Showing posts with label Harris Teeter. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Harris Teeter. Show all posts

Wednesday, November 6, 2013

Kroger could grow by building stores, not just buying them



Kroger Co. will look at growing by building its own stores just as much as buying them, CEO David Dillon told a group of investors and analysts on Wednesday at the company’s investor conference.
“We look at M&A (mergers and acquisitions) as one of the vehicles we can use to go into new markets and one of the vehicles that can add fill-in,” Dillon said. “There’s not a preference. Sometimes you have a choice and sometimes you don’t. We pick a strategy based on the fact of the situation.”
Mike Ellis, Kroger’s (NYSE: KR) senior vice president of retail divisions, added that Kroger CFO Mike Schlotman has told company executives that as long as the financial performance of new stores can meet Kroger’s targets, it doesn’t matter which route it takes to expand. Ellis will become president and COO on Jan. 1,when Rodney McMullen takes over for the retiring Dillon as CEO.
Dillon also talked about Kroger’s hesitance to make too big of a push into home delivery, a stance Kroger executives have talked about in the past. Amazon.com has said it will start offering home delivery of groceries on the West Coast, but Kroger has been dubious that fresh goods can easily be delivered in a practical manner and that many customers want home delivery.
“We do expect some change in that environment,” Dillon said of home delivery. “The issues ultimately come down to what does the customer want and how can it be provided? Nothing has changed, except the customer’s interest might be changing.”
Dillon also said Amazon is different because its stock is judged on revenue and not on the cash flow it produces, as Kroger is.
McMullen added that Kroger has spent plenty of time and effort studying home-delivery models in Europe.
“There are markets out there that are more mature than the U.S. that you can learn from,” McMullen said.
Dillon told a story about sitting in a vendor-sponsored meeting 20 to 25 years ago that was also attended by Lee Scott, who later became Walmart Stores’ CEO. Faith Popcorn, a futurist, said at that meeting that groceries would shift to almost all home delivery within five to 10 years. That obviously didn’t happen.
“I wouldn’t be too quick to assume that the leap to home delivery ends up replacing everything,” Dillon said. “I think a large percentage of customers still like to get out and have that interaction with friends and neighbors as they walk through the store.”
Schlotman said Kroger is still on track to wrap up its acquisition of Harris Teeter Supermarkets Inc. (NYSE: HTSI) by its target of the end of its fiscal year on Feb. 1. He’ll lead the integration effort.
“A lot of work has already happened,” he said, adding much can’t take place until theFederal Trade Commission approves the deal.
Kroger is working on a list of items and prioritizing them, much as it did with the Fred Meyer acquisition in 1998. It developed an A list and a B list and focused on the A-list items first. When those were done, the B-list items moved up.
“That way you don’t get distracted from the most important things by good ideas that are secondary,” he said.
Kroger also reconfirmed its earnings guidance for the year. It still expects to generate same-store sales growth of 3 percent to 3.5 percent and earnings per share of $2.73 to $2.80.
It updated its labor situation in a Securities and Exchange Commission filing along with the presentation. It will negotiate a deal with the United Commercial and Food Workers union for Cincinnati employees later this year and has reached a tentative agreement with that union in Seattle, it said. It also plans to address its underfunded pension plan.
Written By:

Staff Reporter-Cincinnati Business Courier
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Monday, October 21, 2013

Analysts expect more M&A from Kroger

Kroger could be in the market for more supermarket chains


Harris Teeter acquisition may be first of more in effort to grow, but Kroger will be cautious


Cincinnati-based Kroger is about to close on a $2.5 billion purchase of upscale Harris Teeter, and is always on the lookout for the next great deal.

Could Dominick’smarkets in Chicago be Kroger’s next purchase? A&P on the East Coast? Or a solid regional performer like Weis Markets in Pennsylvania?

In the past year, Kroger executives have indicated a new willingness to grow faster – including through acquisition. And the timing could be right: More than $10 billion worth of deals have been announced this year in the supermarket industry – the biggest wave of consolidation since 2006.

Still, many analysts urge caution.

• Interactive: Where Kroger might grow

Although more deals are likely for Kroger, the nation’s largest supermarket chain is notoriously picky about what it buys. Generally, Kroger prefers to acquire healthy operations, not struggling stores that currently dominate the prospective list of takeover rivals.

The steps Kroger takes with future acquisitions could determine how fast the company gets bigger and whether that means better. More stores and more sales could mean more profits and a higher stock price, unless Kroger acquires a dud that could drain resources and drag profits down.

Company executives don’t want a slowdown now. Shares hit an all-time high last week at $42.22, up more than 25 percent since the start of the year.

