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Alternative grocery sales surpass supermarket sales

Alternative grocery sales surpass supermarket sales

David Goodman | Apr 18, 2021 |

Alternative grocers like Amazon/Whole Foods, Walmart, Target, Aldi, warehouse clubs, dollar stores and pharmacies now comprise a majority of U.S. grocery sales. As a result, supermarkets are no longer the primary grocery store for a majority of Americans, according to a Supermarket News article by Scott Moses, managing director and head of grocery, pharmacy and restaurants investment banking at PJ Solomon.

A chart in the article shows that alternative grocery sales have reached $501 billion versus $448 billion for traditional grocers (supermarkets).

As for overall industry sales – which were elevated in 2020 due to the pandemic – Moses doesn’t expect that revenue in 2021 will match last year’s numbers, but says there are various factors that suggest demand will remain relatively high. Those factors include the following:

  • In an elevated unemployment environment like we have now, consumers normally eat more at home since it’s less expensive than going to restaurants.
  • In the past year millions of Americans have significantly improved their ability to cook at home.
  • Nearly one in six independent restaurants closed in 2020, limiting seating capacity, particularly in northern markets.
  • A meaningful percentage of people will take many months – if not years – to overcome their fears of sitting inside restaurants.
  • A significant percentage of workers will probably work more days at home for the foreseeable future, resulting in many meals eaten at home that historically would have been eaten in restaurants.

 

David Goodman

David leases high-quality shopping centers, represents select retail clients and sells vacant bank properties. 

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