The Stop & Shop Companies, Inc.

views updated Jun 27 2018

The Stop & Shop Companies, Inc.

1385 Hancock Street
Quincy, Massachusetts 02169
U.S.A.
(781) 380-8000
Fax: (617) 770-6033

Wholly Owned Subsidiary of Royal Ahold N.V.
Incorporated:
1925 as Economy Grocery Stores
Corporation
Employees: 30,000
Sales: $4.12 billion (1996)
SICs: 5311 Department Stores; 5411 Grocery Stores

The Stop & Shop Companies, Inc. runs the largest grocery chain in New England, with about 200 supermarkets and combination supermarket-general merchandise stores in Connecticut, Massachusetts, New York, and Rhode Island. Stop & Shop is a wholly owned subsidiary of Dutch international food retailer Royal Ahold N.V., the number four supermarket company in the United States. Ahold is the largest grocery concern on the East Coast of the United States, a position gained through the acquisition of several major chains starting in 1977. Stop & Shop, acquired by Ahold in 1996, is one of the Dutch firms largest subsidiary operations.

Started As Economy Grocery Stores

When Sidney R. Rabb went into his uncle Juliuss business, it was a small chain of stores known as the Economy Grocery Stores Company specializing in the sale of grocery products. Such specialization was hardly newthe Great American Tea Company (later A & P) had begun to modify the traditional general store as early as 1859, and even the practice of chain store ownership dated back into the 19th century. The chains did not formally begin until after 1912, however, when A & P introduced the economy store, using efficient management and smaller store size to offer lower prices on a cash-and-carry basisno credit, and no home delivery. The idea rapidly caught on across the country, and it was this merchandising trend that Julius Robbins, his brother Joseph, and his nephew Sidney Rabb followed after the war. Following a period of instability, their chain, Economy, righted itself and, buoyed by the surging economy of the 1920s, began a program of rapid growth through acquisition in Massachusetts.

As chain store operators gained in strength they were soon able to convince manufacturers to sell to them directly instead of through the usual wholesalers, thus vastly reducing their costs and increasing the competitive advantage they already enjoyed over the traditional independent owner. Consumers preferred the lower prices of the chains; by the mid-1920s, Economy had expanded to 262 stores. In 1925 Sidney Rabb was named chairman, a post he would hold for the next 60 years. In the same year, Economy issued its first shares of public stock, and Norman S. Rabb joined his brother Sidney in the business. Ten years later, Irving Rabb, youngest of the brothers, also joined the company. Economys operations continued to gain momentum; the brothers bought a chain of meat retailers and gave them space in each of their grocery stores.

Although the Great Depression brought many industries to a standstill, the resulting need for tight household budgeting was in many respects a boon to the Economy chain stores. The Rabbs continued to expand with the purchase in 1932 of 106 Grey United Stores located throughout northern New England. The supermarket, a concept that had originated in southern California, based its customer appeal on rock-bottom prices, increased product selection, self-service (the customer roamed about the store while the clerk remained at a cash register), and intensive advertising. To the store owner, the new format promised streamlined operation and excellent overall profit. In 1935 the Rabbs opened New Englands first supermarket in Cambridge, Massachusetts, in a converted automobile assembly plant. First-year sales were nearly $2 million, equivalent to the revenue of 45 conventional stores.

Converted Fully to Supermarkets Following World War II

The Rabbs built more of the new stores as fast as they could, calling them Stop & Shop Supermarkets. The program continued to do well until the onset of World War II in 1941, when the food industry was swept up in the war effort and had little money or manpower with which to expand. The labor shortage during the war years, however, proved to be an unexpected boon to the supermarket business, as customers grew accustomed to serving themselves in all departments of the store, including the meat section. Such total self-service created lower labor costs and an increased number of purchases per customer. When the war ended, Economy was well-positioned to proceed with the conversion of its entire chain to the supermarket format, effectively reducing its number of stores while increasing total sales and profits. By 1947 annual sales topped $47 million and the company had changed its name to Stop & Shop, Inc., signaling its total commitment to the supermarket concept.

