Toronto Star

Sobeys plans ahead in supermarke­t wars

E-grocery business is planned for 2020 rollout

- TARA DESCHAMPS

As the grocery wars heat up with companies across the country ramping up their delivery and e-commerce efforts, Sobeys’ parent company is looking to play the long game.

Empire Co. Ltd. is waiting for the spring of 2020 to roll out its online grocery business that will be run in partnershi­p with British firm Ocado, chief executive officer Michael Medline said on Wednesday.

“I’d rather be up and running with our system today, but I don’t want to put mediocre systems across the country when there’s much more modern ways to win over the customer,” he said.

“I see this as a marathon, and we’re in the first 100 metres.”

Empire’s chief financial officer Michael Vels further tempered expectatio­ns by saying “the ecommerce online offering will not be immediatel­y profitable,” but that the company anticipate­s it will become a “growing and vibrant channel.”

The company’s e-commerce efforts will initially be concentrat­ed on the Greater Toronto Area because Medline indicated “that’s a market we need to and will win,” but he acknowledg­ed “there are three or four other markets in the country that we need to look at.”

He wouldn’t say how fast Em- pire will launch in other markets, but revealed that the company has secured its first customer-fulfilment centre in Vaughan, Ont., a few hundred metres from its existing automated-distributi­on centre.

The fulfilment centre will be kitted out with Ocado’s signature robotics, which U.K. reports say can put together an order of more than 50 items within five minutes.

“The issue for e-commerce in this country, in Canada, is that no one has given the customers a fantastic option,” Medline said.

“It makes sense for us by offering customers something that they just never have seen before. We will have the highest market share of any grocer and we’ll be competing with youknow-who.”

The company competes directly against Loblaw Companies Ltd., which launched its own home-delivery service in December and which Medline said is increasing pressure on sales with “curious” gift cards.

The rival chain began offering customers $25 gift cards after revealing its participat­ion in an alleged bread price-fixing scandal.

On the effect such promotiona­l offers are having on Empire, Medline said, “I don’t want to overplay it. It is not intense,” but acknowledg­ed that the volume of competitor offers it saw in the last quarter was more than Ontario and the western provinces have seen in the past 12 months.

“We will stabilize margins, but we will remain competitiv­e,” Medline said, stressing that Empire will put its focus on basket size, which it announced has been improving.

He also revealed that the company had better-than-expected results for its third quarter as its revenue and profits improved compared with a year ago.

It earned $58.1 million or 21 cents per diluted share for the quarter ended Feb. 3.

That was up from $30.5 million or 11 cents per diluted share in the same period a year ago.

 ?? ANDREW VAUGHAN/THE CANADIAN PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? Empire Co. CEO Michael Medline said he sees the competitio­n “as a marathon, and we’re in the first 100 metres.”
ANDREW VAUGHAN/THE CANADIAN PRESS FILE PHOTO Empire Co. CEO Michael Medline said he sees the competitio­n “as a marathon, and we’re in the first 100 metres.”

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