No-frills discounter Aldi is the latest grocer to shake up the industry with big moves.
The German retailer announced this week that it plans to amass about 400 Winn-Dixie and Harveys Supermarket locations across the Southern U.S. As a part of the deal, it will take over operations of the stores, that are in Florida, Alabama, Georgia, Louisiana and Mississippi, and put a minimum of a few of them under the Aldi name.
The deal is expected to shut in the first half of next 12 months.
Aldi is already expanding aggressively across the country. It has greater than 2,300 stores across 38 states. Separate from the acquisition, it is heading in the right direction to open 120 recent stores by year-end.
The proposed deal comes as Kroger‘s $24.6 billion acquisition of Albertsons is pending. Firms including Amazon and Goal are also attempting to snap up more grocery market share as inflation-weary consumers proceed to purchase food and essentials but develop into more frugal in the case of other merchandise like clothing and electronics.
Like Trader Joe’s and fellow Germany-based rival Lidl, Aldi relies heavily by itself brands. About 90% of products it carries are Aldi’s private label, which allows it greater scale and lower costs in areas like marketing and the supply chain. Aldi also gets creative to maintain costs low, including by reducing the size of a pasta sauce lid and other packaging and using electronic shelf labels that save on labor and materials.
As inflation cools, that would present a recent challenge for Aldi — if shoppers revert to old habits like shopping at neighborhood grocery stores that will have higher prices, or go for a favourite name-brand cereal or more variety. It is also needed to race to maintain up with competitors’ online options, prompting Aldi to expand curbside pickup to more stores.
The privately held retailer didn’t share financial details of the acquisition. But the deal has big implications for publicly traded competitors including Walmart and Kroger, in addition to regional grocers.
CNBC spoke to Jason Hart, the CEO of Aldi U.S., about why the company is doing the deal and the way it sees Aldi fitting right into a fast-changing grocery landscape. His comments were edited for brevity and clarity.
Why was Aldi interested in acquiring Winn-Dixie and Harveys Supermarket? Why acquire slightly than construct your personal a whole bunch of stores in similar locations?
This acquisition provides us speed to market with quality retail locations, great people and a solid core business in a region of the country, the Southeast, where we have already had and experienced significant growth and success, but we also see way more opportunity and there is way more consumer demand to fulfill.
Doing this [expanding] on our own organically, that has been our plan, and that has been our trajectory over a lot of years, and in the Southeast as well. …. This acquisition really gives us the opportunity to speed up all of those plans.
Jason Hart, Aldi U.S. CEO
ALDI Creative Quarter Studio/ Katrina Wittkamp
What should shoppers expect to see at those stores on the other side of the acquisition?
We’re currently evaluating which locations we’ll convert to the Aldi format to raised support the communities that we have now got the opportunity to serve more closely. We will convert a big amount to the Aldi format after the transaction is closed and over the course of several years.
For those stores we don’t convert, our intention is that a meaningful amount of those will proceed to operate as Winn-Dixie and [Harveys] Supermarket stores.
In stores that you simply select to not convert with the acquisition, will people begin to see a few of those Aldi products on Winn-Dixie shelves?
We are able to actually see and picture some future synergies and learnings from one another, whether that is consumer insights, product ideas, merchandising ideas, but at this point, we just have no definitive plans to announce.
What do you’re thinking that your stores offer that other players like Walmart, Kroger and even Dollar General don’t?
We feature a limited variety of SKUs [stock keeping units, the term used to describe each type of product carried by a retailer] firstly — a few thousand SKUs in our stores versus our competition that will have over and over that — that drives higher volume per SKU, driving scale that gives efficiency each in our business and for our suppliers.
The handfuls of brands and sizes and small variants of the same product — the results of that [in rival stores] is tens of hundreds of products that won’t necessarily the results of customer demand. It’s more so the brand’s demand for shelf space inside those stores. And the result actually can frustrate customers by overcomplicating the shopping experience. At Aldi, we simplify that shopping experience for the customer, offering great quality and great prices.
Why do you’re thinking that we’re seeing so many big moves in the grocery industry immediately?
The way in which that customers are shopping is changing quite dramatically. And in addition the drive to value. And clearly, there are alternative retail formats which might be growing quicker than the traditional formats. We’re very proud to be one in every of those alternative formats that is really disrupting the industry.
Consumers appear to be willing to try other ways to fill their grocery list, whether that is through e-commerce, whether that is through trying out discounters like Aldi, [and] trying out different products like private label.
When consumers are seeing these changes, and seeing other retailers and other products meet their needs, they modify their shopping habits.
What are the trends with online and in-store sales now as the pandemic is more in the rearview mirror?
We’re now seeing equal growth in each our bricks-and-mortar sales and in our e-commerce sales. I’d anticipate if I used to be to have a look at the crystal ball of the future, it will return to e-commerce growing barely greater than what bricks and mortar is each in the market and for Aldi.