Times said that "Increasingly, Ireland is being viewed as a provincial backwater by the parent company – albeit a very profitable little backwater – and all the strategic decisions are being taken in the UK. In 2008, Tesco opened its first eco store in Tramore, County Waterford. It is expected to use 45% less energy than other Tesco supermarkets of similar size.
Spain, Portugal, and Gibraltar Tesco supplies six stores in Spain, Portugal, and Gibraltar that operate under the name "The Food Co.". Operations started in 2019 with the first store opening in Puerto de Mazarrón located in the Murcia province of Spain. One other store opened in the Algarve in 2019, followed by four more in 2020, in Gibraltar, Ibiza, Mijas (Málaga), and Quesada (Alicante). All 7,500 products stocked originate from Britain. The Web site stated in 2020 "With more stores coming in Spain & Portugal", but had not been updated .
India Tesco has had a limited presence in India with a service centre in
Bangalore, and outsourcing. In 2008, Tesco announced its intention to invest an initial £60m (
US$115m) to open a wholesale cash-and-carry business based in Mumbai with the assistance of the
Tata Group. In 2014, the joint venture between Tesco and Tata was confirmed, where investment by the earlier was reportedly 140 million dollars, becoming the first foreign supermarket to enter India. The stores operate under the banner Star Bazaar and Star Daily supermarkets.
Pakistan In February 2017 Tesco announced a wholesale partnership with Limestone Private Limited, owner of the Alpha Superstores chain. This involved an exclusive partnership which would see Tesco products stocked across Alpha Supermarket stores within Pakistan.
Former operations China In September 2004, Tesco acquired a 50% stake in the Hymall chain from
Ting Hsin. In December 2006, it raised its stake to 90% in a £180 million deal. In 2007, Tesco began opening new stores under its name in the country, beginning with
Beijing. In its peak, most of their stores were based around
Shanghai. Tesco had a large store in Weifang, Shandong province, and a further two-floor store in Taizhou, Jiangsu province. Tesco had been increasing its own brand products into the
Chinese market as well as introducing the Tesco Express format. In August 2013, Tesco announced that they were in talks to merge their Chinese operations with the state-run China Resources Enterprise (CRE) to create a joint venture, which would combine their 131 stores with CRE's nearly 3,000 outlets. The venture was officially announced in October, with Tesco holding a 20% stake and was closed in May 2014. In February 2020, Tesco announced it would completely exit the Chinese market and sell its 20% stake in the venture to CRE for £275 million.
France In 1992, Tesco invested 72% in French retailer
Catteau, which operated a chain of 92 stores in NE France under the Cedico, Hyper Cedico and Cedimarche banners. In December 1997, Tesco sold Catteau to
Promodès following major profit losses and to focus more on its then-new Central Europe division. Also in 1997, Tesco opened up a store named "Vin Plus" in
Calais which mostly sold wine, beer, and spirits. In June 2010, Tesco announced that the store would close permanently at the end of August, citing the decline of the
booze cruise as the reason.
Hong Kong In April 2015, Tesco entered into a joint-venture with
China Resources Vanguard to operate a range of convenience stores entitled "
U Select".
India Tesco has had a limited presence in India with a service centre in
Bangalore, and outsourcing. In 2008, Tesco announced their intention to invest an initial £60m ($115m) to open a wholesale cash-and-carry business based in Mumbai with the assistance of the
Tata Group. In 2014, the joint venture between Tesco and Tata was confirmed, where investment by the earlier was reportedly 140 million dollars, becoming the first foreign supermarket to enter India. The stores are now operated under the banner Star Bazaar and Star Daily supermarkets.
Japan Tesco had an interest in entering the Japanese market as early as 2000. In June 2003, Tesco purchased C Two-Network for £139 million. C Two-Network owned a Japanese supermarket chain called Tsurukame, which had 78 mid-sized stores based within Tokyo. In April 2004, Tesco purchased the bankrupt supermarket chain Fre'c. These stores, also based within Tokyo, would be folded under C-Two Network and rebranded under the Tsurukame name, expanding Tesco's operations in Japan to 104 stores. An additional eight stores were added in October 2005 when Tanekin Supermarket was purchased. In April 2007, C-Two Network opened up its first Tesco Express store in Japan, intending to open up 35 new Tesco and Tsurukame stores by 2008. In September, C Two-Network Co, Ltd. was renamed to Tesco Japan Co, Ltd. and later launched a range of software. By August 2011, 29 supermarkets were in operation. In August 2011, Tesco announced that it would exit the Japanese market and sell a 50% stake of Tesco Japan to
ÆON for £40 million. It was revealed that only half of Tesco Japan's stores in
Greater Tokyo Area were making a profit and that the market share in Japan was never above 1 percent. In December 2012, ÆON purchased out the remainder stake in Tesco Japan for a minimal 1 yen share and became a fully owned subsidiary. In March 2013, Tesco Japan Co, Ltd. was renamed ÆON Every Co, Ltd. with all Tesco branded stores rebranded under the Acore name. At the end of March 2014, ÆON Every's remaining stores were closed or sold, and the company ceased operations.
