PORTLAND, Ore. — The chief executive officers of Kroger and Albertsons insisted Wednesday — under questioning from the federal government — that merging would allow the two supermarket companies to lower prices and more effectively compete with retail giants like Walmart, Costco and Amazon.
Kroger CEO Rodney McMullen and Albertsons CEO Vivek Sankaran appeared in Oregon's U.S. District Court to testify against the Federal Trade Commission's attempt to block the proposed merger of their companies. During the hearing, the commission's lawyers suggested that the merger would hurt competition in certain areas where the two are each other's primary rivals.
''The day that we merge is the day that we will begin lowering prices,'' McMullen said while under questioning by a lawyer representing his company.
The two companies proposed what would be the largest supermarket merger in U.S. history in October 2022, after Kroger agreed to purchase Albertsons. But the Federal Trade Commission sued to prevent the $24.6 billion deal, alleging it would eliminate competition and lead to higher food prices for already struggling customers.
Addressing another issue that has worried shoppers in communities with both Albertsons and Kroger-run stores, McMullen said Kroger was committed to not closing any branches immediately if the merger is finalized but might down the road if it decides location changes or consolidations are needed.
Sankaran, Albertsons' CEO, argued that the deal would boost growth and in turn bolster stores and union jobs, because many of its and Kroger's competitors, like Walmart, have few unionized workers. But when asked what his company would do if the merger didn't go through, he said it may pursue ''structural options'' like laying off employees, closing stores and exiting certain markets, if unable to find other ways to lower costs.
''I would have to consider that,'' he said. ''It's a dramatically different picture with the merger than without it."
An FTC lawyer pointed to a written statement that Sankaran provided to the U.S. Senate in 2022 when testifying about the merger, in which he said his company was ''in excellent financial condition.'' Sankaran said the market and certain conditions had changed since then.