The Hamilton Spectator

Amazon buying Whole Foods in bold move

Deal puts pressure on chains, including Canadian grocers

- ANICK JESDANUN NEW YORK —

Amazon is buying Whole Foods in a stunning move that gives it hundreds of stores across the United States — a brandnew laboratory for radical retail experiment­s that could revolution­ize the way people buy groceries.

The deal valued at $13.7 billion unites the company that persuaded people to buy books — and then everything else — online with the grocery store chain that fell behind as shoppers found “good enough” alternativ­es to the organic and natural foods it helped popularize.

Amazon already offers grocerydel­ivery services in five markets, but the Whole Foods purchase would let it expand to many more. Amazon also offers grocery shipments elsewhere, but that’s tough with perishable foods.

The deal could be “transforma­tive,” Moody’s lead retail analyst Charlie O’Shea said, “not just for food retail, but for retail in general.”

Groceries are already a fiercely competitiv­e business, with low-cost rivals putting pressure on traditiona­l supermarke­t chains. Whole Foods itself had launched an offshoot chain named after its “365” private label brand in a nod to the popularity of no-frills chains.

The Amazon-Whole Foods combinatio­n could put even more pressure on those chains and other big grocery sellers. Walmart, which has the largest share of the U.S. food market, has been working on lowering prices.

“Dominant players like Walmart, Kroger, Costco and Target now have to look over their shoulders at the Amazon train coming down the tracks,” O’Shea said.

Experts say the deal also poses a threat to Canada’s grocers.

Mike von Massow, a food economics expert at the University of Guelph, says Amazon could use the 13 Whole Foods locations in Canada to provide more grocery delivery and pickup offerings or roll out its checkout-free grocery store concept tested in Seattle last year. Most of those locations in Canada are concentrat­ed in the Greater Toronto Area and B.C.’s Lower Mainland.

He says Canadian grocers could drop prices, improve technology or beef up e-commerce to keep pace.

But GlobalData Retail managing director Neil Saunders says investing in such initiative­s can be costly and may be unattracti­ve for grocers as they face increasing competitio­n from discount retailers.

Online delivery of groceries so far has been tough for any company to pull off because of customers’ concerns about the quality of meat and produce, Wedbush Securities analyst Michael Pachter said. But if customers know that what they are getting is the same as what they’d get at the local store, they are more likely to try it out.

Whole Foods, which will keep operating stores under its name, said in an email to customers, that it will maintain the same standards under Amazon, including bans on artificial flavours and colours and antibiotic­s in hens producing its eggs.

Pachter said that even if Amazon gets 20 million members of its Prime loyalty program to pay $15 a month extra for AmazonFres­h grocery-delivery service, that’s 20 million not going to traditiona­l supermarke­ts. He added that these are likely the higher-income households who tend to buy more expensive brands and cuts of meat.

“The convention­al grocery store should feel threatened and incapable of responding,” Pachter said.

Just two years ago, Whole Foods CEO John Mackey predicted disaster for Amazon’s foray into grocery delivery, telling Bloomberg BusinessWe­ek it would be “Amazon’s Waterloo.”

But Whole Foods has seen its sales slump and in February said it no longer saw the potential for expanding its flagship chain to 1,200 locations, up from about 460 in the United States, Canada and the United Kingdom. It also had announced a board shakeup and cost-cutting plan amid pressure from activist investor Jana Partners.

Amazon, meanwhile, has been expanding its reach in goods, services, entertainm­ent — and groceries. It could have built up its groceries business without acquisitio­ns, said Neil Saunders, managing director of GlobalData Retail, but that would have been costly and time-consuming.

With Whole Foods, Amazon gets an establishe­d business that it can transform through its technology and supply network expertise. And it should be able to bring cost-cutting technologi­es, such as robots to move inventory around, while the company gets a better picture of customers by marrying data from Amazon and Whole Foods’ loyalty programs.

Whole Foods, founded in 1978, saw its stock peak in 2013 at $65.24. And the key measure that retailers look at to gauge their health, revenue at stores open more than a year, has fallen for seven quarters in a row.

That’s frustrated investors saddled with a drop of nearly 43 per cent from the start of 2014 through Thursday, while the rest of the stock market marched 32 per cent higher to record heights. The investment firm Jana Partners said in April that it had built up an ownership stake in Whole Foods because it saw ways to address its “chronic underperfo­rmance for shareholde­rs.”

Jana had pushed to shake up Whole Foods’ board of directors, among other changes.

 ?? DREW ANTHONY SMITH, GETTY IMAGES ?? Amazon announced Friday it is buying Whole Food Markets for $13.7 billion.
DREW ANTHONY SMITH, GETTY IMAGES Amazon announced Friday it is buying Whole Food Markets for $13.7 billion.

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