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Online behemoth Amazon is acquiring Austin-based Whole Foods Market for $13.7 billion, the companies announced Friday—a development that watchdogs say will pad billionaire pockets and spell bad news for consumers.
Jim Cramer, host of CNBC‘s “Mad Money,” expects the deal to make Amazon, headed by Jeff Bezos, “dominate food within the next two years.” He added: “I’m taking down numbers for everybody who sells food. Everybody. Because you can’t compete [with] Amazon. They will not let you compete.”
It’s already “rattled the retail sector.”
Indeed, writes Bloomberg, the acquisition “sends shockwaves across both the online and brick-and-mortar industries. Grocery chains plunged on Friday—Wal-Mart Stores Inc. fell as much as 7.1 percent, while Kroger Co. tumbled 17 percent—as investors worried that woes will mount in the increasingly cutthroat industry.”
(Amazon’s stock, meanwhile, was up 3.3 percent—making the acquisition “essentially free” for the online giant.)
According to Wenonah Hauter, executive director of Food & Water Watch, “Too few companies already exert outsized influence over our food choices. This is extreme consolidation of the food system in action, which will lead to higher prices, fewer choices for consumers, and bigger profits for billionaires like its owner, Jeff Bezos.”
“Consumers already face substantially reduced options for grocery shopping because of a wave of mega-mergers that have swept the supermarket and grocery manufacturing industry. In recent years, more than 4,000 grocery stores were joined under two owners after the Albertsons-Safeway and Ahold-Delhaize mergers. The proposed Amazon-Whole Foods deal only further curtails consumer choices and raise prices,” she said.
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