The postwar boom years saw another period of tremendous growth for Stop & Shop. In order to distribute products more efficiently, between 1948 and 1960 the company built a central bakery, a perishable goods distribution warehouse, and a grocery distribution center, all in strategic Massachusetts locations. Stop & Shop also quickly established itself in Rhode Island and Connecticut, and by the end of the 1950s the company was nearing $200 million in sales. The company made an important decision in 1961 to diversify outside the food business with its purchase of Bradlees, a small chain of discount department stores operating largely in shopping centers that already featured a Stop & Shop supermarket. The Rabbs saw in Bradlees a company based on the same high-volume, low-margin marketing used in the food industry. Their expertise soon turned a few moribund stores into a thriving chain. With the addition of new outlets each year, Bradlees sales increased from $5 million to $107 million between 1962 and 1968.

Over the years Stop & Shop tried to develop and maintain excellent relations with the communities in which it did business. The company was one of the first to unionize in the 1930s; it created the Stop & Shop Foundation in 1951 to support various civic and cultural projects; and in 1967 it initiated its Consumer Board Program in response to growing public concern about health and environmental issues. In a further move to accommodate changing customer demands, in 1971 the company gave far greater autonomy to each of its store managers, freeing them to respond more directly to the needs of local customers. On the other hand, the company was twice sued for allegedly conspiring to fix the prices of certain grocery, meat, and dairy products. Both suits were settled.

Both Stop & Shop and Bradlees continued their robust growth into the mid-1980s. Building on an ever more sophisticated network of warehouse distribution centers, the two chains expanded their geographic range, their total number of stores, and their total sales. In addition, in 1968 and 1969, respectively, the company established the Medí Mart Drug Store Company and acquired the Charles B. Perkins Company, a 21-unit New England retailer of tobacco and sundries. A year later all four retailing chains were brought together as divisions of a newly renamed The Stop & Shop Companies, Inc., which at that point included 150 supermarkets, 52 Bradlees Department Stores, 10 Medi Marts, and 25 Perkins Tobacco Shops, together totaling about $750 million in sales. Four years later the company celebrated its first $1 billion year; it had doubled that figure by 1980.

Other acquisitions were not as successful. In 1978 Stop & Shop bought Off the Rax, a discount womens clothing store chain, but sold it after six less than spectacular years. Similarly, a venture into a more upscale segment of the department store world ended in 1987 with the sale of Almys, a 19-store chain the company had purchased just two years before. Despite a history of steady growth and good profits, Medi Mart and Perkins were also put on the block in the mid-1980s as Stop & Shop decided to concentrate its resources on its two biggest and most lucrative divisions, supermarkets and Bradlees. Bradlees reached a high of 169 units in 1987, combining with the 113 supermarkets to bring in $4.34 billion in sales.

In 1985 Sidney R. Rabb died and was succeeded as chairman by his son-in-law, Avram J. Goldberg. Goldberg and his wife Carol, who became president of the company, moved decisively to keep pace with the trend toward the superstore, a greatly enlarged and further diversified model of the traditional supermarket. Superstores typically combined a grocery store with a general merchandise store. Stop & Shops superstoresknown as Super Stop & Shopswere immense, averaging 55,000 to 60,000 square feet in size, and were planned around a street of shops concept in which each class of product received its own well-defined and suitably decorated segment of the store and was offered to the consumer in an ever-larger variety of brands and packaging. In 1982 Stop & Shop completed its first superstoreconsidered to be the first superstore in New England. In certain respects this development brought shopping full circle back to the pattern of 100 years ago, when families made their progress through a series of neighborhood stores, each specializing in a different product line. The street of shops had simply moved indoors.

