Albertsons

Albertsons Companies Inc.[1][2]
Private
Industry Retail / Grocery
Founded July 21, 1939 (July 21, 1939)
Boise, Idaho, U.S.
Founder Joe Albertson
Headquarters Boise, Idaho, U.S.
Number of locations
Increase 2,205 (2015, including Safeway)[3]
Key people
Robert G. Miller
(Chairman & CEO)
Bob Gordon
(EVP & General Counsel)
Products Bakery, dairy, deli, frozen foods, general grocery, meat, pharmacy, produce, seafood, snacks, liquor
Services Supermarket
Revenue Increase US$58.7 billion (2016)[4]
Number of employees
164,000 (2016)[3]
Parent Cerberus Capital Management[5]
Subsidiaries Safeway; Acme Markets
Website www.albertsons.com

Albertsons Companies Inc.[1][2] is an American grocery company founded and based in Boise, Idaho. It is owned and operated by Cerberus Capital Management.

With 2,200 stores and more than 250,000 employees,[3] the company is the second largest supermarket chain in North America after Kroger, which has 2,424 stores. Prior to its January, 2015 merger with Safeway Inc. for $9.2 billion.,[6] it had 1,075 supermarkets located in 29 U.S. states under 12 different banners. Its predecessor company, Albertsons, Inc., was sold to Albertsons LLC (a Cerberus Capital Management-led consortium), CVS Pharmacy, and SuperValu Inc. in 2006. CVS acquired the freestanding drugstores while the Cerberus-led consortium (Albertsons LLC) and Supervalu (New Albertsons, Inc.) divided the supermarket divisions among themselves. After selling the majority of its stores to various buyers, in January 2013, Albertsons LLC, acquired SuperValu's remaining Albertsons stores, as well as its ACME, Jewel-Osco, Lucky, Shaw's and Star Market brands, in exchange for $100 million in cash and $3.2 billion in SuperValu debt. The sale was completed by March 2013. The company's corporate name was Albertson's until 2002, when the apostrophe was removed.[7]

History

Beginnings

Albertsons was founded by Joe Albertson on July 21, 1939 in Boise, Idaho. An ad in the Idaho Statesman newspaper touted Joe Albertson's first store as "Idaho's largest and finest food store." The store was filled with perks that, at the time, were brand new: free parking, a money-back guarantee, and even an ice cream shop. The original store was built onto several times, but it was demolished in 1979 and a replacement store built on the same property. A brick monument stands on the northwest corner of 16th and State Streets in downtown Boise, commemorating the original store.

The cheese department of an Albertson in Seattle (1955)

Joe Albertson's grocery store was an enormous success, and he plowed his profits back into the business. New stores were opened in neighboring towns to the west, Nampa, Caldwell, and Emmett, before Pearl Harbor in late 1941. The company grew steadily in the years following World War II. When Albertson was considering putting a new store in a town, he would drive around the town and look for neighborhoods with lots of children's clothing hanging on clotheslines; he knew that those kinds of neighborhoods were where he wanted to build his stores.

Albertsons, Inc. became a public company in 1959, and its growth continued, opening its 100th store in Seattle in 1964. In 1966, Albertsons expanded to southern California by acquiring Greater All American Markets, a small chain in Orange County.

Partnering with Skaggs

In 1969, Albertsons partnered with Skaggs Drug Centers, owned by The Skaggs Companies, Inc., to create the first combination food/drug stores. The partnership was a tremendous success for several years. The partnership ended due to the fact that it was getting more difficult to control. Neither partner could buy each other out, and the partnership was dissolved amicably in 1977. Skaggs kept stores in Texas, Oklahoma, and Arkansas, and Albertsons kept stores in Florida, Alabama, and Louisiana, as well as some Texas stores. Albertsons added three Skaggs-Alpha Beta stores in Austin within months after entering that market in early 1989 with the acquisition of six Tom Thumb Food & Pharmacy stores. In 1992, seventy-four of the remaining Skaggs stores (having been through several names under Skaggs/American Stores control, first "Skaggs SuperCenters", then "Skaggs-Alpha Beta", and finally "Jewel-Osco") in Oklahoma, Florida, Arkansas, and Texas were acquired by Albertsons from Skaggs/American Stores, including all 53 Jewel-Osco stores in Texas. Albertsons would increase its store count in the Dallas-Fort Worth area by adding 41 Jewel-Osco stores to its 19 stores already in operation. (These were also stores that only months before were rebranded from Skaggs-Alpha Beta to Jewel-Osco.) The stores would be rebranded as Albertsons.

