Los Angeles Times

Kroger in deal for delivery system

Grocery chain enlists a British company to help it compete with retail giants online.

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Kroger Co. is showing some fight.

The largest U.S. grocery chain, battered by doubts that it can thrive as Amazon and Walmart siphon off food customers, took a big step on Thursday by teaming up with Ocado, a British online grocer known for automated warehouses where robots quickly fill orders. It gives the supermarke­t giant a pathway to create its own delivery network.

It was the boldest e-commerce move yet for Chief Executive Rodney McMullen, whose Cincinnati company is facing intense competitio­n in an industry notorious for its thin profit margins.

“This puts Kroger on an entirely different level,” said Jennifer Bartashus, an analyst at Bloomberg Intelligen­ce. “This is definitely a warning shot that Kroger is serious about online retail and grocery delivery.”

Kroger investors cheered the news, boosting shares 5.7%, the biggest intraday gain in more than five months, before they closed up 1.4% to $25.30. The stock had slipped 9.1% this year through Wednesday.

Kroger operates multiple supermarke­t chains, including Kroger, Ralphs and Food4Less.

In the aftermath of Amazon’s takeover of the organic grocer Whole Foods, Kroger has been investing in its socalled click-and-collect program, which allows customers to order groceries online and pick them up in stores. It has also partnered with third-party delivery services, including Instacart, as shoppers warm to the idea of getting food sent directly to their homes.

In the United States, less than 2% of groceries are bought online, a number that is widely expected to climb as Amazon ramps up its push with Whole Foods. Walmart, battling with the online giant to control U.S. consumer spending, has been making costly investment­s in e-commerce to protect its grocery business, which generates more than half of its revenue.

Kroger had a small stake in Ocado and now has agreed to buy an additional 5% of the company and license its technology, which helps other grocers run automated warehouses and deliver food. The deal was valued at about $250 million. Ocado shares surged 45% on Thursday, adding more than $2 billion to the company’s market value.

Kroger and Ocado had discussion­s about a partnershi­p over the last couple of years, with the talks heating up in recent months, according to McMullen. The companies are working on identifyin­g sites for three automated distributi­on centers this year and may open as many as 20 within three years. Preliminar­y work on the first three sites is underway, McMullen said.

Delivering groceries is more complex than selling books or video games because food needs to be stored at the right temperatur­e to ensure it doesn’t spoil. Ocado’s software helps trucks take the best route, so that deliveries arrive at the customer’s door within a one-hour window.

For Kroger, the partnershi­p is about serving customers who are shifting their grocery-buying habits, McMullen said.

“It’s about using our technology and data so that customers can move back and forth,” he said in an interview Thursday. “It really accelerate­s our ability to offer a seamless experience.”

A key for Kroger will be maintainin­g market share as the company waits for the new distributi­on centers to be built.

Two years is a long time, particular­ly as Amazon starts pressing the gas pedal on its integratio­n of Whole Foods.

Kroger has a shot to hold its own as the grocery battle heats up. But smaller, regional grocers might not be so lucky, Bartashus said. Bankruptci­es have already started piling up in the wake of the Whole Foods purchase.

“It portends continued consolidat­ion in the industry,” Bartashus said. “If the smaller guys can’t figure out a way to have a similar level of service, it’s only going to get worse.”

The competitiv­e pressure has squeezed Kroger, which has struggled to raise prices and has seen its profit margins take a hit. The main concern about the company, which operates more than 2,800 stores, has focused on its ability to adapt to the ecommerce shift.

Earlier this year, Bloomberg reported that Kroger was spurned after making a $400- million offer for Boxed Wholesale, the socalled online Costco for millennial­s.

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