Taken Private in 1988

Stop & Shop took another step reminiscent of its past when, for the first time since 1924, it once again became a privately owned corporation. Responding to a hostile 1988 takeover bid by corporate raider Herbert Haft, Stop & Shops board of directors enlisted the aid of Kohlberg Kravis Roberts & Company (KKR) in forming a privately held acquisition company to buy all outstanding shares for approximately $1.23 billion. The acquisition company merged with Stop & Shop, whose top management was largely unaffected. To pay down some of its hefty debt, Stop & Shop sold 70 Bradlees stores and eliminated 450 positions. In November 1989 the Goldbergs suddenly quit their jobs, reportedly because of differences between them and KKR officials, ending more than 70 years of family management. Lewis Schaeneman took over as chairman and CEO.

Stop & Shop became a public company once again in late 1991 through a public offering that sold 41 percent of the company for $212.5 million, the bulk of which was used to reduce debt at the still highly leveraged company. KKR retained control of the business following the offering. At the time of the offering Stop & Shop operated 117 stores in Massachusetts, Connecticut, Rhode Island, and New York, 62 of which were Super Stop & Shop combination stores. The company also owned the 130-unit Bradlees chain, but it was spun off to the public in the summer of 1992 in order to further focus on the core supermarkets and to further reduce Stop & Shops $1.1 billion debt load.

Robert G. Tobin, who had become president of Stop & Shop in March 1993, added the title of CEO in May 1994 and the title of chairman in January 1995, as Schaeneman gradually retired. One day before Schaenemans last day in office, around 60 FBI agents raided the company headquarters as an outgrowth of an investigation of possible mishandling of merchandise incentive funds paid by manufacturers through brokers to retailers. In June 1997 Stop & Shopwithout acknowledging guiltagreed to pay $700,000 to settle allegations over vendor promotions and temporary price reductions.

As Stop & Shop continued to improve its financial health in the mid-1990s, expansion once again became the watchword. In mid-1995 the company made plans to enter the highly competitive, highly fragmented greater New York City area through the opening of superstores. In November 1995 Stop & Shop acquired Purity Supreme, a chain based in North Billerica, Massachusetts, for about $255 million. To satisfy regulators, the company had to divest 17 overlapping stores, meaning that it gained a net 38 stores through the deal. The purchase also temporarily extended Stop & Shops territory into New Hampshire, but the units in that state were soon sold off. Also gained with Purity was a 64-unit chain of Lil Peach convenience stores, but this noncore operation was quickly divested, in mid-1996, to Tedeschi Food Shops Inc. of Rockland, Massachusetts. In December 1995 Stop & Shop spent $87 million for Melmarkets, which ran a Foodtown chain with 17 units on Long Island, thereby gaining its first foothold in the New York region.

Acquired by Royal Ahold in Mid-1996

By this time the expanding Stop & Shop had caught the eye of the highly acquisitive Dutch global food retailing giant Royal Ahold N. V., which acquired Stop & Shop in its entirety, including the KKR stake, in July 1996 for $2.9 billion. Stop & Shop thus became another in a string of eastern U.S. grocery subsidiaries of Ahold. The Dutch company had first gained a foothold in the United States in 1977 when it bought the Bi-Lo chain in North and South Carolina and Georgia. Ahold then purchased the Pennsylvania-based Giant Food Stores, which operated under the Giant, Edwards, and Martins brands, in 1981. Finast Supermarkets, of Ohio, Connecticut, New York, and Massachusetts, was bought in 1988. To gain regulatory approval of its purchase of Stop & Shop, Ahold agreed to sell 29 stores in Massachusetts, Connecticut, and Rhode Island, states in which Stop & Shop and Edwards had overlapping operations. Also in July 1996, William J. Grize, who had joined the company in 1967, was named president of Stop & Shop; he added the CEO title as well in December 1997, with Tobin remaining chairman.

