Los Angeles Times

Blue Apron gets a lift from Walmart’s Jet.com

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Jet.com is throwing a lifeline to Blue Apron Holdings Inc.

Jet, Walmart Inc.’s urban-focused website, began carrying four Blue Apron meal kits Monday to help boost its fledgling grocery business. Jet’s customers in the New York City area can make the meals part of their regular grocery order without having to subscribe to Blue Apron’s service.

The tie-up aims to deliver more customers to the beleaguere­d meal-kit company, whose shares have plummeted since it went public last year. After the announceme­nt, Blue Apron shares jumped 11.4% to close at $1.27.

This is New York-based Blue Apron’s latest move to expand beyond its subscripti­on business, which is reeling from customer defections as more companies — including Jet’s parent Walmart — enter the meal-kit space.

“This is a big, big important step for us,” Blue Apron Chief Executive Brad Dickerson said, adding that the “vast majority” of customers would rather order meal kits on short notice, eschewing the traditiona­l Blue Apron subscripti­on model that requires users to plan meals well in advance.

The partnershi­p also brings new credibilit­y to Jet’s grocery ambitions and amps up the fierce battle for New Yorkers’ online food budgets. Jet is up against Amazon.com Inc.’s Prime Now service, Ahold Delhaize’s Peapod and closely held market leader Fresh Direct, which are all investing to capture more customers.

Acquired by Walmart for $3.3 billion in 2016, Jet is making a play for busy, affluent city dwellers who already shop on Jet for general merchandis­e and household goods. The company plans to open a fulfillmen­t center in New York’s Bronx borough this year, and grocery deliveries will be handled by Parcel, a New York logistics company Walmart bought last year. Jet doesn’t disclose what share of its sales come from food, but “it’s smaller than we want it to be,” President Simon Belsham has said.

Jet offers Blue Apron a source of new revenue at a crucial time. The number of people ordering Blue Apron’s signature boxes of ingredient­s to make homecooked meals dropped 24% in the second quarter compared with the same period last year, leading CEO Dickerson to look for new channels to sell his wares, such as Costco Wholesale Corp. and online delivery services like Seamless and GrubHub Inc. Blue Apron has projected declining sales over the back half of 2018, and before Monday, its shares had fallen more than 70% this year.

The Blue Apron meal kits on Jet each serve two people and can be prepared in about 30 minutes, the companies said. They’ll range in price from $16.99 for the Italian farro bowl to $22.99 for the seared steaks meal.

 ?? Richard Drew Associated Press ?? MEAL KITS from Blue Apron are now carried by Jet.com. Blue Apron shares rose 11.4% on the news.
Richard Drew Associated Press MEAL KITS from Blue Apron are now carried by Jet.com. Blue Apron shares rose 11.4% on the news.

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