The Jerusalem Post

Big Food hungry for meal kits despite Blue Apron IPO flop

- • By LAUREN HIRSCH

The downsized initial public offering of Blue Apron Holdings Inc., the first US meal-kit company to go public, may have disappoint­ed venture-capital investors, but food companies with stakes in the sector may still see returns in the form of insight into changing eating habits.

The meal-kit investment­s have come as out-of-favor brands, increased competitio­n and pricing wars among grocers weigh on sales and profitabil­ity at the biggest food companies.

The packaged-food companies hope that the new and growing meal-delivery industry, with its detailed consumer-preference­s data and feedback, will help big brands reconnect with young shoppers who have moved to new distributi­on channels or abandoned staple labels for fresher, healthier or specialty items.

Campbell Soup Co., the 148-yearold Camden, New Jersey-based packaged-food manufactur­er best known for its canned soups, in May invested $10 million in El Segundo, California-based Chef’d LLC, a Blue Apron competitor that allows users to personaliz­e meal kits with branded pairings.

Even if Blue Apron and its competitor­s struggle to make their model profitable and attractive to public markets, Mark Alexander, who oversees Campbell’s digital and e-commerce initiative­s, expects benefits from the relatively tiny investment for $16 billion Campbell.

“Meal kits may not turn into the biggest thing, and I think even if they don’t, we would have learned a lot about consumer shopping, food preference­s, what consumers like about bundled services and what they don’t like,” he said in an interview last week.

Campbell has struggled with weakening demand for its core products and warned in May that its full-year sales could decline.

Just 23% of Americans buy groceries online, but that share is expected to more than triple in less than 10 years

Blue Apron, the biggest meal-kit delivery company, was forced last week to accept a valuation and public offering that were about a third smaller than it had hoped. Investors had expressed concerns about its lack of profitabil­ity, marketing costs and the impact of Amazon.com Inc.’s $13.7b. deal earlier last month to buy US grocer Whole Foods Market Inc.

Blue Apron shares traded at around $9.45 on Friday, below their $10 IPO price, giving the company a market capitaliza­tion of about $1.8b., less than the $2.2b. valuation of its latest private fund-raising round two years ago.

While the vast majority of investment­s in meal-kit companies, totaling $1.4b. in 2016, came from venture-capital firms hoping to reap big profits as these start-ups expand, a tiny fraction came from big food companies.

Nestle SA led a $77m. investment round in Freshly in June, while Unilever Plc’s venture-capital arm led a $9.2m. investment in Sun Basket in May.

Blue Apron does not have any investment from a major food company.

While Amazon’s splashy bet on Whole Foods sent jitters across the food retail sector over its potential to revolution­ize the e-commerce company’s reach, the investment­s in meal-kit delivery companies are a way for major companies to carry out smaller-scale experiment­s as consumers move to buying food online.

Just 23% of Americans buy groceries online, but that share is expected to more than triple in less than 10 years, according to data provider The Nielsen Company.

“I think Nestle and other consumer packaged-good companies said we want to be part of this new industry and understand more in-depthly how it affects our business,” Freshly chief executive Michael Wystrach said.

DATA LABS

Meal-delivery companies rely on online registrati­on for their services. Customers can provide feedback on the meals and informatio­n on their preference­s, representi­ng a valuable data trove that can be used to develop targeting advertisem­ent.

“We can ask people questions to help them find items and collect data that is individual and granular,” Chef’d CEO Kyle Ransford said. “That data is different than the demographi­c data [at supermarke­ts] because it can tell us more, such as a person’s lifestyle, cooking habits or allergies.”

To be sure, meal-kit investment­s by big food companies are in their infancy, and the value they can offer as consumer-data labs is unproven. Supermarke­ts have also been tracking shopping habits for years, with varying degrees of success.

And as Blue Apron’s IPO shows, investors are concerned about how sticky the meal-kit subscripti­on models actually are, raising the risk of consumers moving on to the next food trend before providing enough data to be meaningful.

Still, the delivery services offer a venue to quickly test new products and ideas, in contrast to lengthy and often costly focus groups usually used by big consumer companies.

“We have real-time response to the consumers: what do they like, what do they buy rapidly, and what should we make rapidly. It is a realtime test market,” Campbell Soup’s Alexander said.

 ?? (Lucas Jackson/Reuters) ?? BLUE APRON CEO Matthew B. Salzberg (center) poses with employees in front of the New York Stock Exchange before the company’s initial public offering last Thursday. Blue Apron, the biggest meal-kit delivery company, was forced to accept a valuation and...
(Lucas Jackson/Reuters) BLUE APRON CEO Matthew B. Salzberg (center) poses with employees in front of the New York Stock Exchange before the company’s initial public offering last Thursday. Blue Apron, the biggest meal-kit delivery company, was forced to accept a valuation and...
 ?? (Lucas Jackson/Reuters) ?? BLUE APRON CEO Matthew B. Salzberg rings a ceremonial bell on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange for the company’s IPO last Thursday.
(Lucas Jackson/Reuters) BLUE APRON CEO Matthew B. Salzberg rings a ceremonial bell on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange for the company’s IPO last Thursday.

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