Porterville Recorder

Amazon to cut prices on Whole Foods staples like eggs, beef

- By BERNARD CONDON AP BUSINESS WRITER

NEW YORK — Amazon plans to use its deep pockets to make big changes at Whole Foods, saying it will cut prices on bananas, eggs, salmon, beef and more when it completes its $13.7 billion takeover next week.

Helping Whole Foods win back customers who found "good enough" organic and natural products elsewhere — possibly at a lower cost — fits Amazon's track record of keeping prices low to lock in customer loyalty. Looking ahead, Amazon hopes to give members of its Prime program special savings and other in-store benefits.

It's an "opening salvo" in the grocery wars, said Neil Saunders, managing director of Globaldata Retail, and shares of other supermarke­ts fell sharply on the news.

"Rivals should be under no illusion that they are now dealing with a competitor that is not afraid to damage profits and margins if it creates longterm gains," Saunders said in an analyst note.

Among other Whole Foods items getting discounts Monday: avocados, tilapia, baby kale, apples and rotisserie chicken — all organic, Amazon said. The company also said certain Whole Foods products will be available through Amazon.com, Amazonfres­h, Prime Pantry and Prime Now.

Amazon's announceme­nt comes a day after Whole Foods shareholde­rs gave their approval and the Federal Trade Commission said it would not block the purchase. Amazon will pay $42 per Whole Foods share, an 18 percent premium from its price the day before the tie-up was announced June 16. The stock edged up to $41.98 on Thursday.

By buying Whole Foods, Amazon is taking a bold step into brick-and-mortar, with its more than 460 stores and potentiall­y very lucrative data about how shoppers behave offline. The grocery chain, which has fought the "Whole Paycheck" reputation, had been under shareholde­r pressure to improve results as customers moved on and discount chains like Lidl and Aldi expanded in the U.S.

Whether Amazon will succeed in the fiercely competitiv­e grocery segment is unclear, but customers are going to benefit from the attempt, said Charlie O'shea, lead retail analyst at Moody's Investors Service.

"Amazon can come in and price items very low," he said. "Its shareholde­rs are agnostic about profit, and seem more interested revenue and market share. That's a competitiv­e advantage."

 ?? AP PHOTO BY GENE J. PUSKAR ?? In this May 3, file photo, customers shop at a Whole Foods Market in Upper Saint Clair, Pa.
AP PHOTO BY GENE J. PUSKAR In this May 3, file photo, customers shop at a Whole Foods Market in Upper Saint Clair, Pa.

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