The Jim Pattison Group's
grocery business continues to show it won't sit idle while national chains Loblaws and Sobeys bulk up their presence in Western Canada.
Not exact matches
At an age when most of his contemporaries are working on their golf swings (if they can still make it around 18 holes), Jim Pattison
continues building his $ 8.4 - billion
business empire, which includes media holdings, automotive sales and
grocery stores.
Regarding the $ 1 trillion
grocery business, «Online
grocery continues to be the least penetrated of all online categories because of the challenges of cost - effectively delivering fresh and frozen foods,» the report said.
Hawaii's Tamura's Market expands into restaurants and bars as it
continues to support its
grocery and liquor
business.
«When we came back to Pensacola, we knew we had to find a way to make a living,» he
continues, noting that the
grocery business was a good fit.
Mi Rancho plans to
continue to drive its well - established foodservice line into the
grocery retail
business.
He has a sell call on Metcash, noting the company's core
grocery business is structurally challenged, with
continued store roll - outs and discounting by Coles and Woolworths putting more pressure on independents.
Additionally, Devotion's
business continues to reach new heights, with current distribution at prominent National
grocery retailers Whole Foods, Wegmans, Publix and Albertsons, major restaurant chains Applebee's, Houlihan's and Red Robin, and retail stores, restaurants and bars in several states.
A
grocery store's reputation is vital because we want to ensure that customers feel compelled to
continue doing
business with us in the future.
Niche property owners — such as Acadia Realty in the Northeast — should shine in a more difficult market; the impact of Wal - Mart on the
grocery business and, as a result, community centers, will
continue to unfold; and retail REITs, especially regional mall operators, will be asked by investors to be more forthcoming with financial data.
«This is a tremendous addition to our Pacific Northwest platform, as we
continue to grow our
business through development, redevelopment, and acquisitions of highly productive urban and suburban
grocery - anchored and mixed - use properties,» said Craig Ramey, senior vice president and senior market officer for Regency Centers in a press release.
He does warn of lower growth expectations for shopping centers, however, citing the omnipresent Wal - Mart impact, which
continues to eat away at the
grocery business.