The Skaggs acquisition was a success, and the new stores were integrated into Albertsons' Texas division. The ease of that acquisition and Albertsons' high-flying stock price led Albertsons to attempt expansion on a grand scale. In a series of acquisitions in the late 1990s, Albertsons acquired Seessel's in the Memphis, Tennessee market; 14 Bruno's stores in the Nashville and eastern Tennessee markets; Smitty's in the Springfield, Missouri market; Super One Foods in the Des Moines, Iowa market; and Buttrey Food & Drug in Montana, Wyoming, and western North Dakota. All of those stores except Seessel's were re-bannered as Albertsons, and several new stores were built, concentrating growth in fast-growing markets throughout Tennessee. Of those acquisitions, only Buttrey was smoothly integrated into Albertsons; by the end of 2005, all of the Albertsons and Seessel's stores in Tennessee outside Memphis had been closed, and the rest had been sold to Schnucks of St. Louis, Missouri. The former Smitty's was divested to Price Cutter, and Super One was closed and the buildings sold.

American Stores

A typical Albertsons in Boise, Idaho.

In 1999, Albertsons made its biggest acquisition: American Stores Company, which included the chains ACME in Pennsylvania, New Jersey, Maryland, and Delaware; Lucky in California and Nevada; Jewel and Jewel-Osco in Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, and Michigan, and two pharmacy chains: Osco Drug and Sav-on Drugs. The acquisition briefly made Albertsons the largest American food and drug operator, with over 2,500 stores in 37 states, until Kroger's acquisition of Fred Meyer closed the following month. To make the acquisition, Albertsons was forced by anti-trust concerns to sell nearly 100 stores, primarily in California, Nevada, and New Mexico. In southern California, there were already Albertsons, so in order to not have two banners in the same area, Lucky stores were converted to the Albertsons banner in November 1999, and the Lucky brand name was retired.

In 2001, Albertsons sold its freestanding Osco Drug stores in the northeastern states to Jean Coutu Group, a Canadian drug store company. Those stores were re-branded as Brooks Pharmacy after the sale was completed in January 2002. In March 2005, Albertsons re-introduced the Osco brand name to the New England region by way of its Shaw's and Star Market pharmacies. Also, Albertsons began issuing Albertsons Preferred Savings Cards.

Facing losses from American Stores, in 2002 Albertsons cut 15-20% and announced it would close or sell 165 underperforming stores. Albertsons exited the San Antonio, Texas, market in April 2002 by closing its 20 remaining area stores after already shuttering three other stores in December 2001. Albertsons was ranked as the area's number two grocer by market share, compared to H-E-B's top position in the market. At the time of the withdrawal, the 44-store H-E-B chain held a commanding 61 percent market share, while Albertsons held a 15 percent market share. Albertsons had held the third position at the time Kroger exited the market in mid-1993 when it closed its 15 area stores. Then, H-E-B's 37 area stores held a 43.2 percent market share, Kroger's 15 area stores a 13.7 percent share, and Albertsons' 10 stores a 13.1 percent share. The remaining stores in the San Antonio division, primarily in the Austin area, became part of the Dallas division.[8]

Also in 2002, Albertsons shuttered its Mid-South division by selling its Seessel's supermarket chain in Memphis to Schnucks and stores in Mississippi to Brookshire's. The troubled Houston division would be gone too, with Albertsons closing its 43 area stores, leaving them to Kroger and Randalls, after entering that market in 1990. The Louisiana stores from that division joined the Florida division, while the stores in the Bryan-College Station area became part of the Dallas division.[8]

In 2004, Albertsons acquired Shaw's Supermarkets and Star Market Company from Sainsbury's for $2.5 billion. Albertsons also purchased Bristol Farms for $135 million.[9] During the same time, Albertsons exited the markets of Omaha, Nebraska and New Orleans, Louisiana; closing over 20 stores. However, the company has since re-entered the New Orleans market.

Sale to SuperValu, CVS and Cerberus

The acquisition spree caused significant problems for Albertsons, Inc. Many of the acquired chains had systems that did not mesh well with Albertsons. Financing those acquisitions required Albertsons Inc. to take on significant debt. Added to those problems were significant changes in consumer buying patterns, including new competition from large discounters such as Walmart and Costco that impacted sales.

