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Supermarket concentration benefits stores, not shoppers

“It is time to split Foodstuffs, not make it stronger”

Photo by Dennis Siqueira on Unsplash

Lisa Asher and Catherine Sutton-Brady
Sydney, July 12, 2024

The proposed merger of Foodstuffs North Island and Foodstuffs South Island raises the prospect of even less choice for New Zealanders in what is an already heavily concentrated market.

But will regulators prevent it from happening?

New Zealand currently has just three major supermarket entities: the two Foodstuffs cooperatives (member-owned companies) and Australian-owned Woolworths. These three control 85% of the grocery market and almost 100% of the supermarket sector.

The Commerce Commission will release its delayed decision on the proposed merger in October.

Less choice in New Zealand  

The dominance of Foodstuffs and Woolworths gives the New Zealand supermarket industry a concentration ratio of almost 100%, calculated by adding the top four firm’s market share of an industry.

By comparison, the supermarket sector concentration ratio in Italy is 58.3%, in Spain 67.4%, in the United Kingdom 61.2%, and in the United States 58.5%. These lower ratios point to more competitive markets.

recent OECD survey has raised concerns over the concentration in the New Zealand market. Suppliers have warned they are being hurt by the dominance of these retailers.

Research has long shown higher levels of concentration favour the companies dominating the market to the detriment of consumers and competition.

Our research supports this finding.

In 2022, the Commerce Commission released a report on New Zealand’s grocery sector.

It found that competition was not working well for consumers in the retail grocery sector. Recommendations included establishing a dedicated grocery regulator to provide monitoring and oversight, which was done by the then-Labour government last year.

Risk of setting precedence

To balance the market better, regulators need to ensure that local markets are competitive. This will require not just the rejection of Foodstuffs’ merger but, also, the possible split or demerger of the existing entities.

The most logical step is to split the Pak N Save and New World brands, ensuring that they are independent of each other.

Otherwise, there is a risk of precedent being set, which establishes an example for other sectors and markets to follow. It also raises the question of the point of the market study, if the market was allowed to concentrate further, despite the knowledge of concentration.

New Zealand’s size and low population density are often blamed for higher food costs.

But our ongoing research shows that low population density in developed markets is not a predictor of supermarket market concentration.

Highly concentrated markets have lower store availability for consumers, driving up population per store and reducing choice.

New Zealand has four times more population per store than Germany, and more than two times the UK and US. New Zealand also has the highest revenue per store across 25 developed markets, ahead of the United States.

Foodstuffs North Island, for example, generates double the global average operating profit of supermarkets.

Individual store owners are benefiting from the lack of competition. In 2018, three Foodstuffs supermarket owners entered the NBR rich list.

Image by Squirrel Photos from Pixabay

Anti-competitive claims

The proposed merger of the two Foodstuffs cooperatives is not the first time the company has joined together geographically disparate entities.

In 2013, Foodstuffs merged their Wellington and Auckland regions to become Foodstuffs North Island. This merger concentrated an already small market further.

The cooperatives’ increased market and bargaining power after the 2013 merger has resulted in complaints from some suppliers over Foodstuffs North Island’s tactics.

Despite being two separate entities, Foodstuffs has admitted to sharing information between its North and South Island entities. And since 2020, Foodstuffs North Island and South Island have released joint annual corporate social responsibility reports.

In a submission on the merger to the Commerce Commission earlier this year, one industry insider claimed the two Foodstuffs cooperatives were behaving as an unofficial cartel. Foodstuffs has rejected this claim.

But the commission has active fair trading investigations into both Foodstuffs South Island and Foodstuffs North Island over pricing and promotional practices. It is also investigating Woolworths New Zealand for the same issues.

And the regulator recently filed proceedings against Foodstuffs North Island, alleging that anti-competitive land covenants were lodged by the supermarket operator. The commission claims Foodstuffs did this to block competitors from opening rival supermarkets at particular sites.

Splitting the Foodstuffs brands

New Zealand is not the only country facing an increasingly concentrated supermarket sector, though it is, arguably, one of the worst.

In Australia, concerns have been raised about the dominance of Coles and Woolworths. These two companies control 65% of the grocery sector between them. The Queensland Greens have called on the government to introduce a 20% cap on market ownership.

In May, the Australian government outlined a mandatory code of conduct for supermarkets to address anti-competitive behaviour.

Australia is attempting to prevent further concentration of its grocery market, highlighting just how much of an outlier New Zealand is.

In contrast, the UK’s two largest supermarkets, Tesco and Sainsbury’s, control just 42.2% of their market.

An investigation into rising food prices by the country’s competition watchdog found inflation was not driven by weak retail competition.

Operating profits in the sector in the UK fell 41.5% in 2022-23, with average operating margins falling to 1.8% from 3.2%. This suggests retailers’ rising costs were not passed on in full to consumers.

The UK grocery sector shows how competitive a grocery sector can be if consumers and regulators are vigilant. The merger of the two Foodstuffs cooperatives is taking New Zealand in the opposite direction. Instead, the Commission should reject the merger.

It should also look at the demerger or divestment of the Foodstuffs banners to foster real competition and a better outcome for consumers.

Lisa Asher is a Retail Expert, PhD Candidate & Sessional Academic and Catherine Sutton-Brady is an Associate Professor of Marketing, both at the University of Sydney.

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