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Walmart To Aggressively Roll-Out Smaller Stores

First Posted: 09/20/10 03:30 PM ET Updated: 05/25/11 06:45 PM ET

Walmart

NEW YORK (AP) -- Wal-Mart Stores Inc. is planning an aggressive push into urban markets with a new small format that's a fraction of the size of its supercenters.

The expansion, expected to be spelled out next month at the retailer's meeting with analysts at its headquarters in Bentonville, Ark., is aimed to pump up sluggish U.S. sales.

Real estate executives said that over this past summer, the world's largest retailer has been scouring for small locations, around 20,000 square feet, in urban areas including New York City, San Francisco and other cities. That size is larger than a typical drugstore but smaller than a supermarket.

"I see this as a smart move, instead of coming into a market as a 900-pound gorilla," said Faith Consolo, chairman of real estate firm Prudential Douglas Elliman's retail leasing division. She noted that Wal-Mart has been talking to landlords and brokers.

"They're on an aggressive roll," she added. "This is a creative time. Everyone is thinking out of the box."

She noted that in New York City, Wal-Mart has been looking in Queens and the lower part of Manhattan.

Since 2008, Wal-Mart has been testing smaller stores called Marketside. They now total four and average 15,000 square feet. The format focuses on fresh food. And the discounter now has almost 200 Neighborhood Market by Walmart stores, which offer a mix of fresh food, pharmacy, beauty, stationary and pet supplies and are about 42,000 square feet.

Wal-Mart has been shrinking its supercenters, which carry a wide assortment of food and general merchandise, to about 150,000 square feet from 195,000 square feet. But the company has maintained that it plans to use smaller formats in urban markets.

In a note to investors Monday, Brian Sozzi, analyst with Wall Street Strategies, said he believes the new 20,000-square-foot stores would likely fuse the Marketside and Neighborhood Markets formats.

"Wal-Mart needs to have a store concept that brings in customers more than once every two weeks when paychecks are distributed," he wrote. He added that using the Marketside Stores as a vehicle for growth is too limiting, and that Neighborhood Markets are too big to enter cities.

Wal-Mart officials couldn't be immediately reached for comment.

Bill Simon, the new president and CEO of Wal-Mart's U.S. business, told investors last week at a Goldman Sachs retail conference, said that "we will have a healthy mix of supercenters and small formats, including our grocery format, Neighborhood Market and smaller formats," he continued. He added that in particular, Wal-Mart is looking to open stores that are similar to the formats in Mexico, Central America, and Latin America.

"We are going to beg, borrow, steal and learn from them as quickly as we can, because it is important for our urban strategy," he added.

Wal-Mart, which now has more than 4,000 stores in the U.S. has hit a wall in the U.S. The company just reported its fifth straight quarterly decline in revenue at stores opened at least a year, considered a key indicator of a retailer's health.

Wal-Mart benefited during the recession as affluent shoppers traded down to cheaper stores. But stubbornly high unemployment and tight credit are still squeezing its main U.S. customers, lower-income workers who are having even more trouble stretching dollars to the next payday because of tight credit and an unemployment rate stuck at almost 10 percent. The discounter's own merchandising gaffes have also contributed to the company's revenue figure's decline.

Wal-Mart's rival Target Corp. is set to spell out more details of its urban strategy on Friday to the media at its headquarters in Minneapolis. Target had told analysts in January that it plans to open in the next few years smaller stores of 60,000 to 100,000 square feet. That compares with its current average of 125,000 square feet. But real estate executives including John Bemis, head of Jones Lang LaSalle Inc.'s retail leasing team, say Target also is looking at 20,000-square-foot locations.

"I think 20,000 makes more sense than 80,000 square feet," Sozzi said.

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NEW YORK (AP) -- Wal-Mart Stores Inc. is planning an aggressive push into urban markets with a new small format that's a fraction of the size of its supercenters. The expansion, expected to be spel...
NEW YORK (AP) -- Wal-Mart Stores Inc. is planning an aggressive push into urban markets with a new small format that's a fraction of the size of its supercenters. The expansion, expected to be spel...
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kerriberri
Let's Obviate Obfuscation!
09:09 AM on 10/28/2010
Part of the reason for this new strategy is the expansion of a new competitor (from Germany), Aldi. They've been in the Midwest for some time, but are now expanding. We have 2 Aldi stores near me in Fort Worth, Texas, and they are fantastic. Prices are INCREDIBLY low, quality of food is great. They're a cash-only operation (brilliant), so this reduces consumer cost (no returned checks, credit card swipe fees, etc. added to everyone's grocery bills). Stores are small & easy to shop.

Also interesting: Aldi is owned by the Albrecht brothers, who also own Trader Joe's. Personally, I think they're using some of the same suppliers for their food at Aldi, since everything I've tried there has been great (guacamole chips, imported chocolate, coffee, green tea, lots more).