After several reorganizations and waves of store closings, on January 23, 2006, Albertsons, Inc.,was acquired by SuperValu, a Cerberus-led group of investors, and CVS Pharmacy. The acquisition was completed on June 2, 2006 with the Cerberus-led group (who also included Kimco Realty Corporation, Schottenstein Stores Corp., Lubert-Adler Partners, and Klaff Realty) acquiring 661 stores and the distribution centers and offices from five of Albertsons divisions. These five divisions were thought to be Albertsons' five weakest divisions, and conventional wisdom in the industry was that the stores would eventually be closed or sold to other operators.

As of June 2, 2006, the company's retail stores were divided as follows:

Post-acquisition

Following the sale, Albertson's, Inc., was removed from the NYSE. Albertsons LLC was the successor company to Albertsons according to SEC filings.[11] New Albertsons Inc. assumed most of the debt but got most of the stores.

The five Albertsons Inc. divisions that remained as Albertson's LLC were the Dallas/Fort Worth division (Texas (except El Paso), Oklahoma, Louisiana, and Arkansas), the Rocky Mountain division (Colorado, Wyoming, Nebraska, and South Dakota), the Southwest division (Arizona, New Mexico and El Paso, Texas), the Florida division (Florida), and the Northern California division (northern California and northern Nevada). Albertson's LLC has concentrated on rebuilding market share and its store base in its strongest areas, and divesting stores and other property in its weaker areas.

On June 6, 2006, only one week after Albertson's LLC was created, the company announced its intent to close 100 Albertsons stores by August 2006.[12] Those closures were spread across all five divisions. Soon after, the company announced that it would be shutting down its online delivery service on July 21, 2006.[13] To distinguish the two companies, Albertsons LLC created a second website, AlbertsonsMarket.com.

In 2007, New Albertsons created the "Crazy About Food" slogan and campaign. At the same time, the company dropped spokesperson Patricia Heaton. In an effort to unify the entire SuperValu company, a new slogan was introduced at the end of 2008 throughout the company and is "Good Things are Just Around the Corner."[14] Previous slogans were "At Albertsons, We Think Like You Do.", "It's Your Store.", and "Helping Make Your Life Easier."

In June 2007, Albertson's LLC decided to discontinue its Preferred Savings Card Program, choosing instead offer discounted items to all of its customers.[15] In September, 2007, all Albertsons stores in the Dallas/Fort Worth, Texas, and Florida markets began collecting their Albertsons Preferred Savings Cards.[16]

In 2008, New Albertsons divested Bristol Farms to its senior management.

Sales and store closures

In November 2006, Save Mart Supermarkets acquired Albertsons' Northern California and Northern Nevada locations and began operating the stores in February 2007.[17] The company gradually converted all the stores to its Save Mart banner, except for stores in the San Francisco Bay area, which were rebranded as Lucky.[17] Most of the Albertsons locations had originally been branded as Lucky before Albertson's 1999 purchase of American Stores.[17]

A typical Albertsons-Savon store in Dallas, Texas. This store has since been sold as part of FTC-ordered divestment.

Between 2006 and 2012, Albertsons announced store closures in several states including Colorado,[18][19][20] Florida,[21][22] Nebraska,[23] Oklahoma,[24] South Dakota,[23] and Texas.[25]

On June 12, 2007, Albertson's LLC agreed to acquire all Raleys locations in New Mexico. The acquisition includes one closed and eight operating stores in Albuquerque and one store in Taos, thus doubling Albertsons store base in the Albuquerque region.[26] In December 2007, SuperValu acquired the eight remaining Wyoming locations from Albertson's LLC not already owned by the company. These stores continued to operate under the Albertsons banner.[27]

On May 5, 2008, Albertson's LLC announced the sale and divestiture of all 72 of the Albertsons Express fuel centers to San Antonio, Texas-based Valero Energy Corporation. Most of the Albertsons Express stores were located in the Phoenix, Arizona; Denver, Colorado; Baton Rouge and Lafayette, Louisiana; and Dallas-Ft. Worth markets. The transaction was completed in August 2008. Valero converted the acquired locations into Valero Corner Stores.

