Some of these closings if not all is their own fault. They remodeled their stores,raised their prices,and customers started looking elsewhere to shop.Kman wrote:460 jobs gone across the stores. Damn.
Artie wrote:Some of these closings if not all is their own fault. They remodeled their stores,raised their prices,and customers started looking elsewhere to shop.Kman wrote:460 jobs gone across the stores. Damn.
Central Grocers said Thursday that it voluntarily filed for protection under Chapter 11 of the U.S. Bankruptcy Code and that it would seek a court-led auction of its assets, including its warehouse and Strack & Van Til retail chain, and wind down its distribution business.
Central said it anticipated entering into a sale agreement with a stalking horse bidder for its 22 remaining Strack & Van Til stores in the near future. Central is also seeking to sell its distribution center in Joliet, Ill.
Other retailers with a significant ownership stake in Central include Treasure Island, Chicago; Sullivan’s, Savanna, Ill.; Fairplay Finer Foods, Chicago; Berkot’s Super Foods, Mokena, Ill.; Tony’s Finer Foods, Chicago; Pete’s Fresh Market, Chicago; Carnicerias Jimenez, Chicago; and La Chiquita Foods, Chicago.
A stalking horse offer, agreement, or bid is an attempt by a bankrupt debtor to test the market for the debtor's assets in advance of an auction of them. The intent is to maximize the value of its assets or avoid low bids, as part of (or before) a court auction.
Other retailers with a significant ownership stake in Central include Treasure Island, Chicago; Sullivan’s, Savanna, Ill.; Fairplay Finer Foods, Chicago; Berkot’s Super Foods, Mokena, Ill.; Tony’s Finer Foods, Chicago; Pete’s Fresh Market, Chicago; Carnicerias Jimenez, Chicago; and La Chiquita Foods, Chicago.
riddlemay wrote:God forbid Treasure Island goes away. Everything it has always done, it is still doing as well as it ever did, and that means some things that no one else does as well as it does.
I can't read the news item well enough to know if TI is imperiled, but I sure hope not.
riddlemay wrote:God forbid Treasure Island goes away. Everything it has always done, it is still doing as well as it ever did, and that means some things that no one else does as well as it does.
Artie wrote:Anyone know what will be the effect on these other stores that are under the Centrella brand?
Central Grocers has an offer from an unnamed strategic competitor to acquire 19 Strack & Van Til stores but was unable to complete an auction of those stores before filing for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection Thursday, the company said in a disclosure statement.
Artie wrote:Central has offer for 19 Strack & Van Til storesCentral Grocers has an offer from an unnamed strategic competitor to acquire 19 Strack & Van Til stores but was unable to complete an auction of those stores before filing for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection Thursday, the company said in a disclosure statement.
riddlemay wrote:Forgive my denseness about this, but just so I get this straight: Central was merely a distributor to all the other chains affected by the bankruptcy, but owned Strack & Van Til?
Coogles wrote:Jewel-Osco is buying 19 Strack and Van Til stores...
http://www.jewelosco.com/2017/05/jewel- ... ocers-inc/
http://www.theshelbyreport.com/2017/05/ ... k-van-til/
"The 19 stores will be sold as going concerns. Jewel-Osco has agreed to interview and extend offers of employment to substantially all of the employees of the stores that are part of the transaction, according to the company."
Jewel's $100 million bid not enough for Indiana Strack & Van Til stores
Three stores in dispute helped family owners prevail, sources say
Federal antitrust concerns unraveled Jewel-Osco’s bid to acquire Strack & Van Til stores in a bankruptcy auction this week, paving the way for the chain’s founding family to swoop in with a surprise, winning offer, sources told SN.
As reported previously, Jewel’s offer of $100 million for 19 Strack & Van Til stores was designated as the “stalking horse” going into the auction, which took place on Tuesday as part of the proceedings of the Central Grocers Chapter 11 case. Jewel’s offer, however, was subject to regulatory approval.
