US FTC's bid to block Kroger-Albertsons merger heads to trial
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[August 26, 2024] By
Jody Godoy
(Reuters) - The U.S. Federal Trade Commission will argue Kroger's $25
billion merger with rival grocer Albertsons is bad for shoppers and
workers when the agency's lawsuit goes to trial in federal court in
Portland, Oregon, on Monday.
The FTC and several states sued to block the deal in February, saying it
would eliminate competition between the top two traditional supermarket
chains in the U.S., spelling higher prices for consumers and less
bargaining power for unionized grocery workers.
The case is a high-profile piece of the Biden administration's push to
lower prices for consumers, and comes as high grocery bills take
prominence in the U.S. presidential race between Vice President Kamala
Harris, the Democratic candidate, and former President Donald Trump, her
Republican opponent.
It is also a key test of FTC Chair Lina Khan's initiative to use
antitrust law to boost wages and mobility for workers.
The trial is expected to last around three weeks and feature evidence
about how major grocery retailers and smaller rivals set prices and view
competition in the industry.
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Kroger and Albertsons are asking U.S. District Judge Adrienne Nelson to
let the deal proceed, saying the tie-up is necessary to compete with
multinational corporations like Walmart, the largest grocery retailer in
the U.S., bulk shopping mainstay Costco and Amazon.com, which owns Whole
Foods.
The two companies say the lawsuit's focus on traditional supermarkets
ignores that consumers typically shop for food at a variety of locations
including big-box stores like Target and dollar stores such as Dollar
Tree.
Kroger has said it will sell 579 of the approximately 5,000 stores it
would own if the deal is allowed to go through. Part of the trial will
focus on whether buyer C&S Wholesale Grocers can successfully run them.
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The Albertsons logo is seen on an Albertsons grocery store, as
Kroger agrees to buy rival Albertsons in a deal to combine the two
supermarket chains, in Riverside, California, U.S., October 14,
2022. REUTERS/Aude Guerrucci/File Photo
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Kroger has also pledged to lower grocery prices by $1 billion after
the merger.
Retailers use multiple levers to lower prices, including negotiating
better deals with suppliers, investing in automation in the supply
chain or changing the way they label and package products.
Although Kroger said it could not provide more specifics on the
details of the price investments, a source familiar with the matter
indicated that the reductions will likely focus on essential and
high-demand items first.
"It's not going to be peanut butter spread, for instance, initially,
but targeted on across a wide range of staples," the source said.
Arizona, California, Illinois, Maryland, Nevada, New Mexico, Oregon,
Wyoming and the District of Columbia are pursuing the case alongside
the FTC.
Washington and Colorado have filed their own lawsuits to block the
merger. The lawsuits are scheduled to go to trial after the Oregon
case.
The states all have Kroger and Albertsons locations.
(Reporting by Jody Godoy and Siddharth Cavale in New York; Editing
by Matthew Lewis)
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