Amazon buys Whole Foods for US$13.7 billion
Amazon will be able to use automation and data analysis to draw more customers to stores while helping Whole Foods cut costs — and perhaps prices

Online retail giant Amazon is making a bold expansion into physical stores with a US$13.7 billion deal to buy Whole Foods Market, setting the stage for radical retail experiments that could revolutionise how people buy groceries and everything else.
Amazon will be able to use automation and data analysis to draw more customers to stores while helping Whole Foods cut costs — and perhaps prices — and better tailor its offerings to customers.
Amazon, meanwhile, will be able to use hundreds of Whole Foods stores as distribution hubs — not just for delivering groceries but as pickup centres for what customers order online.
“The conventional grocery store should feel threatened and incapable of responding,” Wedbush Securities analyst Michael Pachter said.
Moody’s lead retail analyst Charlie O’Shea said the deal could be “transformative, not just for food retail, but for retail in general.”