Within days of closing the Stop & Shop deal, Ahold reorganized its U.S. operations. The reorganization gave Stop & Shop 35 Edwards stores in Massachusetts, Connecticut, Rhode Island, and New York. The New York stores, however, were located in counties north of the New York City region, as Ahold had decided to halt Stop & Shops expansion there, turning the Long Island locations acquired in the Melmarkets deal over to Edwards. As a result, Stop & Shop solidified its position as the largest supermarket chain in New England, with nearly 200 units by the end of 1996. The additional stores were expected to push the companys annual revenue to more than $5.3 billion, making Stop & Shop Aholds largest unit worldwide.

In May 1998 Ahold agreed to acquire Landover, Maryland-based Giant Food Inc. for about $2.7 billion. The purchase of Giant Foodwhich operated 173 stores in Washington, D.C., Maryland, Virginia, Delaware, New Jersey, and Pennsylvaniamade Ahold the fourth largest supermarket company in the United States and solidified its number one position on the East Coast. Stop & Shop, meanwhile, was concentrating on its core New England market and was expanding geographically only in three counties north of New York City: Westchester, Dutchess, and Putnam.

Further Reading

Alaimo, Dan, Stop & Shop to Open Separate Video Store, Supermarket News, July 19, 1993, p. 27.

Baljko, Jennifer L., Ahold Closes Stop & Shop Deal, Supermarket News, July 29, 1996, p. 1.

_____, Ahold Realigning Stores, Officials, Supermarket News, August 5, 1996, p. 4.

Collins, Glenn, Circling the Grocery Carts: Stop & Shop Plans a Foothold in the New York Region, New York Times, August 5, 1995, pp. 31, 33.

Emert, Carol, Stop & Shop Completes Purity Deal by Agreeing to Sell Off 17 Stores, Supermarket News, November 6, 1995, p. 4.

Farnsworth, Steve, Stop & Shop Going Public Again, Supermarket News, October 14, 1991, p. 1.

Fox, Bruce, Stop & Shop Gets Stronger, Chain Store Age Executive, June 1992, p. 23.

Gold, Howard, Learning the Hard Way, Forbes, May 19, 1986, p. 80.

Goldberg, Avram J., Stop & Shop Chief Talks Business, Progressive Grocer, April 1984, p. 25.

Hirsch, James S., and Charles Goldsmith, KKRs Dutch Treat: Stop & Shop Sold to Ahold NV for $1.8 Billion, Wall Street Journal, March 29, 1996, pp. A3, A8.

Peak, Hugh S., and Ellen F. Peak, Supermarket Merchandising and Management, Englewood Cliffs, New Jersey: Prentice-Hall, 1977.

Petreycik, Richard M., Stop & Shop Comes Back in a Big Way, Progressive Grocer, March 1991, p. 104.

Schaeffer, Larry, Tobins Turn, Progressive Grocer, September 1994, p. 28.

Stop & Shop Plans $176M Bradlees Public Offer, Discount Store News, May 18, 1992, p. 1.

Stop & Shop Settles Billback, TPR Dispute, Supermarket News, June 16, 1997, p. 1.

Zimmerman, M. A., The Super Market: A Revolution in Distribution, New York: McGraw Hill, 1955.

Zwiebach, Elliot, FBI Raids Stop & Shop Main Office, Data Center, Supermarket News, February 6, 1995, p. 1.

_____, Stop & Shops New Properties, Supermarket News, March 25, 1996, p. 1.

_____, Stop & Shop Starts Internal Probe, Supermarket News, February 20, 1995, p. 42.

_____, Stop & Shop to Buy Purity Supreme Chain, Supermarket News, May 1, 1995, p. 1.

Jonathan Martin
updated by David E. Salamie

The Stop & Shop Companies, Inc.

views updated Jun 08 2018

The Stop & Shop Companies, Inc.

