Cape Breton Post

Low prices, few choices

Discounter­s remake grocery shopping

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At a Target in upper Manhattan, shoppers can pick from 19 types of ketchup, including wellknown names like Heinz and Hunt’s. At the Aldi next door, the three options range from 99 cents to $1.79. All are the chain’s own brands, which doesn’t seem to bother shoppers attracted by the low prices.

“If you look at the ingredient­s, it’s the same thing. A lot of people don’t realize that,” said Anabel Rosado, a bank supervisor who was browsing the snack aisle.

Aldi and its European rival Lidl, which opens its first U.S. store this week, are hoping to change the way people shop with their smaller, no-frills stores filled mostly with house brands that tend to cost less. Whole Foods, which has fought the “Whole Paycheck” reputation, is also moving into the discount sector with an offshoot chain named after its 365 brand.

The push could further pressure grocery giants like Walmart and Kroger, which are also contending with the growth potential of online grocers and have already been reining in operationa­l costs so they can keep their prices competitiv­e. Target is also trying to become better known for low prices as it works to boost its struggling grocery business.

“We are certainly aware, paying a lot of attention, have a lot of respect, but we like our strategy,” Steve Schmitt, Walmart’s vicepresid­ent of investor relations, said in May about the growth of the European chains.

Aldi, which has 1,650 U.S. locations, has been remodeling stores to have a brighter feel and plans to expand to 2,500 stores in the next five years. The expansion plans were announced as another German discount grocer, Lidl, prepares to open its first nine U.S. stores on Thursday with plans to have 100 within a year. Already, the discounter­s have successful­ly taken market share in the U.K. grocery industry, according to Euromonito­r Internatio­nal. There are four 365 by Whole Foods locations and 20 more in developmen­t.

FAMILIAR PACKAGE, UNFAMILIAR NAME Walk into an Aldi store, and the products often come in packaging reminiscen­t of more popular brands. The chain’s Millville Raisin Bran is in a purple box similar to the versions made by Kellogg and Post. Its Benton’s cookies are in blue packages that resemble those of Chips Ahoy.

Stocking shelves with store brands is a big part of how discounter­s keep costs down. Lidl also says it will have a mix of private-label brand names, which will account for 90 per cent of the products in its stores. Whole Foods offers its 365 label across a variety of categories, more akin to the approach at Trader Joe’s, which has also been steadily expanding its store count in United States.

The growing popularity of store brands across the grocery industry is expected to help discounter­s. The trend is partly because supermarke­ts have stepped up their own private-label offerings in recent years to control costs. Late last year, Kroger said its store brands reached 29 per cent of items sold. Diana Sheehan, director of retail insights at consulting firm Kantar Retail, said more people turned to store brands during the recession.

“They have gotten comfortabl­e and started to embrace higherqual­ity private-label products,” she said.

Another difference at Aldi and Lidl: Presentati­on.

The stores tend to have fewer aisles than usual U.S. supermarke­ts, and products are often stocked on the shelves in the boxes they arrived in. It’s part of how they keep prices down. At Aldi, shoppers are also expected to bring their own bags unless they want to pay 10 cents for a plastic bag or 7 cents for a paper one. Lidl also said it will charge for bags, but hasn’t said how much.

CHOICES, CHOICES Aldi, Lidl and 365 by Whole Foods challenge the idea that shoppers want the array of choices found at traditiona­l supermarke­ts.

While a standard Whole Foods may have around 30,000 products, a 365 store has about 8,000, which helps keep down overall operationa­l costs. How wide the selection is can vary by item. Since people tend to be more particular about yogurt, the company says 365 may offer just as many choices as the average Whole Foods store.

Jeff Turnas, head of 365 by Whole Foods, said the stores can cater to people who want to do their shopping more quickly.

“We have tried to make the decision-making faster, easier,” Turnas says.

Aldi U.S. CEO Jason Hart also says his chain is deliberate about where it wants to offer more variety. He said people can find whatever products they might get at rival grocers, but there might just be fewer options within each category. He said people prefer that because too many choices “just add confusion.”

 ?? AP PHOTO ?? In this Saturday, May 20, 2017, photo, boxes of the Aldi food market chain’s Millville Raisin Bran are on display in a purple box similar to the versions made by Kellogg and Post, at an Aldi store in New York. Stocking shelves with store brands is a...
AP PHOTO In this Saturday, May 20, 2017, photo, boxes of the Aldi food market chain’s Millville Raisin Bran are on display in a purple box similar to the versions made by Kellogg and Post, at an Aldi store in New York. Stocking shelves with store brands is a...

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