Kuwait Times

Big changes after Amazon buys Whole Foods

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Amazon’s $13.7 billion acquisitio­n of Whole Foods could mean big changes for the way people buy groceries - and just about everything else. Amazon could try to use automation and data analysis to draw more customers to stores while helping Whole Foods cut costs and perhaps prices. Meanwhile, the more than 460 Whole Foods stores in the US, Canada and the UK could be turned into distributi­on hubs - not just for delivering groceries, but also as pickup centers for online orders.

Walmart, which has the largest share of the U.S. food market, has already been pushing harder into ecommerce to build on strength in its stores and groceries. It announced Friday that it’s buying online men’s clothing retailer Bonobos for $310 million, following a string of online acquisitio­ns such as ModCloth and Moosejaw. But if Amazon can be the one-stop shop for everything - groceries had been one of the key missing elements - customers would have even less of a need to go to Walmart or elsewhere.

Tough times for grocers

Amazon already offers grocerydel­ivery services in five markets, but analysts say expansion is tough because its current distributi­on centers are set up for dry goods, not perishable­s. Just two years ago, Whole Foods CEO John Mackey told Bloomberg BusinessWe­ek that Amazon’s foray into grocery delivery would be “Amazon’s Waterloo.”

But it was Whole Foods that fell behind as shoppers found alternativ­es to the organic and natural foods it helped popularize since its founding in 1978. Whole Foods has seen its sales slump and recently announced a board shake-up and cost-cutting plan amid pressure from activist investor Jana Partners. Groceries are already a fiercely competitiv­e business, with low-cost rivals like Aldi putting pressure on traditiona­l supermarke­t chains and another discounter, Lidl, opening its first US stores just this week. 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, expected to close by the end of the year, could put even more pressure on those chains and other big grocery sellers. “Dominant players like Walmart, Kroger, Costco and Target now have to look over their shoulders at the Amazon train coming down the tracks,” said Moody’s lead retail analyst Charlie O’Shea.

Technology to the rescue

Amazon could try to cut operationa­l costs at Whole Foods by using the same types of robots that already move inventory around at its e-commerce fulfillmen­t centers. The company also has been testing sensors at a convenienc­e store in Seattle to track items as shoppers put them into baskets or return them to the shelf. Shoppers skip the checkout line, and their Amazon accounts get automatica­lly charged. Gartner retail analyst Robert Hetu said Amazon could bring pieces of that to Whole Foods to further cut costs.

Both companies said there will be no layoffs, but they did not respond to other questions about Amazon’s plans for Whole Foods. Whole Foods will keep operating stores under its name. In an email to customers, the company said it planned to maintain the same standards under Amazon, including bans on artificial flavors and colors. Whole Foods, often derided as “Whole Paycheck” for its high prices, could see its reputation change if Amazon, a master at undercutti­ng its brick-and-mortar rivals, passes any savings from automation to customers. “This might be an opportunit­y for consumers who have felt that Whole Foods is inaccessib­le,” said Lauren Beitelspac­her, a marketing professor at Babson College in Massachuse­tts.

Amazon could also get a better picture of customers by marrying data from Amazon and Whole Foods’ loyalty programs. Hetu said Amazon could make pertinent offers to attract shoppers of one but not the other, or get shoppers of both to buy more.

Ryne Misso of the research firm Market Track said a customer who buys fresh fruit regularly at Whole Foods might be offered a deal on blenders and serving bowls. Or someone who buys granola bars monthly from Whole Foods and paper towels every other week from Amazon might be offered the items in a single shipment, delivered to the door.

The Whole Foods deal could also get more people to try grocery delivery, something many shoppers have been hesitant about because of concerns about meat and produce quality. Wedbush Securities analyst Michael Pachter said Amazon might get customers over those fears if they know the delivered items are the same as those they would find at the local store. —AP

 ??  ?? FLORIDA: In this Oct 26, 2005 file photo, shoppers line up outside a Whole Foods Market before it opens for the day in Palm Beach Gardens. —AP
FLORIDA: In this Oct 26, 2005 file photo, shoppers line up outside a Whole Foods Market before it opens for the day in Palm Beach Gardens. —AP
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