National Post

Whole Foods CEO sought Amazon lifeline

Outside consultant involved in deal

- Craig Giammona Devin Banerjee and

• Whole Foods Markets CEO John Mackey was facing the worst crisis in his company’s history. On April 10, activist hedge fund Jana Partners had announced an eight per cent stake and was agitating for an overhaul of the struggling grocery chain, potentiall­y including a sale.

That’s when Mackey recalled reading areport that Amazon. com had considered trying to buy Whole Foods. A few days earlier, Bloomberg News reported that the e-commerce giant had mulled a bid last fall to help accelerate its push into the grocery business but didn’t pursue a deal. That gave Mackey just the lifeline he needed.

On April 21, the Whole Foods chief authorized an outside consultant to contact Amazon, a filing to U.S. regulators on Friday shows.

“The consultant offered to make an introducto­ry phone call to a contact at Amazon. com to inquire whether there might be an interest in having an explorator­y meeting between the companies,” according to the filing, which provides details about the negotiatio­ns on the proposed merger.

About two months later on June 16, the e-commerce titan and the upscale grocer that helped bring organic food into the mainstream announced a deal, with Amazon agreeing to buy Whole Foods for $42 a share, or about $13.7 billion (all figures US).

As the Amazon deal took shape, according to the filing, Whole Foods also entertaine­d interest from at least four private equity firms as well as “Company X,” which met with Mackey and his advisers to discuss a potential deal at $35-$40 a share. That unnamed company was in fact the Albertsons grocery chain, according to a person familiar with the situation. Albertsons declined to comment.

In the end, Whole Foods decided not to seek formal offers from its private equity suitors, fearing leaks and believing that Amazon’s offer would be better. Amazon’s initial offer was for $41 a share. Whole Foods countered Amazon at $45 and eventually accepted the internet retailer’s “best and final” offer of $42.

Whole Foods shares were up less than 1 per cent to $ 42.15. Amazon shares rose 1.3 per cent to $977.59.

In the aftermath of the news that Amazon and Whole Foods had agreed on a deal, the grocer’s shares traded above the offer price, fuelling speculatio­n that a rival bidder would emerge.

But the list of companies with the financial firepower to bid against Amazon is short, and with Wal- Mart Stores recently saying it would not bid, it’s increasing­ly unlikely that a rival bid will surface, according to Brian Yarbrough, an analyst at Edward Jones. “I don’t think it makes sense to get into a public bidding war with Amazon,” he said.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada