BusinessB&M shares ditched as troubles in Germany take big toll on profitsInvestors sold off the stock, which fell 7% at 350.8p.Jason LockAlex Lawson @MrAlexLawson12 November 2019Shares in bargain chain B&M dived today after it admitted profits had fallen, dragged down by its struggling German arm.The retailer of everything from Henry vacuum cleaners to Harry Potter branded headphones reported a 2.8% fall in first-half profits to £96 million. Investors sold off the stock, down 27p or 7% at 350.8p.That was despite sales at the chain, which has 645 stores, rising 12.4% to £1.8 billion and same-store sales growing 3.7% in the UK. Chief executive Simon Arora said: “We’re in the same fast lane that Aldi, Lidl, Primark are in.” He added there is now “no embarrassment” in shopping at budget stores.B&M bought its German business, Jawoll, for e80 million in 2014 and the division has slipped into the red. Arora has kicked off a “strategic review” of Jawoll but said this doesn’t necessarily mean it will be sold. Investec analysts said “We still argue there is a credible route to return Jawoll to satisfactory profitability.”Arora said the timing of the December election is “deeply unhelpful” and called on the next government to tackle business rates.He said: “It can’t be right that UK retail, which employs so many people, is paying a disproportionate share of business rates and that does need urgent review.”MORE ABOUTBusiness; retail