Kroger-Albertsons Merger Faces Long Road Before Approval (2024)

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Consumer advocates, unions and independent grocers are against a deal that would join Kroger and Albertsons, and be lucrative for investors.

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Kroger-Albertsons Merger Faces Long Road Before Approval (1)

By Julie Creswell

Ever since the pending megamerger between Kroger and Albertsons, the two largest grocery store chains in the country, was announced in October, the companies have argued that the marriage will be good for consumers, employees and communities.

But the biggest winners in the $24.6 billion deal may be the private-equity giant Cerberus and a group of investors. They have already made big profits in their long-term investment in Albertsons and hope to make billions of dollars more through the merger.

The buyout group was a step closer to a big payday last week when the Washington State Supreme Court declined to review a case brought by the state attorney general that tried to stop a dividend payment to Albertsons’ shareholders, arguing that it would financially weaken the company if the transaction failed.

The decision clears the way for Albertsons to pay its shareholders a $4 billion dividend. The buyout group, which owns 73 percent of the company, will receive the biggest share of the dividend, or $3 billion, of which $2.5 billion will come from cash and about $1.5 billion will be borrowed and put on Albertsons’ balance sheet. Albertsons said it would immediately begin the process of paying the special dividend.

The legal challenge to the dividend was the first in what is likely to be a long and arduous process for Kroger and Albertsons, and theirplanto create a behemoth with $200 billion in annual revenues and 5,000 stores across the countryoperating under well-known chains like Safeway, Ralphs and Vons.

The companies have said regulatory approval for the complicatedtransactionwon’t happen until early next year and may require the sale or spinoff of hundreds of grocery stores. Washington Analysis, a research firm in Washington, D.C., that focuses on political and regulatory policy, put the odds of the merger successfully closing at 35 percent.

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At a time when consumers are already withering under high food prices, consumer advocates argue that the deal would wipe out any meaningful competition in numerous cities and communities and ultimately lead to consumers paying more.

Union officials have attacked the deal, saying it puts jobs at risk as antitrust regulators will probably force the sale of hundreds of grocery stores across the country.

“Is my store going to be one that closes? Is my livelihood going to go away?” asked Kyong Barry, 60, a front-end manager at a Safeway in Auburn, Wash. She is a member of the United Food and Commercial Workers International Union, which has 350,000 members working in stores owned by Kroger and Albertsons.

For the past 15 of her 20 years working at the grocery store, Ms. Barry said, she had perfect attendance before a bout of Covid-19 just before Thanksgiving forced her to call out sick. “This is a very scary time for us while they try to pay themselves $4 billion that we helped them make,” she said.

And even independent grocery store chains are fretting about the merger, saying it will result in higher food prices and make the already competitive landscape more difficult.

“When the large power buyers demand full orders, on time and at the lowest cost, it effectively causes the water-bed effect,” said Michael Needler Jr., the president and chief executive of Fresh Encounter, a chain of 98 grocery stores based in Findlay, Ohio. “They push down, and the consumer packaged goods companies have no option but to supply them at their demands, leaving rural stores with higher costs and less availability to products.”

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The two grocery store chains and investment firms involved insist the deal isn’t about a payday for investors.

“Our merger with Albertsons provides meaningful, measurable benefits to America’s consumers, associates of both companies and the communities we serve,” Kroger said in a statement.

Albertsons said in a statement that it had “grown tremendously with the help of our sponsors and other investors.” It added that it had spent billions of dollars to modernize its stores and build digital and technology platforms, as well as to improve associate wages, benefits and training programs.

For the private-equity giant Cerberus, which was co-founded by the billionaire Stephen Feinberg and oversees $60 billion in assets, getting into the grocery business was relatively easy. Getting out has proved much more difficult.

For years, the grocery store industry had low growth yet was intensely competitive, with Walmart, Target, Costco and others increasingly elbowing their way into food shoppers’ carts. As grocery chains struggled to compete against the big-box behemoths, consolidation happened and private-equity firms moved in, sometimes with disastrous results.

Corporate buyout specialists generally raise money from big investors, like pension funds for state employees, teachers, police officers and firefighters, and then buy undervalued or underappreciated companies. To maximize investment returns, the buyout firms typically leverage their cash with loans that are taken out by the company itself.

For most buyout funds, the hope is to fix or improve the company and make profits in a public offering or by selling the company to another buyer within four to seven years. In other instances, the debt piled on the company for the buyout overwhelms it, as was the case in 2016 and again in 2020 when the New York grocery chain Fairway Markets filed for bankruptcy.

