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Hearing Begins in FTC Lawsuit Against Kroger’s Planned $25 Billion Acquisition of Rival Albertsons

The U.S. Federal Trade Commission (FTC) argued in court on Aug. 26 that Kroger Co.’s planned $25 billion purchase of rival Albertsons Companies Inc. is anti-competitive and could send food prices soaring for Americans.
The FTC made the arguments during a hearing in the U.S. District Court in Portland, Oregon, as the agency seeks a preliminary injunction against the deal.
It comes nearly two years after the planned acquisition was first announced.
“Stopping this multibillion-dollar deal will keep in place the vigorous competition that acts as a check on rising grocery prices and spurs improvements in quality and innovation,” FTC Chief Trial Counsel Susan Musser told U.S. District Judge Adrienne Nelson in her opening statements.
Cincinnati, Ohio-based Kroger and Boise, Idaho-based Albertsons announced what was set to be the biggest merger of supermarket chains in U.S. history in October 2022.
Kroger operates thousands of stores across 36 states and is the biggest grocer in the country by revenue while Albertsons is the second-largest supermarket chain.
If the merger were to be completed, the two grocery giants would operate about 5,000 stores and approximately 4,000 retail pharmacies and would employ nearly 700,000 employees across 48 states under one corporate umbrella.
The agency further argued that the loss of competition would lead to lower quality products and services, while also narrowing consumers’ choices for where to shop for groceries.
The grocery giants have further vowed to spend $500 million to begin lowering prices as soon as the merger is complete along with $1 billion to raise wages and comprehensive benefits for workers and $1.3 billion to improve Albertsons Cos.’ stores.
Speaking during the Aug. 27 hearing, Albertsons’ lawyer Enu Mainigi said the acquisition falling through could result in layoffs and store closures, with the attorney noting that Walmart is able to sell certain products at a price lower than the grocery store chain can buy them wholesale.
The acquisition with Kroger gives Albertsons the best chance to survive, the lawyer said.
Multiple states including Arizona, California, Illinois, Maryland, Nevada, New Mexico, Oregon, Wyoming, and the District of Columbia are pursuing the case against Kroger and Albertsons alongside the FTC.
The trial is expected to last around three weeks.
High food prices continue to remain a key theme in the U.S. presidential race between Democratic Vice President Kamala Harris and Republican former President Donald Trump.
Food prices are expected to increase more slowly than the historical average rate of growth next year, according to the department.

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