According to a source, Jewel dropped pursuit of three of the properties due to Federal Trade Commission concerns. That helped turn the tide toward Indiana Grocery Group, which made a competing offer for all 19 stores Jewel bid for, in addition to an Ultra Foods store in Merrillville, Ind., that was not part of the Jewel offer, and a commissary in Valapariso, Ind., and Strack’s headquarters building in Highland, Ind.
It would have been a devastating loss for NW Indiana,Cathy. It would have left a large portion of the area with Jewel,and only Jewel other than a Whole Foods in Schererville and Walmarts as a full service supermarket so it was near and dear to my heart. I'm glad the original owners were able to prevail.Cathy2 wrote:Artie,
I have really appreciated your keeping track and updating this.
A friend commented about a local store not quite having as much stock as before. I suggested it may be the lack of Centrella brand items not having been fully resourced yet. Pretty much it was indeed this issue.
Artie wrote:Antitrust concerns sunk Jewel’s Strack bid
riddlemay wrote:Artie wrote:Antitrust concerns sunk Jewel’s Strack bid
I've read the article, and I interpret (but am not positive) that this affects only the stores in Indiana--e.g., the store in Chicago on Elston is still going to become a Jewel. But I'd like confirmation on that.
Artie wrote:Cathy2 wrote:Artie,A friend commented about a local store not quite having as much stock as before. I suggested it may be the lack of Centrella brand items not having been fully resourced yet. Pretty much it was indeed this issue.
Cathy,I can confirm that Pete's Fresh Market is using Associated after a visit there yesterday and Strack & Van Till will also be using them as their supplier.
Strack & Van Til says new distributor should mean lower-priced items and more organicsLike many of the 400 independent grocers throughout Chicagoland that Central Grocers served, the Highland-based supermarket chain has struck a new deal with Associated Wholesale Grocers. Kansas City-based AWG is the second largest wholesaler in the country and five times bigger than Central Grocers with $10 billion a year in revenue, giving it far more leverage to negotiate good prices.
AWG offers the IGA, Best Choice, Clearly Organic, Always Save and Superior Selections generic brands.
A majority of the former Central Stores have migrated to AWG, which recently opened a massive warehouse in Kenosha, Wisconsin, and serves Chicago grocers like Angelo Caputo’s Fresh Markets and Treasure Island Foods, Strack said.
New court filings show that Indiana Grocery Group's bid won out in an auction because it was worth at least $21.3 million more than Jewel-Osco's initial offer, though the exact sale price has yet to be settled.
Exactly how many bidders took part in the auction hasn't been disclosed by any of the involved parties, but there might have been more than Indiana Grocery Group and Jewel. Trade publications reported that Supervalu, SpartanNash and Associated Wholesale Grocers also were interested at least at one point in Strack & Van Til's remaining stores.
Hombre de Acero wrote:
There's just no comparison to the International, multi-cultural, low pricing at Pete's Fresh Market on Western @ Madison-
my "go-to" store now.
From fresh curry leavesto Thai Basil, $2.79lb. Boneless-skinless-Chicken-Thighs,
to the widest assortment of Indian Basmati Rice this side of Devon Ave......
Pete's is a chefs dream.
"We temporarily lost variety in our stores," he said. "We lost new items. We're excited to get back to putting new items on our shelves. There's been a lot of work done to get us to this point, and there will be more work in the coming weeks."
AWG is five times larger than Central Grocers was and offers the IGA, Best Choice, Clearly Organic, Always Save and Superior Selections generic brands. Strack & Van Til stores will carry all of those brands to replace Centrella, which Central Grocers had produced.
Strack said AWG will supply more organic items, more lower cost items to compete with discounters like Aldi and Save-A-Lot and more variety.
"They have 4,000 private label items, which is four times what Central Grocers did," he said. "We won't bring them in all at once, but we'll be restocking the shelves as we go."
Strack & Van Til has started to stock AWG perishables and will continue to add its primary grocery lines.
Grocery Wars Turn Small Chains Into Battlefield Casualties