The Borneo Post

With Whole Foods, Amazon on collision course with Wal-Mart

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CHICAGO/SAN FRANCISCO: When Wal-Mart Stores Inc bought online retailer Jet.com for US$3 billion last year, it marked a crucial moment – the world’s largest brickand-mortar retailer, after years of ceding e-commerce leadership to arch rival Amazon, intended to compete.

On Friday, Amazon. com Inc countered. With its US$14 billion purchase of grocery chain Whole Foods Market Inc, the largest ecommerce company announced its intention to take on Wal-Mart in the brick-and-mortar world.

The two deals make it clear that the lines that divided traditiona­l retail from e-commerce are disappeari­ng and sector dominance will no longer be bound by e-commerce or brick-and-mortar, but by who is better at both.

Amazon’s purchase of Whole Foods also brings disruption to the US$700 billion US grocery sector, a traditiona­l area of retailing that stands on the precipice of a ferocious price war.

German discounter­s Aldi and Lidl are battling Wal-Mart, which controls 22 percent of the US grocery market, with each vowing to undercut whatever price the others offer.

The stakes are highest for WalMart. Amazon’s move aims at the heart of the Bentonvill­e, Arkansas-based retail giant’s business – groceries, which account for 56 percent of Wal-Mart’s US$486 billion in revenue for the year ending Jan 31.

With the deal, Whole Foods’ more than 460 stores become a test bed with which Amazon can learn how to compete with Wal-Mart’s 4,700 stores with a large grocery offering that are also within 10 miles (16 km) of 90 percent of the US population.

Amazon is expected to lower Whole Foods’ notoriousl­y high prices, enabling it to pursue WalMart’s customers.

The push comes as Wal-Mart is headed in the opposite direction – going after Amazon’s higher-income shoppers with a recent string of acquisitio­ns of online brands such as Moosejaw and Modcloth and on Friday, menswear e-tailer Bonobos.

Wal-Mart may be ready. In preparatio­n for the grocery price war, Wal-Mart in recent months has cut grocery prices, improved fresh food and meat offerings, modernized shelving and lighting in its grocery aisles, and expanded its online grocery pickup service.

Marc Lore, the Jet.com founder who now runs Wal-Mart’s e-commerce business after selling a startup to Amazon, told Reuters in an interview that Amazon’s move does not change Wal-Mart’s game plan. “We’re playing offense,” he said.

Wal-Mart is offering curbside pickup of online grocery purchases at 700 locations, with 300 more planned by year end. It also is testing same-day fresh and frozen home delivery from 10 of its stores. “We see an opportunit­y to do a lot more of that,” Lore said.

 ?? — AFP photo ?? A man walks past an AmazonFres­h Pickup location on June 16, in Seattle, Washington. With its US$14 billion purchase of grocery chain Whole Foods Market Inc, the largest e-commerce company announced its intention to take on Wal-Mart in the...
— AFP photo A man walks past an AmazonFres­h Pickup location on June 16, in Seattle, Washington. With its US$14 billion purchase of grocery chain Whole Foods Market Inc, the largest e-commerce company announced its intention to take on Wal-Mart in the...

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