Cerberus moved into the grocery business 17 years ago when it acquired 655 struggling stores owned by Albertsons sprinkled around Florida, Texas and Northern California for $350 million in equity. In 2013, the investors put up $100 million in cash and took out $3.2 billion of debt to acquire more than 800 stores from Supervalu. About a year later, more stores were added when the group contributed $1.25 billion to acquire more than 1,300 stores from Safeway. The rest of the $9 billion purchase of the Safeway stores was financed with debt, pushing Albertsons’ total debt to more than $12 billion.

“Our story with Albertsons is one of a long-term partnership that has created thousands of union careers and invested billions into stores, infrastructure and local communities,” Cerberus said in a statement. “It has also supported the retirement savings of individuals, universities, nonprofits and others who have entrusted us as a fiduciary.”

But various efforts by the investors to find a lucrative way to cash out of the grocery store business have been thwarted several times as Albertsons has struggled with net losses for several years.

In 2017, when Albertsons turned a small profit, the investment firms paid themselves a cash distribution of $250 million.

Later, an attempt in 2018 to cash out of the investment fell through when a proposed reverse merger with Rite Aid was scuttled after the drugstore chain’s shareholders opposed it.

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Albertsons went public in the early months of the pandemic, but its offering was lackluster. Still, the investors sold $800 million worth of shares, andanother $1.7 billion was raised from some hedge funds and used to do a share buyback.

But for Albertsons, the pandemic significantly changed its fortunes. As consumers worked from home and ate fewer meals at restaurants, grocery store profits soared. Albertsons’ profits nearly quadrupled to $1.6 billion in 2021 from $466 million in 2019.

The higher profits allowed Albertsons to pay its shareholders nearly $500 million in dividends over the past three years.

The sky-high profits also attracted a suitor. In early 2022, a grocery store chain identified as Party A in securities filings emerged with an offer to buy Albertsons for $41 a share. But as the potential buyer was going through due diligence and shortly after Albertsons’ financial advisers raised the idea of a multi-billion-dollar dividend payout to shareholders, the buyer walked away.

After a scramble to look for alternatives, another buyer was found. In October, Kroger announced it would acquireAlbertsons in a complex deal that would pay all shareholders $34.10 a share. But that value will decrease by $6.85 a share when the $4 billion dividend to all shareholders is paid and could decline further if, in order to receive regulatory approval, hundreds of stores are placed in a new company that would be owned by Albertsons shareholders, including the private-equity firms.

“That’s where the most uncertainty lies — how many stores will they have to divest?” said Arun Sundaram, an equity analyst at CFRA Research. “That could be another $4 a share, which means, at the end of the day, if the deal goes forward, shareholders could receive $23 a share by our estimate.”

For the buyout firms and other investors, which had about $2 billion invested in total in the various grocery store acquisitions, their 73 percent stake in Albertsons would be valued at more than $9 billion. That is on top of the $1.5 billion in profits they’ve already made and the $3 billion from their share of the dividend when it is paid.

“The returns will ultimately be pretty good and probably beat the stock market” over the length of the investment, said Jeffrey Hooke, a former investment banker and author of the book “The Myth of Private Equity,” who is now a finance lecturer at Johns Hopkins Carey Business School. “But the Albertsons shareholders have been hanging on to this company, or its predecessor, for almost 17 years, and that’s a very long holding period for private equity firms. It’s only natural for them to want to seek an exit.”

Julie Creswell is a New York-based reporter. She has covered banks, private equity, retail and health care. She previously worked for Fortune Magazine and also wrote about debt, monetary policy and mutual funds at Dow Jones. @julie_creswell

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Kroger-Albertsons Merger Faces Long Road Before Approval (2024)

FAQs

Kroger-Albertsons Merger Faces Long Road Before Approval? ›

In October 2022, Kroger and Albertsons announced that both companies' respective boards had voted to approve a merger. If the merger is completed in 2024 as its executives expect, Kroger-Albertsons would be the second-largest grocery retail chain in the country, right behind Walmart.

Has the Kroger Albertsons merger been approved? ›

In October 2022, Kroger and Albertsons announced that both companies' respective boards had voted to approve a merger. If the merger is completed in 2024 as its executives expect, Kroger-Albertsons would be the second-largest grocery retail chain in the country, right behind Walmart.

Why does Kroger want to merge with Albertsons? ›

The two grocery store chains and investment firms involved insist the deal isn't about a payday for investors. “Our merger with Albertsons provides meaningful, measurable benefits to America's consumers, associates of both companies and the communities we serve,” Kroger said in a statement.