In June 2008, Albertson's LLC entered into an agreement with Lakeland, Florida-based Publix stores to sell 49 Florida Albertsons locations to the chain. This included 15 stores in Northern and Northwest Florida, 30 locations in Central Florida, and four locations in South Florida. The sale was completed in September.[28] In July 2009, SuperValu announced that it was selling 36 of its 43 Utah Albertsons locations to Associated Food Stores.[29] All stores were rebranded as Fresh Market.[29]

In September 2012, SuperValu announced the closure of 26 Albertsons stores in the U.S. as part of a decision to close about 60 stores nationwide.[30]

A former Albertsons location in St. Petersburg, Florida, now operating under the Publix Super Markets banner

Sale to Cerberus

On January 10, 2013, it was announced[31] that Supervalu was selling New Albertsons (Albertsons and the ASC purchased stores) to Cerberus Capital Management, which own the rest of the Albertsons stores. Since then, the Albertsons LLC-owned stores have come into the fold. In February 23, 2013, Albertsons LLC announced it would split operations of the combined chain into five divisions: Northwestern, Intermountain, Southern California, Southern, and Southwestern.

In June, the AlbertsonsMarket.com website and its Facebook page were merged into the Albertsons.com website and its Facebook page as part of the merger of the two companies. At the same time, the "It's a Great Deal" slogan adopted by Albertsons LLC/Albertsons Market since 2006 was replaced with "You're In for Something Fresh."

United Supermarkets acquisition

On September 9, 2013, the company acquired Lubbock-based supermarket United Supermarkets LLC.[32] On February 4, 2014 the FTC voted 4-0 to approve the deal. The acquisition deal cost Albertsons $385 million and required Albertsons to sell its single stores in the Amarillo, Texas and Wichita Falls, Texas markets.[33] The United Supermarkets family brands include Market Street, Amigos, and United Express.[34]

After the deal was finalized, the Albertsons Market brand was revived for Albertsons stores operated by United. The first to be branded as such opened in Alamogordo, New Mexico in 2015.

Safeway acquisition

On February 19, 2014, Safeway began to explore selling itself, and as of February 21, 2014 it was in advanced negotiations with Cerberus Capital Management.[35] On March 6, 2014, Cerberus (parent company of Albertsons) announced it would purchase Safeway for $9.4 billion in a deal expected to close in the 4th quarter of the year.[36]

On July 25, 2014, Safeway stockholders approved the merger with Albertsons.[3]

In December 2014, Albertsons announced that the Haggen Company, a Bellingham, WA based grocery chain, was buying 146 Safeway, Albertsons and Vons stores, as required by the antitrust review of the merger.[37]

On January 30, 2015, Albertsons officially acquired Safeway Inc. after being cleared by the FTC,[6] thus giving it control of the Safeway store banners, including Randalls, Tom Thumb, Carrs Safeway, Vons, and Pavilions, plus Safeway's 49% share of Casa Ley, a Mexican grocery chain.[38] Following the merger, Albertsons announced the new company would have 14 divisions led by three regional offices.[39]

On January 11, 2016, it was announced that the three remaining Albertsons stores in Florida, located in Largo, Altamonte Springs and Oakland Park, would be re-bannered as Safeway; this marks the first time that the Safeway brand would exist on a supermarket operation in Florida.[40]

Going public

After several months of rumors, the combined operation announced it would go public as Albertsons Companies, Inc. Albertsons attempted to IPO with the ticker ABS on October 14, 2015, planning to raise as much as $1.7 billion, selling 65.3 million shares with a range of $23 - $26 per share. However, the company postponed the listing due to market conditions, particularly after Wal-Mart warned of more challenged sales earlier that day. Albertsons has reportedly postponed the IPO indefinitely, as of October 2015.[1]

Haggen acquisition

On March 2016, Albertsons reached an agreement to acquire 29 of Haggen's "core" stores located in Washington and Oregon for $106 million.[41] The deal was approved on March 29, 2016.[42] As part of the deal, 15 stores in Washington will still operate under the Haggen banner, while the rest will be converted to Albertsons locations.

