Kroger
Interested in Acquisitions, if Price Is Right
March 15th, 2007
NEW YORK — Kroger Co., Cincinnati, is in the market for acquisitions, possibly
even a major acquisition along the lines of its 1999 purchase of Fred Meyer,
Inc. — but only if the price is right, Mike Schlotman, senior vice president and
chief financial officer, said in a presentation here yesterday at the Bank of
America 2007 Consumer Conference. Asked about making another Fred Meyer-type
acquisition, Schlotman said, “We wouldn’t be opposed to an acquisition of size,
though we aren’t prowling for one. What’s more significant for us is fill-in
acquisitions. We just try to be very prudent with our shareholders’ money on
what we are willing to pay for assets in our existing markets.” He cited one
example in which Kroger lost a bid for a group of stores to another retailer
over price, “but we are in the process of acquiring some of the stores we really
wanted from that company, because the company that bought them overpaid” and ran
into financial problems — an apparent reference to Buehler Foods, Jasper, Ind.,
which acquired a group of Winn-Dixie stores in Kentucky in 2005 and ended up
liquidating them following a corporate Chapter 11.