Skip to main content

Supermarket/Grocery

  • WinCo coming to Texas center

    Boise, Idaho-based discount grocer WinCo Foods will develop a new ground-up 82,077-sq.-ft. anchor store at Trinity Valley Shopping Center in Carrollton, Texas.

    The new WinCo will be developed at the site of a former Target anchor store at the center. Following the closure, the ownership of the center, Josey Trinity Mills Ltd., acquired the vacant building in October 2015. The site will be demolished starting around April 2016, and the newly developed WinCo is scheduled to open in early 2017.

  • Popular New York grocery chain on brink of default

    The losses are mounting at one of New York City’s most beloved supermarket chains, the 80-year-old Fairway Market, as it battles increased competition from the likes of Trader Joe’s and Whole Foods Market. Fairway Group Holdings Corp., is on the cusp of default, and the next step could be bankruptcy court, Crain’s New York reported. The company warned investors in a regulatory filing on Feb. 5 that it could breach its loan agreements.

  • Walmart delivers uneven growth amid ongoing profit pressures

    Photo: Doug McMillon, president and CEO, Wal-Mart Stores, Inc.

  • Kroger CEO joins VF Corp. board

    The VF Corp. is adding some heavy duty retail expertise to its board of directors.

  • Senior Kroger exec retiring after 44 years

    The Kroger Co.'s senior VP for retail operations and strategic initiatives plans to retire in April.

    The company announced that Marnette Perry plans to retire on April 29, after 44 years with the company.

  • Walmart delivers uneven growth amid profit pressures

    A modest increase in fourth quarter same store sales at Walmart’s U.S. stores marked a sixth consecutive period of growth and helped the company exceed analysts’ profit targets, but a reduced 2016 sales outlook caught some investors by surprise.

  • Exclusive: Instacart exec talks online delivery with CSA

    Chain Store Age recently spoke with Vishwa Chandra, VP of retail accounts for Instacart, to get a better sense of the current and future state of online delivery.

    What is driving growing consumer interest in online delivery?

  • Survey: Online groceries are habit-forming

    Although not many consumers are currently shopping for groceries online, those who do are likely to be repeat customers.

    According to “The 2016 Online Grocery Shopper,” a survey of more than 500 U.S. online consumers from Toronto-based grocery technology provider Unata, 8% of consumers bought groceries via Internet in 2015.

    However, 93% of those shoppers said they are “likely” or “very likely” to buy groceries online in 2016.

X
This ad will auto-close in 10 seconds