The Malta Business Weekly

Sainsbury’s-Asda may ‘have to sell at least 73 shops’

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At least 73 supermarke­ts will have to be sold in order for Sainsbury’s proposed merger with Asda to be given the go-ahead, according to new research.

And it’s in the south-east and the north-west of England where stores are most under threat.

The new supermarke­t group would become the largest in the UK by market share.

The £15bn deal is set to face huge scrutiny by the Competitio­n and Markets Authority. regulator.

It’s the CMA’s job to prevent companies becoming too dominant and harmful to consumers.

If the CMA approves this merger, then many expect both chains to have to give up a number of stores.

However, divining how the Competitio­n and Markets Authority will vet this controvers­ial mega-merger is no straightfo­rward task.

“There hasn’t been a retail deal like this in more than a decade,” says David Haywood, founder of Maximise UK, which is an expert in identifyin­g the best locations for stores.

He reckons at least 6% or 73 of the combined group’s supermarke­ts are at risk, a figure that excludes convenienc­e stores.

Mr Haywood worked on the last big retail merger - the takeover of Safeway by Morrisons in 2004.

The market looks very different today, with the rise of the discounter­s and the ability to buy groceries online.

So how will the CMA view this blockbuste­r merger?

“The real focus will be on how Sainsbury’s and Asda’s main supermarke­ts operate at a local level and how they overlap. The CMA will be concerned about whether the deal reduces the number of competing brands within a 10 or 15 minute drive time,” says Mr Haywood.

One of the key questions is what weight the CMA gives to Aldi and Lidl, which have grabbed more than 12% of the grocery market and are continuing to open lots of stores.

Maximise UK’s calculatio­ns do include Aldi and Lidl as effective competitor brands.

But it says if the CMA takes a more conservati­ve view and excludes the discounter­s, then the number of potential store disposals leaps to 245, a number that would weaken the financial merits of the tie-up.

The CMA has included Aldi and Lidl in a number of previous cases, although they’ve been given a lower “weighting” in some investigat­ions because they didn’t stock all of the products of their competitor­s.

Sainsbury’s is confident that the regulators will take a more sophistica­ted approach this time round reflecting the changes in how and where people shop.

It also believes there are aren’t as many overlaps as critics may think because its stores are mainly in the South East while Asda is a major player in the North.

And both chains will no doubt be emboldened by the recent CMA decision to approve the takeover of the wholesaler, Booker, by Tesco.

Sainsbury’s chief executive, Mike Coupe, has insisted there won’t be any store closures as a result of the merger, and that any stores that needed to be off-loaded would be sold as trading entities.

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