Chattanooga Times Free Press

Walmart to sell its UK unit as it focuses on other markets

- BY DANICA KIRKA AND ANNE D’INNOCENZIO

Walmart is selling its British unit, Asda, to local rival Sainsbury’s for $10.1 billion, a deal that lets the world’s largest retailer focus on online sales in countries where it has stronger growth prospects and faces less-intense competitio­n.

The cash and stock deal will reshape Britain’s supermarke­t industry. It combines the No. 2 and No. 3 supermarke­t chains, with a total 31.4 percent share of the market that would put it ahead of the current leader, Tesco, according to data from Kantar Worldpanel.

Walmart overall is building fewer big stores and increasing its focus on internet businesses as people shop more online and at sites like Amazon. The company is expanding services like same-day delivery in the U.S., while focusing on big prizes overseas like China and potentiall­y India. Walmart is reportedly in talks to buy a majority stake in Flipkart, India’s leading e-commerce company, which would give it a foothold in an exploding online market.

“Given the competitiv­e landscape in U.K. grocery retail, profitable growth and expansion opportunit­ies are limited, so reducing resources makes sense — especially when there are other geographie­s and channels” with more opportunit­y for growth, said Moody’s Lead Retail Analyst Charlie O’Shea.

In Britain’s grocery market, discounter­s have taken market share from traditiona­l chains such as Sainsbury’s and Tesco. Asda was also fighting to compete with no frills German-based discounter­s Aldi and Lidl, which offer sharp discounts but limited assortment­s.

The deal with Sainsbury’s is “consistent with our strategy of looking for new ways to drive internatio­nal growth,” Judith McKenna, CEO of Walmart’s internatio­nal business, said in a statement.

The combinatio­n joins Asda’s strong presence in northern England with Sainsbury’s larger operation in the south, creating a company with more than 2,800 stores across the country.

Walmart, which operates stores under 55 banners in 27 countries outside the U.S., has taken some lumps as it tries to import its low-price strategy overseas. The Bentonvill­e, Arkansas-based company gave up in Germany and South Korea in 2006, and it closed 10 percent of its Brazil stores in 2016 as it looked to restructur­e its operations. In many overseas markets, Walmart has lacked the scale to press local suppliers on price as it does in the United States.

Walmart’s internatio­nal business, which accounts for about 24 percent of its total sales and rang up $118.07 billion in sales for its latest fiscal year, has seen slower sales growth. In the fiscal year ended Jan. 31, its internatio­nal sales rose 1.7 percent, while its Walmart U.S. division rose 3.5 percent.

But Walmart has been working to adapt to the various landscapes and differing consumer behaviors, and teaming up with local partners when it realizes it can’t go alone.

 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? Sainsbury’s has agreed a merger deal with Walmart Inc.’s U.K. unit, Asda, for $10.1 billion in cash and stock in a deal that would create Britain’s largest supermarke­t chain.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO Sainsbury’s has agreed a merger deal with Walmart Inc.’s U.K. unit, Asda, for $10.1 billion in cash and stock in a deal that would create Britain’s largest supermarke­t chain.

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