Post Office Box 369
Boston, Massachusetts 02101
U.S.A.
(617) 770-8000

Private Company
Incorporated:
1925 as Economy Grocery Stores Corporation
Employees: 44,000
Sales: $4.34 billion

Like all supermarketing giants, Stop & Shop Companies, Inc. has played a major role in the dramatic transformation of American food retailing in this century. Unlike most of its competitors, however, at Stop & Shop the family that oversees the nations ninth-largest chain of supermarkets also struggled with the companys first growing pains after World War I, some 70 years ago. Sidney R. Rabb joined his uncle Julius in the grocery business outside Boston in 1918. When he died in 1985 his lifelong position as Stop & Shops chairman of the board was filled by his son-in-law, Avram Goldberg, while his daughter, Carol Goldberg, became president and chief operating officer.

When Sidney Rabb went into his uncles business, it was a small chain of stores known as the Economy Grocery Stores Company specializing in the sale of grocery products. Such specialization was hardly newthe Great American Tea Company (later A & P) had begun to modify the traditional general store as early as 1859, and even the practice of chain store ownership dated back into the 19th century. The chains did not begin until after 1912, however, when A & P introduced the economy store, using efficient management and smaller store size to offer lower prices on a cash-only basisno credit, and no home delivery. The idea rapidly caught on across the country, and it was this merchandising trend which Julius Robbins, his brother Joseph, and his nephew Sidney Rabb followed after the war. Following a period of instability, their chain, Economy, righted itself, and, buoyed by the surging economy of the 1920s, began a program of rapid growth through acquisition in Massachusetts.

As chain store operators gained in strength they were soon able to convince manufacturers to sell to them directly instead of through the usual wholesalers, thus vastly reducing their costs and increasing the competitive advantage they already enjoyed over the traditional independent owner. Consumers preferred the lower prices of the chainsby the mid-1920s, Economy had expanded to 262 stores. In 1925 Sidney Rabb was named chairman, a post he would hold for the next 60 years; Economy issued its first shares of public stock; and Norman S. Rabb joined his brother Sidney in the business. Ten years later, Irving Rabb, youngest of the brothers, also joined. Now operating with considerable momentum, the brothers bought a chain of meat retailers and gave them space in each of their grocery stores.

Although the Great Depression brought many industries to a stand-still, the resulting need for tight household budgeting was in many respects a boon to the economy chain stores. The Rabbs continued to expand with the purchase in 1932 of 106 Grey United Stores located throughout northern New England. The supermarket, a concept that had originated in southern California, based its customer appeal on rock-bottom prices, increased product selection, self service (the customer roamed about the store while the clerk remained at a cash register), and intensive advertising. To the store owner, the new format promised streamlined operation and excellent overall profit. In 1935 the Rabbs opened New Englands first supermarket in Cambridge, Massachusetts, in a converted automobile assembly plant. First-year sales were nearly $2 million, equivalent to the revenue of 45 conventional stores.

The Rabbs built more of the new stores as fast as they could, calling them Stop & Shop Supermarkets. The program continued to do well until the onset of World War II in 1941, when the food industry was swept up in the war effort and had little money or manpower with which to expand. On the other hand, the labor shortage during the war years proved to be another unexpected advantage for the supermarket business, as housewives grew accustomed to serving themselves in all departments of the store, including the meat section; such total self-service meant lower labor costs and increased number of purchases per customer. When the war ended, Economy was well-positioned to proceed with the conversion of its entire chain to the supermarket format, effectively reducing its number of stores while increasing total sales and profits. By 1947 annual sales topped $47 million and the company had changed its name to Stop & Shop, Inc., signaling its total commitment to the supermarket concept.

The postwar boom years saw another period of tremendous growth for Stop & Shop. In order to distribute products more efficiently the company built, between 1948 and 1960, a central bakery, a perishable goods distribution warehouse, and a grocery distribution center in strategic Massachusetts locations. Stop & Shop also quickly established itself in Rhode Island and Connecticut, and by the end of the 1950s was nearing $200 million in sales. The company made an important decision in 1961 to diversify outside the food business with its purchase of Bradlees, a small chain of discount department stores operating largely in shopping centers which already featured a Stop & Shop supermarket. The Rabbs saw in Bradlees a company based on the same high-volume, low-margin marketing used in the food industry. Their expertise soon turned a few moribund stores into a thriving chain. Adding new outlets each year, Bradlees increased its sales from $5 to $107 million between 1962 and 1968.

