Otago Daily Times

Woolworths strikes new wholesale deal

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WELLINGTON: Woolworths has made its first deal to sell a wide range of wholesale groceries to another retailer, outside its own store brands.

The deal to sell to organic grocer Huckleberr­y followed a Commerce Commission investigat­ion into the grocery sector, with recommenda­tions for the big two supermarke­t chains to sell wholesale goods to smaller competitor­s.

New Zealand’s supermarke­t chains were last week given a year to show they would sell wholesale to other retailers to open up competitio­n — and were warned that if not, they could face prices being set by a regulator.

Huckleberr­y managing director Darren Guo said the Government’s push for supermarke­ts to open up their wholesale channel was what it needed to get the negotiatio­ns rolling.

Woolworths New Zealand (WWNZ) director Stephen Sexton also said the government directive and Commerce Commission investigat­ion were the major drives to get the deal going.

Mr Sexton said the supply deal demonstrat­ed the company’s commitment to encourage more competitio­n, as at present its business was just set up to serve its Countdown, SuperValue and FreshChoic­e stores.

The wholesale business was planned to operate separately from its retail supermarke­ts.

However, it would use the same infrastruc­ture and logistics network, he said.

About 60 retailers had shown interest in a wholesale deal with the business, including smaller retailers such as dairies and convenienc­e stores, right up to nationalsc­ale chains.

‘‘Starting a wholesale business and all the complexity that brings isn’t an easy task — but we’re determined to get there,’’ he said.

‘‘We’ve been working hard to get this [Huckleberr­y] agreement in place and we are confident it will be the first of many.’’

WWNZ would have to experiment a bit as it worked through a range of issues, from order to delivery, which it could apply to other wouldbe wholesale customers, he said.

‘‘The Government has been really clear that it wants to see wholesale opening up so we’ve all got to play our part.

‘‘We’ve got a No 8 wire solution for Huckleberr­y and the medium retailers, and we’ll be able to onboard a few more . . . if we’re talking hundreds of sites national it’s going to take us 12 to 15 months to get the technical capability and capacity in our network to supply that, but we’re committed and we’ll work through that.’’

WWNZ could not give an indication of the price difference of its wholesales­upplied goods compared with what retail customers paid in its own stores, because that was commercial­ly sensitive, Mr Sexton said.

But WWNZ would need to make profit from the wholesale business for it to be sustainabl­e.

The final prices the wholesale groceries would ultimately be sold on for in stores were not something WWNZ had a say in, he said. — RNZ

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