Is Kroger buying Albertsons or is Albertsons buying Kroger? ›

Under the terms of the merger agreement, which has been unanimously approved by the board of directors of each company, Kroger will acquire all of the outstanding shares of Albertsons Companies, Inc.

How much is Albertsons merger with Kroger stock? ›

According to the original merger agreement, Kroger was planning to pay $34.10 per share to investors in Albertsons. That amount would ultimately be decreased by a special dividend paid out by Albertsons that ultimately ended up being worth $6.85 per share.

Which government agency is reviewing Kroger's proposed acquisition of Albertsons? ›

Acquiring Albertsons

The Federal Trade Commission is talking to companies that sell groceries across the country about their views on the potential acquisition of Albertsons by Kroger, the Wall Street Journal reported.

Is U.S. Grocer Kroger in talks to merge with rival Albertsons? ›

Oct 13 (Reuters) - U.S. grocery company Kroger Co (KR. N) is in talks to merge with smaller rival Albertsons Companies Inc (ACI. N) in a tie-up that would create a supermarket titan, people familiar with the matter said.

What's the status of the Kroger Albertsons merger? ›

Union officially rejects Kroger, Albertsons merger | Supermarket News. The UFCW announced it was against the merger back in November of 2022.

What are the legal issues with Kroger and Albertsons merger? ›

The consumer group's lawsuit argues that the Kroger-Albertsons merger—by combining the nation's two largest supermarket companies—violates antitrust law because it would quell competition, reduce consumer choice and raise prices in the grocery store sector, as well as trigger job cuts from store closings.

Is Kroger bigger than Albertsons? ›

Albertsons is the second-largest supermarket company, owning 2,300 stores and employing 290,000 people. Kroger is the largest supermarket operator in the U.S., with more than 2,700 stores and 450,000 employees and owns other supermarket chains like Harris Teeter, Fred Meyer and Ralphs.

Did grocery consumers sue to block Kroger's $25 billion buy of Albertsons? ›

Feb 3(Reuters) - A private lawsuit filed in California on Thursday seeks to stop Kroger Co's (KR. N) planned $25 billion purchase of rival Albertsons Companies Inc (ACI. N), a deal that state attorneys general, consumer groups and some U.S. lawmakers have questioned as harmful to competition in the grocery market.

Did grocery consumers sue to block Kroger's $25 BLN buy of Albertsons? ›

Albertsons Shoppers Sue To Block $25 Billion Grocery Mega-Merger; Wyoming Workers Still Wary. More than two dozen Albertsons customers are suing to stop a $25 billion merger between the largest grocery chains in the U.S. They also want to rewind a recent $4 billion dividend paid out to Albertsons shareholders.

What is Kroger profit for 2023? ›

Kroger annual gross profit for 2023 was $31.778B, a 4.71% increase from 2022. Kroger annual gross profit for 2022 was $30.349B, a 1.79% decline from 2021.

What is the special dividend for Kroger Albertsons merger? ›

In the Kroger-Albertsons merger announcement, Albertsons reported that it would pay its shareholders a special cash dividend of about $6.85 per share, up to $4 billion. The actual total of the dividend stands at over $3.92 billion.

Who owns the most Kroger stock? ›

What type of owners hold Kroger Co stock?
NameHoldShares
Vanguard Group Inc11.52%82,675,649
Blackrock Inc8.84%63,391,900
Berkshire Hathaway Inc6.97%50,000,000
State Street Corp4.69%33,653,551
6 more rows

Is Albertsons stock a good buy? ›

Based on analyst ratings, Albertsons Companies's 12-month average price target is $25.85. What is ACI's upside potential, based on the analysts' average price target? Albertsons Companies has 27.97% upside potential, based on the analysts' average price target.

Who are the advisors for Kroger and Albertsons? ›

Goldman Sachs and Credit Suisse were the financial advisors to Albertsons, while Citigroup and Wells Fargo advised Kroger. Citi and Wells also jointly arranged $17.4 billion of debt financing to support the deal.

What bankers merged with Kroger Albertsons? ›

Goldman Sachs & Co. LLC and Credit Suisse Group AG advised Albertsons, while Citigroup Inc. and Wells Fargo Securities LLC advised Kroger.

Which federal agency reviews mergers and acquisitions? ›

Merger Review | Federal Trade Commission.