Over the years Stop & Shop has tried to develop and maintain excellent relations with the communities in which it does business. The company was one of the first to unionize in the 1930s; it created the Stop & Shop Foundation in 1951 to support various civic and cultural projects; and in 1967 it initiated its Consumer Board Program in response to growing public concern about health and environmental issues. In a further move to accommodate changing customer demands, in 1971 the company gave far greater autonomy to each of its store managers, freeing them to respond more directly to the needs of local customers. On the other hand, the company has twice been sued in recent years for allegedly conspiring to fix the prices of certain grocery, meat, and dairy products. Both suits were settled.

Since the late 1960s both Stop & Shop and the Bradlees chain have continued their robust growth. Building on an ever more sophisticated network of warehouse distribution centers, the two chains have expanded geographically, in the total number of stores, and in sales dollars. In addition, in 1968 and 1969 respectively, the company established the Medi Mart Drug Store Company and acquired the Charles B. Perkins Company, a 21-unit New England retailer of tobacco and sundries. A year later all four retailing chains were brought together as divisions of a newly renamed Stop & Shop Companies, Inc., which at that point included 150 supermarkets, 52 Bradlees Department Stores, 10 Medi Marts, and 25 Perkins Tobacco Shops, together totaling about $750 million in sales. Four years later the company celebrated its first $1 billion year; it had doubled that figure by 1980.

Other acquisitions were not as successful. In 1978 Stop & Shop bought Off the Rax, a discount womens clothing store chain, but sold it after six less-than-spectacular years. Similarly, a venture into a more upscale segment of the department store world ended in 1987 with the sale of Almys, a 19-store chain the company had purchased just two years before. And despite a history of steady growth and good profits, Medi Mart and Perkins were also put on the block in the mid-1980s as Stop & Shop decided to concentrate its resources on its two biggest and most lucrative divisions, supermarkets and Bradlees. Bradlees reached a high of 169 units in 1987, combining with the 113 supermarkets to amass $4.34 billion in sales.

In 1985 Mr. Sidney, Sidney R. Rabb, died and was succeeded as chairman by his son-in-law Avram J. Goldberg. Mr. Goldberg and his wife Carol, now the president of the company, have moved decisively to keep pace with the current trend toward the superstore, a greatly enlarged and further diversified model of the traditional supermarket. These immense stores average 55,000 to 60,000 square feet in size and are planned around the street of shops concept, in which each class of product receives its own well-defined and suitably decorated segment of the store and is offered to the consumer in an ever-larger variety of brands and packaging. Stop & Shop completed its first superstore in 1982 and hopes to finish converting its entire chain by the early 1990s. Thus, after a long and circuitous development, supermarket shopping in the next decade will curiously resemble that of 100 years ago, when families made their progress through a series of neighborhood stores each specializing in a different product line. The street of shops has simply moved indoors.

Stop & Shop recently took another step forward into the past when, for the first time since 1924, it once again became a privately owned corporation. Responding to a hostile 1988 takeover bid by the Dart Group Corporation, Stop & Shops board of directors enlisted the aid of Kohlberg Kravis Roberts in forming a privately held acquisition company to buy all outstanding shares for approximately $1.23 billion. The acquisition company merged with Stop & Shop, whose top management was largely unaffected. To pay down some of its debt, Stop & Shop sold 33 southern Bradless stores and plans to sell more. As it moves into the 1990s, Stop & Shop continues to focus its energy on Sidney Rabbs original business, the retailing of food.

Further Reading:

Zimmerman, M.A. The Super Market: A Revolution in Distribution, New York, McGraw-Hill, 1955; Peak, Hugh S. and Ellen F. Supermarket Merchandising and Management, Englewood Cliffs, N.J., Prentice-Hall, 1977.