Walmart launches new grocery brand, as it tries to hang on to inflation-fueled growth

Walmart launches new grocery brand, as it tries to hang on to inflation-fueled growth


People talk outside a Wal-Mart Pickup-Grocery store in Bentonville, Arkansas.

Rick Wilking | Reuters

Walmart is debuting a new grocery brand, as the discounter tries to retain the shoppers it has attracted during a period of high inflation.

On Tuesday, the big-box retailer said it will roll out a private label called BetterGoods, a line of more trend-and chef-driven foods. Most items will be priced at less than $5.

Walmart is already the country’s largest grocer by revenue. Nearly 60% of the company’s sales in the U.S. came from its grocery business in the most recent fiscal year.

Walmart’s large food business has helped it drive store and online traffic, especially as customers have watched their discretionary spending during a period of high inflation. And its low-priced reputation has helped the company attract higher income grocery shoppers as inflation pinches budgets.

In the most recent fiscal year that ended in late January, Walmart’s net sales for groceries in the U.S. rose nearly 7% year over year to $264.2 billion.

An employee restocks frozen food products at a Walmart Inc. store in Burbank, California.

Patrick T. Fallon | Bloomberg | Getty Images

But Walmart, like other grocers, has seen room to grow its private label business as shoppers seek new flavors and lower prices. During the Covid-19 pandemic, some national brands’ products ran low at stores and caused customers to start buying the retailers’ own brands.

Later, inflation pushed prices of food and housing higher and inspired more shoppers to try store brands, which are often cheaper. Plus, the growth of low-priced grocery chains like Aldi, Lidl and Trader Joe’s — which prominently feature their own brands rather than national ones — and the popularity of Costco’s Kirkland brand has changed customers’ perception of store brands.

Grocers have also overhauled their private label approach. Instead of relying on basic items like canned peas or copycat items like a lower-priced box of cereal that resembles Cheerios to make up their store brand, retailers began debuting more unique food items.

For example, Target launched a new grocery brand called Good & Gather in 2019 with a wide range of items including bagged salad kits, peanut butter spreads and frozen veggies. Another grocery brand it debuted, Favorite Day, is made up of creative takes on ice cream bars and trail mixes.

Other retailers have debuted new private brands in their grocery aisles focused on affordability and fending off discounters like Aldi or Dollar General. Kroger, for example, launched Smart Way two years ago. The brand offers low-priced basics like mayonnaise and sliced bread.

Walmart’s new grocery brand, BetterGoods, will be made up of items across many categories including frozen foods, dairy and snacks ranging from under $2 to under $15. The products will fit within one of three major areas, the company said: items with more of a culinary flair, such as a jarred creamy corn jalapeño chowder; items that are plant-based, such as a pint of oat milk non-dairy frozen dessert; or items that exclude certain ingredients, such as gluten- and antibiotic-free chicken nuggets.

The new private brand will join Walmart’s existing collection of private brands in the grocery department, which includes Great Value — the country’s largest private grocery brand by revenue, according to Numerator, a market research firm.



Source

AI is creating new billionaires at a record pace
Business

AI is creating new billionaires at a record pace

Mira Murati, Chief Technology Officer of OpenAI (L) and Dario Amodei, Getty Images | CNBC A version of this article first appeared in CNBC’s Inside Wealth newsletter with Robert Frank, a weekly guide to the high-net-worth investor and consumer. Sign up to receive future editions, straight to your inbox. Artificial intelligence startups have minted dozens of new […]

Read More
From Starbucks to Smoothie King, restaurants seek to cash in on consumers’ protein frenzy
Business

From Starbucks to Smoothie King, restaurants seek to cash in on consumers’ protein frenzy

Starbucks Protein Drink Courtesy: Starbucks Restaurant chains are joining in on the protein frenzy, hoping to encourage diners to pay more for extra macronutrients during a time when many consumers aren’t spending as much. From “gym bros” to users of GLP-1 drugs like Ozempic, many Americans are trying to add more protein to their diets, […]

Read More
How one real estate startup is taking on record heat this summer
Business

How one real estate startup is taking on record heat this summer

Runwise co-founders (L-R) Jeff Carleton, Lee Hoffman and Mike Cook. Courtesy of Runwise A version of this article first appeared in the CNBC Property Play newsletter with Diana Olick. Property Play covers new and evolving opportunities for the real estate investor, from individuals to venture capitalists, private equity funds, family offices, institutional investors and large […]

Read More