The Hamilton Spectator

Empire to ‘turbocharg­e’ growth

Farm Boy products will be added to Sobeys platforms

- ARMINA LIGAYA

TORONTO —The parent company of grocery chain Sobeys Inc. has signed a deal to acquire food retailer Farm Boy — which opened its only location in Hamilton earlier this year on the west Mountain — in a bid to expand its reach in Ontario, particular­ly in the Greater Toronto Area.

Empire Co. Ltd.’s president and chief executive Michael Medline said it aims to “turbocharg­e” the Ottawa-based chain — which it values at $800-million — and double its business and footprint from its current base of 26 stores across the province over the next five years.

This accelerati­on of growth would be done through a mix of new sites and conversion­s of some existing Sobey’s locations, the company said.

Sobey’s has three locations in Hamilton, including Stoney Creek, Waterdown and Ancaster.

“This is a jewel of an asset,” Medline told analysts on a call Monday discussing the transactio­n. “They have a proven business model with an establishe­d brand... and a significan­t runway for growth.”

The Hamilton Farm Boy store, located in Harvard Square Plaza, 801 Mohawk Rd. W., was the 26th store in the Farm Boy chain. It’s

22,500-square-feet and was expected to bring 140 new jobs to the city.

Empire’s chief financial officer Michael Vels said the door was open to expand Farm Boy into other markets beyond Ontario, but there was no time frame given the amount of “upside” in Ontario.

Farm Boy opened its first grocery store in Cornwall in 1981, and offers fresh foods and its own private-label grocery products, a format which has drawn some comparison­s to popular U.S. food retail chain Trader Joe’s.

The acquisitio­n comes as competitio­n in the grocery space

continues to heighten, with Amazon acquiring Whole Foods Market last year. Under the deal, Farm Boy will be set up as a separate company and continue to be led by co-CEOs Jean-Louis Bellemare and Jeff York, who have both agreed to reinvest in the company in return for a 12per-cent interest of the continuing Farm Boy business.

Empire says Farm Boy products will also be added to Sobeys’ Ocado-based e-commerce business, an online grocery platform which will launch in 2020 in the Greater Toronto Area.

Medline also assured the Ontario-based chain’s customers

Monday that they “would not see any changes in their Farm Boy shopping experience.”

“We do not want to ruin the magic of Farm Boy by trying to integrate them,” he said on the conference call.

Meanwhile, Empire does not have any other “growth assets” currently in its sights, said Medline.

“This was it, and this was the timing,” he said.

“It was clear to us that Farm Boy would be sold, and there wasn’t time to waste...

“Our old world and new world competitor­s are not standing still.”

 ?? BARRY GRAY THE HAMILTON SPECTATOR ?? The parent company of grocery chain Sobeys Inc. says it has reached a deal to acquire food retailer Farm Boy in a bid to expand its reach in Ontario.
BARRY GRAY THE HAMILTON SPECTATOR The parent company of grocery chain Sobeys Inc. says it has reached a deal to acquire food retailer Farm Boy in a bid to expand its reach in Ontario.

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