Online retail giant Amazon is buying Whole Foods in a
$13.7bn (£10.7bn) deal that marks its biggest push into traditional retailing yet.
Amazon, which has long eyed the grocery business,
will buy the upmarket supermarket for $42 a share.
Investors greeted the deal as game-changing for the
industry, sending shares of rival grocers plunging.
But Whole Foods, which had been under pressure, climbed.
Founded in 1978 in Texas, Whole Foods was a pioneer
of the move towards natural and organic foods.
It has grown to more than 460 stores in the US, Canada
and the UK, and employs about 87,000 people.
Amazon founder and chief executive Jeff Bezos said:
"Millions of people love Whole Foods Market because they offer the best natural and organic foods, and they make
it fun to eat healthy.
"Whole Foods Market has been satisfying, delighting
and nourishing customers for nearly four decades - they're doing an amazing job and we want that to continue."
'Maximise value'
Whole Foods has faced dissatisfaction from investors, amid falling same-store sales and increased competition.
Last month, the company named a new chief financial
officer and new board members.
In April, activist investor Jana Partners called the firm's
shares undervalued, noting "chronic underperformance".
The price being paid by Amazon marks a 27% premium
to the level Whole Foods' shares closed at on Thursday.
The $13.7bn value includes assumption of the grocer's debt.
The takeover deal - the biggest in Amazon's history - is expected to be completed in the second half of the year, pending approval by shareholders and anti-trust regulators.
Whole Foods boss John Mackey said: "This partnership presents an opportunity to maximize value for Whole
Foods Market's shareholders, while at the same time extending our mission and bringing the highest quality, experience, convenience and innovation to our customers."
The Whole Foods brand will continue. Mr Mackey is
expected to stay on as chief executive.
'Inherent logic'
Whole Foods stock soared 29% on the news. Amazon
shares closed up 2.4%.
Neil Saunders, managing director of GlobalData Retail,
said the deal should give the grocer financial breathing
room, while making it more competitive online and
improving its supply chain logistics.
The takeover also makes Amazon an instant player in
the grocery industry, where it has operated at the fringes
since launching its food delivery service Amazon Fresh in Seattle in 2007.
Whole Foods and Amazon were staying quiet on Friday
about how they might introduce technology to stores,
merge their supply chains, or cross-sell Amazon products.
Brendan Witcher, principal analyst at Forrester
Research in Boston, said any changes are further
down the road.
But that didn't stop instant speculation about what
changes might be coming. Possibilities include:
• Lower prices? Amazon has a long history of deferring
profits in favour of winning customers with low prices.
It could try a similar strategy at Whole Foods, now knocked by some as "Whole Paycheck".
• Techie shopping? Amazon is also interested in how technology can make shopping more efficient. The firm's Alexa robot maintains shopping lists and Amazon is
testing a convenience store in Seattle that operates
without check-out lines.
"There is an inherent logic in the move which, in our
view, brings benefits to both businesses," Mr Saunders wrote.
'Potentially terrifying'
Shares of other supermarket chains took a beating.
The industry has already seen significant consolidation, with smaller players wiped out.
Kroger shares fell more than 9 %, Target plunged 5%
and Costco Wholesale Corp. dropped about 7%.
Walmart, which announced its own $310m deal to
acquire the online clothing company Bonobos, slid 4.7%.
The reaction spread to companies in Europe. Dutch
retailer Ahold Delhaize fell nearly 10%.
Mr Saunders said the deal is "potentially terrifying"
for other companies.
"Although Amazon has been a looming threat to the
grocery industry, the shadow it has cast has been pale
and distant," Mr Saunders wrote. "Today that changed."

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