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Nicola Willis wants third competitor to ‘break up’ supermarket duopoly

Author
RNZ,
Publish Date
Tue, 31 Oct 2023, 11:34am
 Photo / Supplied
Photo / Supplied

Nicola Willis wants third competitor to ‘break up’ supermarket duopoly

Author
RNZ,
Publish Date
Tue, 31 Oct 2023, 11:34am

National Party deputy leader Nicola Willis wants a third supermarket competitor to break up the current duopoly,听following the collapse of online grocer Supie.

Consumer NZ said the failure of the online supermarket was a stark example of the difficulties of establishing any competitive foothold in an industry dominated by two major supermarket chains.

Supie was set up in 2021 to introduce more competition into the grocery industry, but struggled to achieve the scale necessary to be competitive and profitable. The company听went into voluntary administration on Monday听after a key individual investor pulled out, leaving creditors owed about $3 million and 120 employees out of a job.

"If I do become the Minister of Finance in the next few weeks I will want to seek advice on how do we ensure that we do get a third entrant into this (grocery) sector," says Nicola Willis. Photo / Marty Melville"If I do become the Minister of Finance in the next few weeks I will want to seek advice on how do we ensure that we do get a third entrant into this (grocery) sector," says Nicola Willis. Photo / Marty Melville

Workers were called in for a meeting to learn they had lost their jobs and would not be getting paid for their last two weeks of work or for any annual leave they are owed.

Former employee Anthony Bunce said shocked staff were in tears and needed their money in the lead-up to Christmas.

鈥淲e need it, we鈥檙e desperate for it. We鈥檝e got bills to pay. I know these guys are going to struggle. It鈥檚 not easy to find a job in a day and we鈥檝e just had no notice. We鈥檙e heartbroken.鈥

Willis said the collapse was sad for the employees, and for Supie as a challenger in the grocery sector.

鈥淚鈥檓 of the view we need a third entrant to break up that duopoly,鈥 she told听First Up.

鈥淚f I do become the Minister of Finance in the next few weeks I will want to seek advice on how do we ensure that we do get a third entrant into this sector, and it doesn鈥檛 have get the sort of failure that we saw here.鈥

Supie went into voluntary administration yesterday.Supie went into voluntary administration yesterday.

Monopoly Watch spokesman Tex Edwards, founder of 2degrees, said the sheer market power of the two supermarket chains meant government intervention was the only way to ensure another competitor.

The government had to understand what it would take to break up the duopoly, 鈥渇orce the sale of approximately 100-120 supermarkets to a third player, and force sale of some of the distribution centres which is where the problem lies鈥.

鈥淭he barriers to entry are the market power and the level of entrenchment.鈥

Edwards told听Morning Report听it would take $1.1 billion in capital for a new entrant to operate in the market.

Supie was an honourable venture with credible entrepreneurs and a sensible business case, he said.

鈥淲hat was happening here was that capital providers... were looking at the business case and saying unless you can get to scale immediately, you can鈥檛 bring a consumer proposition that delivers price competition - you鈥檙e only competing on choice and sustainability.鈥

PWC voluntary administrator Richard Nacey said about 400 creditors were owed about $3 million. He said the firm was turning over nearly $14m a year, but would not reveal the name of the investor who pulled out late last week.

鈥淲e鈥檝e made the vast majority of staff redundant. Whether they receive the funds that are owed to them is probably too early to say, but I think there is a reasonable chance there won鈥檛 be the funds available to pay them.

Founder 鈥榞rateful鈥 for support

Supie founder Sarah Balle said she had put absolutely everything into Supie and was devastated.

She was grateful for Supie鈥檚 supporters - employees, customers, suppliers and shareholders - as they fought to introduce competition in the grocery market, she said.

鈥淚鈥檓 also grateful for the outpouring of support from the business community who have offered jobs to our team and the recruitment industry for offering their assistance too. Kiwis helping Kiwis in tough times.

鈥淚 won鈥檛 be commenting further for now, as my focus is on working with the administrators on the huge legal and operational process to close the business as efficiently as possible.鈥

Supie founder Sarah Balle said she had put absolutely everything into Supie.Supie founder Sarah Balle said she had put absolutely everything into Supie.

Jacqui Knight was among the thousands of disappointed customers. She said she had been trumpeting Supie to her friends - impressed by the firm鈥檚 minimum waste ethos, wholefoods and ethically sourced meat.

A fortnight ago she paid a $100 subscription that gave her a year鈥檚 free shipping.

鈥淚 guess I鈥檓 going back to the old traditional supermarkets, Countdown or New World. We鈥檝e really got to do a better job with these supermarkets. I don鈥檛 think the supermarkets are fair.鈥

Failure comes despite growth

Consumer chief executive Jon Duffy said Supie had experienced a 鈥渞eally tough road鈥.

鈥淏ut the really unfortunate thing about the recent news is, against the odds, the company was growing - from about 20,000 customers in April last year to 55,000 this year. That鈥檚 a phenomenal achievement.鈥

He said the new grocery commissioner should take a hard look at any anticompetitive factors that could have led up to Supie鈥檚 failure.

鈥淲e had a green shoot of competition and it鈥檚 been snuffed out. It鈥檚 really important that the grocery commissioner is paying really careful attention to this. Because if there had been activities that led to the demise of this company that shouldn鈥檛 have happened, and I have no proof of this, then the grocery commissioner should be definitely looking into those.鈥

Grocery commissioner Pierre van Heerden had been in the job for just over three months, and had just outlined his 鈥渢op three鈥 points on a fix-it list for the country鈥檚 $25 billion supermarket sector. They included cracking down on unethical behaviour from suppliers linked to the dominant chains, and misleading or inaccurate pricing.

鈥淚t is disappointing to see any new entrant or competitor coming into the market not succeeding but I am here to try and level the playing fields to make sure that others that come into the market actually have a chance of competing.鈥

Van Heerden told听Morning Report听the听wholesale access regime听- allowing new entrants to buy goods from current supermarkets at a competitive price - had already been implemented, and land covenants had been removed.

鈥淚鈥檓 tasked to make sure that the Grocery Industry Competition Act is implemented effectively. I know Tex [Edwards] has got his views and those are really things that the new government will need to take a look at.

鈥淎t the moment, my focus is on the role that I鈥檝e been appointed to ensure that we do get long-term sustainabe change for Kiwi consumers.鈥

Change would not happen overnight, he said.

鈥淭he current industry set-up has taken years to get here, so this is a long term game that we鈥檙e playing.鈥

- RNZ

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