By Saabira Chaudhuri 

LONDON--Asda, the British arm of Wal-Mart Stores Inc., on Thursday reported its first fall in full-year sales since the financial crisis and indicated that its challenges show no signs of abating.

The U.K.'s No. 2 supermarket chain reported a 1% fall in sales at comparable stores for 2014, and a 2.6% drop in this metric for the fourth quarter, with U.K. Chief Executive Andy Clarke blaming "a very competitive market where retailers drove unprofitable sales."

Asda's results come as Wal-Mart reported its second straight quarter of same-store sales growth in the U.S. on an increase in traffic, although the retailer also issued weaker-than-expected guidance for the year, in part because of plans to boost pay for store employees.

Asda's fourth-quarter like-for-like sales drop is steeper than the 1.6% decline it reported in the third quarter. Mr. Clarke said U.K. rivals' short-term discounting tactics pressured Asda's results, and he insisted the company would stand by its strategy of sustained low pricing rather than sporadic discounting. "You can only give away a GBP10 note for GBP9 for so long," he said at a media briefing in London on Thursday. "We are just not going to play that game."

Asda announced plans to spend GBP600 million ($915.44 million) this year refurbishing existing stores, creating new stores and opening new "click and collect" locations where customers can pick up online purchases. The supermarket plans to add 150 new remote click-and-collect sites and open 36 new gas stations. Asda opened 200 new click-and-collect sites in 2014, taking the number to 600 at the end of 2014.

The company plans to open 17 new stores, including three supermarkets in London, this year. That strategy stands in contrast with rivals, which have been scaling back plans to open large stores as customers have moved toward shopping more frequently in local stores instead of making one large weekly purchase. Tesco PLC last month said it would close 43 unprofitable stores and shelved plans to open 49 new ones.

Asda "is more aggressive on the new-space front than the competition," said John Kershaw, an analyst at Exane BNP Paribas.

Mr. Clarke said Asda has fewer large stores than competitors and that the company still sees room to expand its physical footprint in this area. "A majority of customers still want to come in and do a weekly shop," he said. "Supermarkets continue to be key for us."

Mr. Clarke described the retail market as being in "one of its most challenging and changeable periods in history," and indicated there would be little respite soon. "The data you already see in the market for 2015 suggests it's going to be a very challenging market for 2015 and 2016," he said.

During 2014, Asda spent GBP300 million lowering prices as retailers continue to fight to attract customers. The company has a five-year pledge to invest more than GBP1 billion cutting prices.

Asda has a market share of 17.3%, according to the latest figures from Kantar Worldpanel, which monitors the household grocery-purchasing habits of 25,000 demographically representative households in the U.K. Tesco is the U.K.'s No. 1 supermarket chain, with a 29% share, and J Sainsbury PLC is close behind Asda, with 16.7%.

Ian Walker

contributed to this article.

Write to Saabira Chaudhuri at saabira.chaudhuri@wsj.com

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