I did a blog post about them here, just because it's such a great place to shop: http://kerriskitchen.com/whats-an-aldi/

Oh, and they locate their stores within sight of existing Walmart stores (just like Sam Walton used to do with the old Franklin Five and Dimes).
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09:38 PM on 09/21/2010
In other words... Wal-Mart wants to very-belatedly go to the territory that, say, Dollar General Stores has occupied for about the last fifty years or so. :-/

In a very strange sort of way, Wal-Mart is very much a =product= of the "financial bubble" mentality, not an opponent of it. Wal-Mart ... (a) determined to put a store in =every= podunk town, and ... (b) determined that the store must be several times larger than a respectable aircraft-hangar, and must stock "everything under the sun," whether it moved off the shelves or not.

"Retailers," as a lot, have a business model that is very difficult to pursue. Margins are razor-thin at the best of times. Inventory is not your friend. Fixed costs such as air conditioning are your nemesis. And yet ... "here went Wal-Mart."

Bye bye, Wal-Mart!
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BBinMT
Is this a 5 minute argument or the full half hour?
07:24 PM on 09/21/2010
Ever wonder why small businesses can't make it and wages have been stagnant for 10 years. One piece of the puzzle is right here.
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Mark Harker
07:04 PM on 09/21/2010
Any successful company finds ways to innovate. i say congratulations to them. i hope they do well. Walgreen's used to be the size of wal-mart but they saw a market for local drugstores.
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JPalka
06:35 PM on 09/21/2010
So Walmart will be the new boutique in US
04:09 PM on 09/21/2010
Isn't Walmart well overdue for anti-trust action?
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Mark Harker
06:58 PM on 09/21/2010
no no ones stopping you from going to target or a local store.
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BBinMT
Is this a 5 minute argument or the full half hour?
07:28 PM on 09/21/2010
Provided there is a local store left standing. Their purchasing practices have also brought down some traditionally strong suppliers which left many without decent manufacturing jobs. The huge getting huger doesn't translate into prosperity for most.
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Red45
We can turn the tide
02:38 PM on 09/21/2010
walmart is like cancer cells----just slithering into every community in America until all other retail businesses are shut down. THEN they can charge whatever they want so all the walton children can continue to be billionaires and screw everyone else, including walmart employees.
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whyus
San Francisco native
02:22 AM on 09/21/2010
I have never shopped there.
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Morgantheaxe
Right is wrong, and left is correct!
01:34 AM on 09/21/2010
No they shouldnt be forced to pay their employees more, but worry not Walmart has theirs coming. Every single person I know....literally has had enough of Walmart. The cheap clothing ( and I dont mean price I mean quality), the mish mash of lower than average prices mixed with much higher than average prices on many items( when home depot is kicking your butt on items walmarts jacking it up a bit), and the horrible shopping experience that is a walmart super box has really turned a lot of people off. My wife and I actually choose to shop at a higher priced grocery store because we get better meat and produce. The stuff we were getting at walmart, especially the produce, was just looking terrible. We have started using the local Walgreens for our prescriptions because the service at the pharmacys is horrible. We know we arent the only ones doing this. We'll see what Walmarts bottom line is over the next year or two.
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garder54
08:05 AM on 09/21/2010
Sams Club, can't beat it.
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loki
Better to die fighting, than live on knees
11:50 PM on 09/20/2010
Wonderful. I guess we will see BP gas stations with Wal-Mart Mini Marts...
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take10
11:23 PM on 09/20/2010
Yep! This time they plan to put Mom and Pop completely out of business!
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uniquindividual
I'm unique and so are you
05:34 PM on 09/21/2010
And small business owners continue to support Walmarts serfs - Republican politicians
10:51 PM on 09/20/2010
They wages they pay, are not so bad, IF we were back in the 80's before Reagan deregulated everything. But those same wages now, are just not realistic because of the prices of rent, food, gas and everything else.
2 options and neither is really viable: (1) have Walmart (and others) raise their wages OR have the cost of every day needs rolled back to the 80's.
We are to the point now, where is really is no way to correct the distortion of wages verses cost.........
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mandalay007
10:49 PM on 09/20/2010
the swell thing would be to see this corp. TANK-----lord knows I hate to put the workers out of a job, but this company needs to be stopped----------Kate Gosslin's American, and then we wonder-----%#^&
Giopaps
Born Dutch, always Dutch
09:14 PM on 09/20/2010
Walmart, small or not stay out of my neighborhood. Your low price competition makes it imposable for surrounding stores to keep offering good healtcare insurance and above minimum wage salaries to their employees. You make America poor, China rich and our country a heaven for illegal immigrants.
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mjeffn
Freedom's just another word 4 nothing left to lose
08:24 PM on 09/20/2010
A WalMart near ground zero will attract mullets to sacred ground.
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DanoX
I'll be your snack-pack baby!
08:56 PM on 09/20/2010
HAHAHAHA! Brilliant! LOL!