The acquisition of King Kullen was said to have been killed by COVID-19, but it was announced in January 2019. A month later, Stop & Shop workers went on strike, and for as short as it was, it really did a number on the chain with an estimated 10% of their customer base leaving permanently. Either the numbers coming out of Boston and New England are solid or crumbling as Long Island is.marketreportblog wrote: ↑March 19th, 2024, 1:25 pmOne of the reasons I suspected something bigger might be up is that rather than giving a stock reply about improving customer experience and lowering prices and all the usual stuff, details on Stop & Shop are said to be announced in May along with that earnings report. That to me sounds ominous, although it's hard to tell tone from that article. I can't tell what exactly that means or if it's a complete nothing (like they'll just announce updates on the remodel program or something).pseudo3d wrote: ↑March 19th, 2024, 9:12 am I found that during the pandemic, Stop & Shop's market share slipped by 1.1 percent, with the other Ahold Delhaize banners gained market share (they didn't have numbers for Giant-MD other than it being positive, but Food Lion went up 1.8, Giant-PA went up by 0.5, Hannaford went up by 0.5), blaming the loss in not being able to work on a "really aggressive remodeling program".
I expect another earnings report would come in May. If the news coming out of Stop & Shop is really bad and continuing to deteriorate, would they try to hurry and get it off the books before the earnings report, or break the bad news then?
As for the sales, I did a quick analysis of the market share for Stop & Shop based on Food Trade News reports (see here for the latest one). My conclusion: Stop & Shop's market share is declining steadily in the NYC area. But it's far from a precipitous drop, and the change in some areas are almost imperceptible.
Metro NY Market
- 2018 market share 19.23%
- 2019 market share 18.73%
- 2020 market share 18.36%
- 2021 market share 17.90%
- 2022 market share 17.26%
Long Island
- 2023 market share 16.54%
- 2018 market share 35.25%
- 2019 market share 33.52%
- 2020 market share 33.52%
- 2021 market share 33.74%
- 2022 market share 32.67%
New Jersey
- 2023 market share 31.07%
(2018 not available)
- 2019 market share 6.81%
- 2020 market share 6.63%
- 2021 market share 6.69%
- 2022 market share 5.87%
New York City
- 2023 market share 5.73%
- 2018 market share 8.34%
- 2019 market share 8.25%
- 2020 market share 7.71%
- 2021 market share 7.52%
- 2022 market share 7.13%
I'm assuming that roughly accounts for the drop you describe. New York City is a big drop because of store closures (or store closures because of a big drop in sales?) but Long Island is a bit concerning since that's a stronghold for them. They're still the market leader on Long Island, though. I think there is a clear trend in the wrong direction here but these numbers don't seem to show any real catastrophe. Unfortunately, I don't have any sales or market share data for any of New England.
- 2023 market share 6.57%
Anyway, the article is interesting. They can point to Food Lion's remodeling and updating process as its growth continues or at least remains stable...but they can't say "Stop & Shop is still remodeling" as the sales plummet and store conditions deteriorate, which would put the blame on remodeling making stores worse, not better, or more likely, just be seen as excuses as they try to pull a fast one on investors (Eddie Lampert pulled that for years with Sears until they went bankrupt).
But I can't see that happening without store closures (which Sears did annually until bankruptcy), and even in 2005 Safeway did the "we need to close a bunch of stores as part of our big remodeling project" move. However, store closures are never popular with anyone--investors don't like them especially if you don't have a plan, customers don't like 'em, employees don't like 'em.
With almost a third of the volume in Ahold Delhaize's stores, it would be difficult to see Ahold Delhaize doing anything dramatic with the chain, but it probably doesn't contribute a third of the profit to the chain. The idea of putting Stop & Shop on the sales block whole seems unlikely but I'm sure that we'll see closures and maybe pulling out of south New Jersey.