Pricewatch

  • Better value at Supervalu

    June 25, 2009 @ 4:30 pm | by Conor Pope

    Another front in the supermarket prices wars has been opened after Supervalu rolled out €86m worth of fresh price reductions. It takes to €200m, the number of price cuts the store says have been implemented since the beginning of the year.

    Supervalu says that almost 2000 product lines on its shelves have fallen in price since the beginning of the year and claims that the cost of an average weekly trolley of goods across its 194 independently owned stores has fallen 23 per cent or €30, from €129.96 to €98.56.

    Supervalu, which is owned by the Musgrave Group, said yesterday the long-term price cuts were being “delivered without sacrificing SuperValu’s commitment to Irish suppliers and Irish jobs”. It said it had been able to introduce the cuts by working “closely with our suppliers and managing our own cost base”.

    Supervalu’s managing director Donal Horgan said “ 75 per cent of everything on SuperValu’s shelves is sourced or produced in Ireland and this is set to continue”. He said the company’s dealings with Irish suppliers and producers was worth in excess of €2.85 billion every year to the Irish economy and indirectly supported 14,000 Irish jobs.

    Supervalu’s move mirrors price cuts implemented in some of the other major retailers in the Republic. In early May, Tesco Ireland announced a radical overhaul of its structure and pricing and dropped the prices in stores in border counties by an average of 22 per cent. It has spent the intervening period rolling out the new structures in its other stores.

    Marks and Spencer announced last week it was dropping the prices in its homeware and clothing departments by an average of 12 per cent while Dunnes Stores has also been actively engaged in a campaign of price reductions over the last six weeks in direct response to the Tesco move.

  • 7 Comments »

    1.
    June 25, 2009
    4:47 pm

    So Supervalu can cut their prices without sacrificing the Irish produce, just by working “closely with our suppliers and managing our own cost base”? I think this means they were actually gouging us worse than the Sassenachs up until now so if it’s that easy

    Comment by Tom Ennis
    2.
    June 25, 2009
    5:16 pm

    Hush now, this is a good news post!

    Comment by Conor
    3.
    June 26, 2009
    8:50 am

    bring back the co op!

    Comment by paul m
    4.
    June 26, 2009
    9:17 am

    Hush now, this is a good news post!

    Haha your time has come Conor!

    Comment by Steve K
    5.
    June 26, 2009
    9:26 am

    Fine, I’ll just grumble to myself. Actually in fairness to Supervalu, recent post on Cheapeats did point out that they are known to be pretty good at a local level for supporting small producers. My main gripe with them is the anticompetitive stuff they do under the cover of RGDATA

    Comment by Tom Ennis
    6.
    June 27, 2009
    12:59 am

    2000 product lines have dropped in price by €200 million. Correct me if I’m missing something here…but does that mean these ‘product lines’ have dropped in price by, on average, €100,000 each?

    What constitutes a ‘product line’, and what is one usually worth that around €100,000 (and bear in mind this amount can be higher and lower depending on the line) can be shaved off it’s value in 6 months.

    I’ve seen this Supervalu press release reprinted by journalists without it being challenged. I’d be curious to see a list of the 2,000 product lines with their before and after value.

    Comment by Andrew
    7.
    July 1, 2009
    2:00 pm

    For starters, Supervalu is not owned by Musgrave. Musgrave supplies Supervalu and owns the brand, while the stores are owned by the franchisees. I presume that the €200m value on price cuts is calculated by multiplying the 2000 products by the price reduction on each and then multiplying that by the volume of each of the 2000 products bought annually to arrive at an annual saving. Seems clear enough to me regardless of how reliable the actual €200m figure is.

    Comment by Garrett

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