Chains

Albertsons operates stores under the following banners:[43]

Brands

Albertsons owns several store brands ("private label" brands), often bearing the name of the chain sold under, e.g. "Jewel" brand products in the Jewel and Jewel-Osco locations. Other Albertsons brands over the years have included Good Day, Village Market, A+, Master's Choice, and Janet Lee (named after the executive vice-president's daughter). The drug store brands (used for health and beauty aids, over-the-counter medications, and intimate paper goods) were consolidated under the name "Equaline," rather than the previous name, "Sav-On Osco by Albertsons" brand. Albertsons introduced an upscale private label brand, "Essensia," in 2003, which has now been renamed by SuperValu as Culinary Circle. Store brand items in Albertsons stores include Albertsons (national brand quality food), Shoppers Value (value priced items), Homelife (national brand quality non-foods), Culinary Circle ("gourmet" foods and ready-made meals), Whole Care Pet (pet foods and supplies), Baby Basics (diapers and infant care items), Java Delight (coffee), Farm Fresh (fresh produce), Arctic Shores (frozen seafood), Stockman & Dakota (high-quality beef), Flavorite (national brand quality foods, used throughout Supervalu stores), Stone Ridge (ice cream and sherbet), Super Chill (soft drinks and mixers), Equaline (health and beauty products), and Wild Harvest (natural and organic foods). In 2011 SuperValu announced it would eliminate Flavorite and all brands named after the chains it operates (such as Albertsons, Jewel, Shaw's, etc.) and would replace those labels with a new label, Essential Everyday.

After its purchase of Safeway, Albertsons began replacing some of its brands with Safeway's. O Organics and Open Nature replaced Wild Harvest, Pantry Essentials replaced Shoppers Value while Refreshe replaced Super Chill. By late 2015, its remaining store brands will be replaced with "Signature" (formerly Safeway Kitchens, Home, Farms and Care). In addition, Albertsons also started selling Lucerne dairy products, Mom To Mom baby products and Priority Pet Food as well.

Operations

On average, stores in the Albertsons Companies range between 50,000 square feet (4,600 m2) to 70,000 square feet (6,500 m2)[45] and almost universally feature a produce department, a meat and seafood counter, a deli, and a bakery, with many of the stores also featuring in-store banks and pharmacies. Larger and newer stores may include enhanced amenities, including Starbucks coffee counters, prepared foods, in-store pizza, salad bars, and juice bars.

Technology

Albertsons was increasingly progressive in the area of technology, having in recent years added a "check out while you go" system, known as "Shop 'N' Scan", where shoppers scanned items as they shopped and quickly paid before leaving. This was tested at Albertsons (now LLC) stores in Texas. This system has since been removed from some stores.

Albertsons offered (in certain areas) its customers the option to shop from home via the company's website. Pickups were arranged at the store, or the items were delivered to the customer's home. In areas where this program was in effect, it was widely advertised over television and radio by corporate spokeswoman Patricia Heaton.

At the beginning of 2009, SuperValu introduced a way to help customers shop healthy known as nutrition iQ. This program identifies the health benefits of over 60,000 products in 11 different health categories.

On June 11, 2013, Albertsons announced its plans to merge its duplicate websites, social media accounts and mobile apps onto one of each kind.[46] While its website consolidation appeared to take place as expected, its applications received bad reviews[47] — but the biggest consequence was the mistaken deletion of their previous Facebook page and loss of over 200,000 fans. While no details were given as to the mistake made, Albertsons simply admitted that while attempting to join their Albertsons page with over 200,000 Likes and their Albertsons Market page with over 80,000 Likes, something went wrong resulting in the loss of thousands of Likes and comments.

Since its acquisition of United Supermarkets, the Albertsons Market brand was revived, and its Facebook and Twitter pages were re-opened.

Preferred Savings Card

Prior to the introduction of the Albertsons Preferred Savings Card in 2001 to all stores, Albertsons used a savings program called "Bonus Buys." "Bonus Buys" were available to anyone that shopped at Albertsons. Preferred Savings Cards are issued to all shoppers and allow for customers to actually see the savings. The cards were also used in a gas rewards program beginning in 2009. Only the SuperValu-owned Albertsons stores continued to use the Preferred Savings Cards, as the Albertsons LLC stores discontinued them after September 2007. In June 2013, the use of the Preferred card in the former SuperValu stores was discontinued.[48] The cards briefly continued in Southern California stores before being discontinued in July 2013.

