

Page 18
— Retail Properties Quarterly — February 2015
A
t the Rocky Mountain Com-
mercial Real Estate Expo in
November 2004, I delivered
a presentation on the future
of grocery store development
in the Denver metro area. This article
follows up on those predictions and
what impact the merger of Safeway
and Cerberus, Albertsons’ parent
company, will have in the continuing
grocery war.
Grocery store
trends.
Between
1989 and 2004,
the growth of new
grocery stores
exceeded the popu-
lation growth – the
population during
that period grew 37
percent, compared
with the growth
of new grocery
stores at 42 percent.
Albertsons’ store
count increased 52
percent, followed
by King Soopers at
47 percent, then Safeway at 30 per-
cent. Many of the new Safeway stores
were on-site replacement stores,
which increased its market share by
6.3 percent, while Albertsons, despite
aggressive expansion, had its market
share decline 14.6 percent, and the
market share of King Soopers also
decreased 8.7 percent. Cannibaliza-
tion of existing stores, and having to
compete with larger, newer Safeway
stores, contributed to King Soopers
and Albertsons losing market share
despite building more new stores
than Safeway.
National trends showed that mar-
ket shares of conventional stores
were projected to decline from 76 to
55 percent between 1997 and 2009,
with price operators market share
increasing from 21 to 39 percent and
the market share of specialty stores
increasing from 3 to 6 percent.
In 2004 I accurately predicted that
conventional supermarkets would
concentrate on remodeling and
experiment with alternative formats
to compete with the specialty stores
entering the market. Based on current
research and findings, I predict that
specialty stores and super discount
stores will be responsible for building
most new stores, and fewer conven-
tional stores will be built.
Historical perspective.
A walk
through the retail cemetery shows
how the retail environment has
changed over the years. The early
grocery chains like Millers, National
T, A&P, Furrs, Cub Foods and various
Hispanic grocers are long gone. New
food stores like Sprouts, Whole Foods,
Trader Joe’s, Vitamin Cottage, Save-A-
Lot, Super Target, Super Walmart and
Walmart Neighborhood stores have
taken their place. King Soopers has
had the most aggressive new store
development in recent years, while
Albertsons and Safeway have closed
stores. And as these new supermar-
kets and discount stores got into the
pharmacy business, drug chains like
Skaggs, Osco, Eckard, Longs Drugs
and Drug Emporium are no longer
around. Looking at nonfood chains,
Handy Dan, Mervyns, May D&F, Lin-
ens ‘n Things, Woolco and Kmart, as
well as major appliance stores have
also disappeared – replaced by Home
Depot, Lowes, Kohl’s, dollar stores
and outlet malls.
Redevelopment of neighborhood
shopping centers also has been
updated to accommodate new retail-
ers or allow for expansion of existing
supermarkets to include new for-
mats. I was fortunate to be involved
in the transformation of two King
Soopers shopping centers that were
redeveloped as Safeway-anchored
shopping centers. The bottom line is
retailers may come and go, but good
locations are irreplaceable.
The Safeway/Albertsons merger.
How
will the merger of Safeway and Alb-
ertsons change the dynamics of the
grocery war and what role can devel-
opers, investors, landlords and city
governments play to avoid becoming
a casualty? In the short term, as the
two companies complete their merg-
er, I do not think capital spending
will be high on the list of things to
do. The companies suggest that they
will continue to operate under both
banners, but I believe this will be dif-
ficult to do. Albertsons has never had
a shopper-loyalty card, it sold off its
gas stations and, even when its stores
were new, they felt plain, old and
dated. Albertsons does have more
nonfood stock-keeping units than
a typical Safeway store, but, in my
opinion, Safeway has better perish-
ables and better facilities.
I suspect these stores eventually
will end up operating under one ban-
ner, and it will be Safeway. After all,
it is the oldest supermarket chain in
Denver. For example, when Kroger
acquired Smith’s and Smitty’s of Ari-
zona, it eventually ended up operat-
ing them as Fry’s Food Stores.
If you are an owner of a Safeway or
Albertsons shopping center and there
is a store with the other name close
by, you need to decide if you want
them to stay or have them leave. Now
is the time to take control and, what-
ever the decision, aggressively pursue
a deal that gives you control, other-
wise you could become a casualty of
the grocery war. Waiting for the other
store to decide what it is going to do
is not an option that will benefit you.
Appealing to the customer.
Retail,
particularly in the grocery sector,
has become more difficult to find a
format that is appealing to the fickle
consumer. On one hand, you have
examples like Costco, which requires
the customer to buy a membership in
order to be able to shop at its stores,
and what you buy this week may not
be available next week. The specialty
grocer follows an opposing model,
selling items you did not even real-
ize you wanted to buy. The downfall
of the specialty grocer is the lack of
something as simple as Tide deter-
gent, which is not available at these
stores. Then there is the conventional
supermarket, which is readily avail-
able in convenient locations. But the
conventional supermarkets aren’t
without faults either. The model is
based on trying to sell a little bit of
everything, meaning inventory can
run low and certain items are not
available, therefore, these stores lose
customers to the large membership
retailers and specialty and discount
stores.
I think it is time for conventional
grocers and shopping center owners
to re-examine who their customers
are, and develop shopping centers
that offer the convenience, goods and
services that consumers demand.
Often shoppers are willing to go else-
where, rather than shopping at the
most convenient location. Maybe this
Albertsons and Safeway merger will
provide an opportunity to develop
a new format for both stores, and
become co-anchors of the next gen-
eration of the neighborhood shopping
center.
s
Neighborhood centers and the grocery warGrocery Update
Howard
Gerelick
Shopping center
consultant, retired
vice president
of real estate,
Safeway, Denver
Albertsons and Safeway will merge, but continue to operate under both names.
The merger could result in a grocery war for owners if two stores are close to each other.
I think it is time for
conventional grocers
and shopping center
owners to re-examine
who their customers
are, and develop
shopping centers that
offer the convenience,
goods and services that
consumers demand.