Malaysia ,
Malaysia, 2019 In December 2000, Tesco entered into a joint venture with trading conglomerate
Sime Darby Berhad to operate Tesco-branded Hypermarkets in Malaysia. Tesco would own 70% of the venture, while Sime Darby would own 30%. The first hypermarket opened in May 2002 in
Puchong,
Selangor with intentions to open 13 stores in five years. In December 2006, Tesco purchased the local operations of Dutch supermarket chain
Makro for £80 million and rebranded them under the Tesco Extra name. By 2012, Tesco Malaysia operated 49 stores that were branded under the Tesco and Tesco Extra names. In April 2013, Tesco Malaysia launched the Grocery Home Shopping Service, where it delivered groceries ordered via the Internet to consumers, with no minimum purchase imposed. In February 2015, Tesco Malaysia expanded to the convenience store market and opened up their first Tesco Ekspres store. In March 2020, Tesco sold Tesco Malaysia to the Thailand-based
Charoen Pokphand Group for US$10.6bn, including debt, in a deal that included the Thailand operations. In April, Sime Darby agreed to sell their 30% stake in Tesco Malaysia to Charoen Pokphand and Tesco for RM300 million. After the deals closed, the chain was rebranded as
Lotus's.
Pakistan In February 2017 Tesco announced a wholesale partnership with Limestone Private, owner of the Alpha Superstores chain. This involved an exclusive partnership which would see Tesco products stocked across Alpha Supermarket stores within Pakistan.
Poland , Poland, 2006 In 1995, Tesco entered the Polish market after acquiring the local chains Minor, Madex, and Savia. The company opened its first hypermarket in Wrocław Bielany in 1998. At the height of its operations in Poland the company operated from over 450 various format stores as well as an online shopping service. In November 2019, having suffered years of net losses and despite extensive cost-cutting and attempts at streamlining its business model, Tesco announced it would exit the Polish market and sell its entire operations. In June 2020, the
Salling Group acquired Tesco Poland's operations, consisting of 301 stores and two logistics centres for £181 million. After the sale, Salling announced they would close 58 stores and rebrand the remaining 243 as
Netto, of which it would expand Netto's Polish operations to over 700 stores. The rebranding and closures were done in phases, with the last stores closing in October 2021.
South Korea In April 1999, Tesco entered into a 51-49% joint venture with
Samsung C&T Corporation entitled Tesco-Samsung, with the latter's supermarket chain
Homeplus merging under it. Over the years, Tesco became the majority owner of the business. By 2008, they held Tesco held 94% of the shares in the venture. It was the second largest retailer in South Korea, just behind
Shinsegae Group. In February 2011, The Tesco-Samsung venture was renamed as Homeplus Co, Ltd. In September 2015, Tesco sold Homeplus to
MBK Partners, a South Korean buyout firm, which partnered with a Canadian pension fund and Singapore's
Temasek Holdings in a transaction worth 4.2 billion pounds.
Taiwan Tesco entered the Taiwanese market in 2000. The chain struggled to survive a saturated market led by other supermarket chains. In September 2005, Tesco announced it would pull out of the market and sell its operations to
Carrefour in exchange for their stores in the Czech Republic and Slovakia. Both companies stated that they would focus their efforts on countries with strong market positions.
Thailand , Thailand, 2021 In 1998, Tesco entered Thailand when they purchased a stake in the Lotus Supercenter chain from
Charoen Pokphand in the midst of the
1997 Asian financial crisis. Renamed to Tesco Lotus Supercenter and later simply Tesco Lotus, The two companies operated Tesco Lotus under a joint-venture known as Ek-Chai Distribution. In February 2004, Tesco owned 90% in the business and planned on purchasing out Charoen Pokphand's remaining stake. By 2009, Tesco Lotus operated 380 stores, claiming to serve 20 million customers every month and that 97% of its goods were sourced from Thailand. By March 2013, the Thailand operations were generating £3 billion in revenues and was one of Tesco's largest businesses outside of the UK. In 2014, Tesco Lotus expanded to the convenience store market with 365, aiming to compete with
Family Mart and
7-Eleven in the country. In March 2020, Tesco announced that it would sell Tesco Lotus back to Charoen Pokphand for US$10.6bn, including debt, in a deal that included Tesco's Malaysian operations. Talks between the two businesses of a possible merger were signalled as early as 2002. The business was renamed Tesco Kipa and began opening stores using the standard Tesco trading pattern as in the UK. In March 2006, the first Kipa Ekspres convenience stores opened in the country. By December 2008, Tesco Kipa operated 100 stores. The first Kipa Extra store opened in October 2010. In February 2014, Tesco considered selling a stake in the business to
BC Partners, the then-owners of
Migros Türk, although the talks were held off in May. In June 2016, Tesco announced that they would exit Turkey and sell its 95.5% stake in Tesco Kipa to Migros Türk. The sale was completed in February 2017.
United States Tesco entered the United States grocery market in 2007 through the opening of a new chain of convenience stores, named
Fresh & Easy, on the West Coast (Arizona, California, and Nevada). The company established its U.S. headquarters in
El Segundo, California. The first store opened in
Hemet, California in November 2007, with 100 more planned in the first year, a store opening every two-and-a-half days. The chain proved to be a financial failure for Tesco. In September 2013, the company announced that they would sell the chain and 150 of its stores to private equity firm
Yucaipa Companies. The
BBC reported that the remaining 50 stores were expected to close. The chain failed to make a change under new ownership, and in October 2015 it was announced that all remaining stores would close. The chain collapsed into bankruptcy the following week, the second in two years. Following this, the remainder of the chain was liquidated. ==Corporate affairs==