References

  1. 1 2 3 "Albertsons » Albertsons Files Registration Statement for Proposed Initial Public Offering". Albertsons. Retrieved 5 January 2016.
  2. 1 2 "Albertsons » About Us". Albertsons. Retrieved 5 January 2016.
  3. 1 2 3 4 Maria Armental (July 25, 2014). "Safeway Shareholders Approve Albertsons Merger". The Wall Street Journal. Retrieved August 1, 2014.
  4. "Albertsons on the Forbes America's Largest Private Companies List". Forbes.com. Retrieved 2015-04-28.
  5. Solomon, Brian (March 6, 2014). "Cerberus Buys Safeway, Merges It With Albertsons For Over $9 Billion". Forbes. Retrieved June 3, 2014.
  6. 1 2 Halkias, Maria (January 30, 2015). "It's a done deal: Albertsons and Safeway merger is complete". Dallas Morning News. Archived from the original on January 31, 2015. Retrieved March 13, 2015.
  7. Albright, Mark (August 6, 2002). "Stores get less possessive". St. Petersburg Times. Retrieved October 16, 2014.
  8. 1 2 Milligan, Tara (13 March 2002). "Albertson's saying good-bye to Memphis; closing, selling Seessel's stores". Memphis Business Journal. Retrieved 12 June 2016.
  9. Fixmer, Andy (13 December 2004). "Albertson's Plans Upscale Push With Bristol Farms Expansion" (PDF). Greif & Co. Los Angeles Business Journal. Retrieved 12 June 2016.
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  12. Albertsons to close 100 of its stores Deseret News (Salt Lake City), June 8, 2006.
  13. Albertson's LLC to Close Shutter Online Shopping Service Progressive Grocer/AllBusiness.com, July 13, 2006
  14. Albertsons says it's "crazy" about food, KTVB-TV, March 9, 2007. Archived February 28, 2009, at the Wayback Machine.
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  16. Albertsons's ditches loyalty cards, Dallas Morning News, September 27, 2007. Archived October 17, 2007, at the Wayback Machine.
  17. 1 2 3 Albertsons is sold in Northern California AllBusiness, November 28, 2006.
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  20. "Albertsons to close more Denver-area stores". 9News. January 8, 2010.
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  22. Rich, Jennifer (April 11, 2012). "Albertsons to close 13 Florida stores". The Bradenton Herald. Archived from the original on April 13, 2012. Retrieved April 11, 2012.
  23. 1 2 Nash Finch to Buy Rapid City Albertsons, Rapid City Journal, February 15, 2008.
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  25. Albertsons to close 6 D-FW stores, The Dallas Morning News, January 29, 2007. Archived September 30, 2007, at the Wayback Machine.
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  27. Supervalu will acquire Albertsons stores, The Casper Star Tribune, December 20, 2007.
  28. Publix buying 49 Albertsons Stores, AllBusiness, June 9, 2008 Archived May 1, 2010, at the Wayback Machine.
  29. 1 2 SuperValu announces sale of Albertsons stores in Utah
  30. "Albertsons to close 26 U.S. stores". The Los Angeles Times. September 5, 2012. Retrieved September 7, 2012.
  31. "SUPERVALU Announces Definitive Agreement for Sale of Five Retail Grocery Banners to Cerberus-Led Investor Group". Supervalu. January 9, 2013. Retrieved January 14, 2013.
  32. "Albertson's LLC to Acquire United Supermarkets LLC". Albertson’s LLC. September 9, 2013. Archived from the original on December 1, 2013. Retrieved February 13, 2014.
  33. "FTC gives final approval for United-Albertsons merger". Amarillo Globe-News. February 4, 2014. Retrieved February 13, 2014.
  34. "Serving Texans in the Texas tradition". United Texas, LLC. Retrieved February 13, 2014.
  35. "Cerberus in advanced talks to buy Safeway". Reuters. February 21, 2014. Retrieved February 21, 2014.
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  37. "Washington-based Haggen grocery chain buying 146 Albertson, Safeway stores in the West". Fox Business Network. December 20, 2014. Retrieved March 13, 2015.
  38. "Safeway earnings may drop / Grocery chain blames slow sales, health costs". San Francisco Chronicle. November 9, 2002.
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  40. "Safeway store coming to Altamonte Springs". Orlando Business Journal. 11 January 2016. Retrieved 23 January 2016.
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  42. "Judge approves sale of Haggen to Albertsons". The Seattle Times. March 29, 2016. Retrieved April 3, 2016.
  43. "About Us". Albertsons. Retrieved 2016-08-01.
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