Pic: Simon Lambert and Sons, a pub in Wexford
Tuesday 12 January 2016
Sunday 10 January 2016
Wednesday 6 January 2016
Argos - a Local-leap by Sainsbury's?
Yesterday’s
surprise announcement of an initial rebuff by HRG not only places the
Argos-Homebase combination firmly in the takeover frame, but also sets a
minimum starting price of £1bn.
The
advantages for Sainsbury’s in terms of adding to their non-food offering,
making more use of big-space via a transfer of Argos Click & Collect, and
re-acquiring a DIY operation they sold some years back, combined with
successful initial trials of Argos shop-in-shop make this a must-have
acquisition, but not at any price.
Incidentally,
gaining access to Argos Click & Collect expertise hopefully does not
rank high in terms of plus-points, given that this ‘mail-order’ company
transitioned into ‘hard-copy’ click & collect as an extension of their
original business rather than a high-tech entry into online…
It
also goes without saying that Argos vs. Amazon is a no-contest battle, on any parameter…
In
terms of upping-the-ante, with a market capitalisation of £5bn, a share price
showing a 57% drop since 2008, and continuing pressure from the discounters,
Sainsbury’s is not in a position to raise their bid significantly in the month
that remains in which to make an improved offer.
However,
having put HRG in the spotlight, other mults now have until 2nd February to assess the
relative appeal of acquisition in terms of similar advantages to their
businesses.
In
practice, Tesco and Morrisons are currently distracted by more pressing issues,
but Asda’s Walmart (Mkt Cap $196bn) would have little problem in covering
‘whatever it takes’ to add scale to their UK repertoire…
On
balance, the next move depends on the extent to which Sainsbury’s faith in the
future of Local convenience causes them to consider converting ‘as many as it
takes’ of Argos 800 High Street outlets – moving more Argos ranges into larger
Sainsbury’s outlets – into additional Local branches, and persuading their
largest shareholder - Qatari - to make up the difference…
Tuesday 5 January 2016
Amazon Pantry could help itself to Ocado's lunch, but the combination impacts us all
Source: Wired via Business Insider
An article in Business Insider, acknowledges that the introduction of Amazon Pantry, already impacting Ocado shares, down 35% since June 2015, is hurting Ocado, but reports that Goldman Sachs has an interesting theory about how this might actually be good for Ocado.
Essentially, apart from putting Ocado into the takeover frame, Amazon Pantry will add to pressure on the mults, pointing them at possibly leasing Ocado's online platform and delivery infrastructure, and, as per Paul Clarke's presentation above, online grocery delivery is more complicated than general merchandise.
However, the real issue is that the combination of Amazon and Ocado expertise is raising the online bar to such an extent that other retailers may not even bother...
NB Making a difference to your online approach in 2016: If you want a real insight into the unprecedented standards being set by Ocado in developing an online multi-product delivery-pipeline into your home, see CEO Paul Clarke's 16min +10min Q&A presentation to the Wired Retail conference above
Tuesday 22 December 2015
Sir Ken Morrison's £6.6m Stake In Sainsbury’s, 'just looking'?
Sir Ken Morrison, the former Chairman and life president of Morrisons, has built up a £6.6m stake in Sainsbury’s.
According to The Times, Sir Ken owns 2.6m shares in the rival supermarket whilst his son William owns 2.1m, giving them a combined stake worth of £11.9m. Filings reveal that Sir Ken purchased his stake around April last year when as his frustrations with the management team of Morrisons was reaching its peak. He memorably criticised the then Chief Executive Dalton Philips, saying his turnaround strategy was "bulls***"....more
Monday 21 December 2015
Coles' onshelf Price-rise buck-pass
pic: The Sydney Morning Herald
In a move reported in The Sydney Morning Herald, allegedly aimed at pressuring a supplier to reverse price rises, Coles in Australia has put signs on its shelves, saying popular infant formula maker Bellamy's threatened to pull its product if the grocer didn't accept its price rises.
Fortunately, demand for Bellamy's is too big to delist - part of the unprecedented Chinese demand for infant formula - but the real risk for suppliers and retailers is that one-sided revelations of a price negotiation could result in exposure of full concession exchange - think trade investment, pricing support, and all the other product-support mechanisms that would look outrageous in the tabloid press...
A pointer for other retailers, in other places?
In a move reported in The Sydney Morning Herald, allegedly aimed at pressuring a supplier to reverse price rises, Coles in Australia has put signs on its shelves, saying popular infant formula maker Bellamy's threatened to pull its product if the grocer didn't accept its price rises.
Fortunately, demand for Bellamy's is too big to delist - part of the unprecedented Chinese demand for infant formula - but the real risk for suppliers and retailers is that one-sided revelations of a price negotiation could result in exposure of full concession exchange - think trade investment, pricing support, and all the other product-support mechanisms that would look outrageous in the tabloid press...
A pointer for other retailers, in other places?
Saturday 19 December 2015
Thursday 10 December 2015
Back to the Future via Hovering Lucozade Thief
Sky News report (here) the theft of a case of Lucozade from a Mitcham Co-op by a man on a hoverboard. When you check the security video, the shock is not that it can be done, but the fact that it happened in slow-motion, proving that really original instore theatre can over-ride blatant theft, the first time…
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