Did Kroger Albertsons CEOs defend grocery merger at Senate hearing? ›

Senators raise concerns on inflation, job impacts; executives say competition will continue. Chief executives of the two largest U.S. supermarket chains defended their proposed $20 billion merger Tuesday at a Senate subcommittee hearing, vowing to keep prices low and protect workers' jobs if the deal passes. Kroger Co.

What does Kroger merger mean for employees? ›

Based on existing empirical research showing the labor market effects of employer concentration, we find that the merger will permanently reduce the wages of 776,000 grocery store workers. Their annual earnings will fall by $334 million—about a $450 loss in annual wages per worker.

Is Albertsons in financial trouble? ›

Based on the latest financial disclosure, Albertsons Companies has a Probability Of Bankruptcy of 13.0%. This is 64.07% lower than that of the Food & Staples Retailing sector and 70.01% lower than that of the Consumer Staples industry.

Will Safeway become Kroger? ›

Approved by the boards of both companies, the merger agreement says that Kroger will acquire Albertsons, which owns Northern California giant Safeway, for an estimated $24.6 billion, according to a Kroger press release. The acquisition includes the company assuming $4.7 billion of Albertsons' debt.

Who owns Albertsons now? ›

Is Kroger buying Albertsons and Tom Thumb? ›

The Albertsons in Casa Linda Plaza. Kroger is set to acquire Albertsons and all of its subsidiaries, the companies announced on Oct. 14.

Why did Albertsons shut down? ›

SACRAMENTO, Calif. -- Albertson's will close all 17 in-store pharmacies in its 43-store Northern California division here. The Boise, Idaho-based company cited intense competition in a very large market as the reason behind the closures.

Where do Kroger and Albertsons overlap? ›

The companies have the most overlap in cities including Washington DC, Chicago, and Los Angeles. Both companies were created out of mergers and acquisitions over the last few decades.

What grocery chains are owned by Kroger? ›

The Kroger Co. operates grocery retail stores under the following banners: Supermarkets – Kroger, Ralphs, Dillons, Smith's, King Soopers, Fry's, QFC, City Market, Owen's, Jay C, Pay Less, Baker's, Gerbes, Harris Teeter, Pick 'n Save, Metro Market, Mariano's. Multi-department stores – Fred Meyer.

Who is cheaper Kroger or Albertsons? ›

Albertsons has higher prices than Kroger and other grocers, analysts say, and they predict Kroger will try to reduce Albertsons prices to be more competitive against discount chains like Aldi.

What's the largest grocery chain in the United States? ›

Largest U.S. grocers by market share, 2022

Walmart is the most popular grocery store chain nationwide, with 25.2% of the market share as of last year. Costco and Kroger are the second- and third-most-popular grocers, with 7.1% and 5.6% of the market share, respectively.

What two of the largest supermarkets in the US are merging? ›

Kroger announced in October that it would merge with Albertsons Companies, Inc. in a nearly $25 billion deal that is aimed at making the company more competitive with other giants like Walmart and Costco.

Was Albertsons owned by Kroger? ›

Acquisition by Kroger

On October 14, 2022, Kroger announced its intent to merge with Albertsons, with Kroger acquiring all Albertsons shares, and divesting some stores to secure regulatory approval. The $24.6 billion transaction is expected to close in early 2024.

What stores are merging with Kroger? ›

Moorpark Road store. Bentzen said the merger of Kroger, which owns Ralphs and Food4Less, and Albertsons, which owns Vons along with its eponymous stores, would cause a grocery monopoly in many small towns, leading to store closures and fewer places for residents to shop.

What a Kroger Albertsons merger means to Dallas Fort Worth grocery shoppers? ›

Together, the four brands operate 195 stores in Dallas-Fort Worth: Kroger 95, Tom Thumb 60, Albertsons 31 and Market Street nine. Their combined market share in D-FW would surpass Walmart, giving the merged company 28% of the region's grocery business.

Who is the parent company of Kroger? ›

Institutional Ownership

The Vanguard Group, Inc.

Is Publix owned by Kroger? ›

Publix Super Markets, Inc., commonly known as Publix, is an employee-owned American supermarket chain headquartered in Lakeland, Florida. Founded in 1930 by George W. Jenkins, Publix is a private corporation that is wholly owned by present and past employees and members of the Jenkins family.

What grocery store makes the most money? ›

Largest Food Retailers Research Summary

The largest food retailer in the world is Walmart, with a revenue of $573 billion and a net income of $13.94 billion. As of 2022, the global food & grocery retail market has a market size of $14.78 trillion.

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