“I don’t see Kroger running out right away to make another major acquisition while still digesting and integrating Harris Teeter,” said Carol Levenson, an analyst with Gimmie Credit. “But you never know.”

Acquisition can be easier way to enter new markets
Analysts say grocery-chain mergers are accelerating due to a combination of low interest rates on loans and a gradual economic recovery. Because the industry grows slowly and is very competitive, strong operators consider buying weaker ones as one of the fastest and cheapest ways to grow.

Kroger – one of the strongest financial operators – has virtual first-refusal rights on any store or chain up for sale, analysts say. The company’s all-cash offer beat out 18 rival suitors for Harris Teeter, the highly regarded chain of 212 stores known for its loyal customers and copious food samplings.

Executives with the North Carolina chain even rejected a slightly higher offer because they doubted the other bidder could deliver the stated value.

“Kroger has built itself up and is doing very well,” said Andy Wolf, an analyst with BB&T Capital Markets.

The Harris Teeter takeover comes a year after Kroger boldly announced it was stepping up its growth targets. Last October, the company said it would ramp up capital spending by $200 million each year. The company also said it would invest in a targeted expansion strategy “in existing markets and enter new markets.”

“Kroger typically expands in new territories through acquisitions,” Kantar Retail analyst Alida Destrempe wrote in a September report.

The Harris Teeter deal delivers on Kroger’s expansion goals by strengthening its presence in five Southeastern states and giving it a foothold in three new ones as well as the District of Columbia. Even after the deal closes late this year, Kroger still has more territory to fill: It has no presence in 16 states, mostly in the upper Midwest and the Northeast.

Analysts note that, besides Harris Teeter, Kroger hasn’t made a large acquisition since 1999, when it merged with the Fred Meyer chain in a $13 billion deal. Instead Kroger has scooped up handfuls of stores over the past decade in a series of smaller deals. Many see Kroger sticking to that playbook.

Kroger officials declined to comment for this story.

Struggling companies come with disadvantages
Potential deals abound in regions where Kroger might like to expand: Safeway announced last month it will exit the Chicago market where it operates the Dominick’schain. The New Jersey-based Great Atlantic & Pacific Tea Co. reportedly is shopping itself around. And Pennsylvania-based Weis Markets Inc. is in the midst of a management restructuring.

Analysts, though, believe Kroger will remain choosy. The turmoil within a company, division or market that often spurs the sale of a store or chain of stores could be what turns Kroger off.

“Kroger may not want a fixer-upper,” said Charles Pinson-Rose, an analyst with Standard & Poor’s. “They like good assets that add something to their operations.”

The Chicago market could be very appealing for Kroger, which strives to be the No. 1 or No. 2 player in every market in which it competes. Chicago is a major market where Kroger is a bit player with just 16 of its Food 4 Less stores.

“I wouldn’t rule it out. Kroger obviously wants to be in Chicago; it’s an opportunity to expand,” Morningstar analyst Ken Perkins said. “If anybody were to buy a lot of Dominick’s, it would be Kroger.”

Wolf noted, though, that Dominick’s is damaged goods: The No. 2 Chicago grocer (after Jewel-Osco) is in danger of slipping to No. 3 or 4. Kroger might be interested in buying some of the 72 stores for sale, but trying to turn around performance in a lot of them could prove an expensive distraction.

Perkins agreed that Kroger would need a big enough opportunity at a good price to justify buying a significant number ofDominick’s stores.

Ditto for Great Atlantic & Pacific Tea Co. with 320 stores from Maryland to Connecticut. The grocer has struggled and downsized for years and just emerged from bankruptcy in 2012. News reports say the whole A&P chain might be available for between $500 million to $1 billion.

“There’s a reason these assets are for sale,” Telsey Advisory Group analyst Joseph Feldman said.

Financial data provides clues to other, healthier potential acquisition targets.

Stock in Weis Markets trades at about $50 per share, cheap when measured by its price to earnings ratio. The company operates 165 stores in Pennsylvania, Maryland, New Jersey, New York and West Virginia.

While Weis Markets sales dropped 1.9 percent last year, its financial results are relatively strong, showing consistent profits for more than a decade. Nonetheless, its chief executive, David Hepfinger, abruptly left the company last month to “pursue other interests” and Jonathan Weis, 45, grandson of the founder, was named interim CEO.

Weis officials declined to say whether Weis will remain in charge or whether a permanent CEO is being sought.

Weis Markets keeps a fairly low profile in the industry, but analysts say family-controlled companies become more likely to sell out to a larger player when a third generation of family assumes control. Company chairman Robert Weis, the 93-year-old son of co-founder Harry Weis, owns almost 47 percent of the company.

