The grocery sector is dog-eat-dog at the best of times, as investors in Tesco (LSE: TSCO) need no reminding. Its shares are now 60% lower than they were five years ago and still limping. Tesco was once the UKs top grocery dog but it has been savaged by those German mongrels Aldi and Lidl.
If that wasnt bad enough, it now faces a fresh challenge from an internet thoroughbred Amazon (NASDAQ: AMZN.US) which has just launched its nationwide same-day grocery delivery service Amazon Pantry.Will the new service gobble up whatremainsof Tescos growth prospects?
Perish The Thought
Amazons Pantry will be stock with4,000 food andhousehold goods at launch.The service will be open to its Amazon Prime customers who pay a 79 annual subscription and is clearly designed to get more of them to sign up.Customers will also pay 2.99 for the first 20kg box they buy, plus 99p forany furtherboxes in the same order. The service already operates in the US, Japan and Germany.
It was originally thoughtthe service would be called Amazon Fresh, as in the US, but in fact Amazon will only start off byselling non-perishable items. So the initial challenge isnt quite as fruityas Tesco feared. Its offer of Everyday essentials at every day sizes includes breakfast cereals, jams and spreads, sauces and ready meals, pasta and baking supplies, and cleaning products.
Best Served Cold
That makes ita good way to stock up on bulkyitems, but customers will still need to go shopping (either at the high street or online) for milk, fruit, vegetables, meat and other perishable essentials. Why would they bother doing two shops and possibly incur two delivery fees unless Amazon can prove it is much cheaper? This isnt the mortal challenge we all fear, although nobody can write off Amazon.
Amazon has deep pockets and seems willing to invest in the cold chain capability it needs to offer fresh food deliveries, buying two Tesco logistics buildings in the London area, and triallingchilledand frozen food delivery in Birmingham. There is a long way to go, and although Amazon will eat into some Tesco sales, it will be a long time before itcan deliver the same vast range of goods asTesco. Until it has that kind of scale it may struggle to compete on price in the UKscut-throat grocery sector.
Dogs Life
Tesco has more pressingproblems. Sales fell 1.8% in the last four weeks, according to latest figures from Nielsen, even before Amazon opened its pantry. It has some friends, however. Citi has just upgraded Tesco to buy, with a target price of 230p, which would be a rise of22% from todays 170p. It reckons Tesco has the scope to be more competitive, to rebuild its profitability and to repair its balance sheet.
With shares neara 10-year low reckons things can only get better, Citi says, provided Tesco invests up to 700m to put the bite on the discounters. Tesco can worry about Amazon tomorrow. Aldi and Lidl are the ones snapping at its heels today.
Tesco was once supposed to rule the world but now other British companies are taking up the challenge.
Like this exciting opportunity, which Motley Fool analysts have singled out asone stock poised for global domination.
This company looks ready to explode, with its sales on course to triple in the next five years.
Moredetails of this exciting buying opportunity are available in a brand-new report3 Hidden Factors Behind This Daring E-commerce Play.
To find out more for free,click here now.
Harvey Jones has no position in any shares mentioned. We Fools don’t all hold the same opinions, but we all believe that considering a diverse range of insights makes us better investors.