Feldman said companies with families owning large stakes could make a deal very easy or shut it down, depending on their wishes. He declined to speculate what the Weis family might do with their company.

Another potentially undervalued chain operating in untapped or underpenetrated markets for Kroger would be Milwaukee-based Roundy’s, which operates 160 stores in Wisconsin, Minnesota and Illinois. Last year, Roundy’s booked a $69.3 million loss amid tougher competition after years of consistent profits. With a stock trading below $8 the entire company theoretically could be purchased for less than $350 million.

Back in Chicago, Wolf noted Kroger might be holding out for a far bigger prize: Jewel-Osco, the region’s No. 1 player with 176 stores. The chain was acquired by an investment group led by private equity outfit Cerberus Capital Management.

Jewel-Osco is part of the troubled Albertson’s empire that was sold off by Supervalu for $3.3 billion in March. Wolf believes Cerberus will fix up various Albertson’s divisions in the next few years, then sell them off. 

Written by: 
Alexander Coolidge


Wednesday, September 25, 2013

Click and Collect Could Present Grocery Online Ordering Opportunities Without Risk of Delivery System

Much has been made about supermarkets being slow to roll out online ordering and the difficulties companies (and even Amazon) have experienced in making grocery delivery profitable.

Click and collect, where customers order groceries online but pick them up at a store or other designated location, might be a way for retailers to enter the digital space with fewer risks than delivery.

From a consumer standpoint, store pick-up can offer more convenience because you don’t have to wait around for the delivery person to show up and can avoid paying a delivery fee. For retailers, it saves money over delivery and opens up new markets, especially for suburban stores where delivery would be too cost prohibitive. As Bill Bishop, founder of consultancy Brick Meets Click, told CNBC, "It eliminates big barriers. ... It's a way to modify the model to accommodate a whole boatload of people."

Click and collect already has a loyal following in Europe. In the UK alone, online grocery shopping is expected to grow 126% to £14.6 billion ($23.4 billion) in the next five years thanks in part to retailers offering grocery pick-up.

Harris Teeter is one U.S. retailer that has been experimenting with both home delivery and store pick-up for online orders with its Express Lane service. Currently, the chain is piloting a mobile wallet to make the “collect” part of click and collect go faster. At the pick-up location, customers scan a QR code with an app, which processes payment from a predetermined credit card and sends a digital receipt.

Some customers have heaped praise on Express Lane, while others’ reactions provide a cautionary tale for what happens when services don’t match expectations.

Read More: http://supermarketnews.com/blog/click-and-collect-presents-online-ordering-opportunities#ixzz2fuELxm2w

Tuesday, July 9, 2013

Kroger to Buy Harris Teeter for $2.4 Billion


A Kroger-operated market in Del Mar, Calif. Kroger will acquire 212 Harris Teeter stores.
The Kroger Company, seeking to expand in the Southeast and mid-Atlantic regions, said on Tuesday that it would acquire Harris Teeter Supermarkets for $2.4 billion.
Kroger agreed to pay $49.38 a share in cash, about 2 percent above Harris Teeter’s closing price on Monday and 34 percent above the price on Jan. 18, when media reports emerged that Harris Teeter was exploring strategic alternatives.
Harris Teeter has 212 stores in North Carolina, Virginia, South Carolina, Maryland, Tennessee, Delaware, Florida, Georgia and the District of Columbia. The company also operates distribution centers for grocery, frozen and perishable foods in North Carolina. Harris Teeter posted $4.5 billion in revenue for the 2012 fiscal year.   Kroger said it would finance the transaction with debt and assume Harris Teeter’s outstanding debt of about $100 million. Harris Teeter will continue to operate its stores as a subsidiary of Kroger and will continue to be led by Harris Teeter’s senior management team. There are no plans to close stores.
Kroger expects the deal to result in savings of $40 million to $50 million over the next three to four years.
“This is a financially and strategically compelling transaction and a unique opportunity for our shareholders and associates,” David B. Dillon, Kroger’s chairman and chief executive, said in a statement. “Harris Teeter is an exceptional company with a great brand, friendly and talented associates, and attractive store formats in vibrant markets run by a first-class management team.”

Thomas W. Dickson, the chairman and chief executive of Harris Teeter, said, “Harris Teeter has a long track record of creating shareholder value, and this merger is the culmination of those efforts over many years.”

Bank of America Merrill Lynch advised Kroger and Arnold & Porter served as legal adviser. J.P. Morgan Securities advised Harris Teeter, and McGuireWoods was its legal adviser.

Original Article authored by Dealbook for the NYTIMES and can be located here)http://dealbook.nytimes.com/2013/07/09/kroger-to-buy-harris-teeter-for-2-4-billion/?ref=business