Kroger is closing around 60 stores in the next year and a half

A Kroger grocery store in Houston. Roughly 60 locations are set to close over the next 18 months.

A Kroger grocery store in Houston. Roughly 60 locations are set to close over the next 18 months. (Brandon Bell via CNN )


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KEY TAKEAWAYS
  • Kroger plans to close 60 stores, about 5% of its locations, in the next 18 months.
  • Closures follow a failed merger with Albertsons and a $100 million charge.
  • Kroger aims to improve remaining stores, benefiting from increased home dining trends.

NEW YORK — Kroger is set to close about 5% of its grocery stores — amounting to approximately 60 locations — over the next year and a half.

The closures come a few months after plans collapsed for a merger with rival Albertsons that would have created a massive chain. That resulted in the two companies becoming embroiled in a legal fight.

Kroger revealed in an earnings release Friday that it was taking a $100 million impairment charge on the closures, but that they would provide a "modest financial benefit" in the long term. The company did not specify which stores were slated for closure and isn't providing further comment beyond the earnings report.

Affected employees will be offered positions at nearby stores, Kroger said, and it will use the money saved to invest in "customer experience" at the remaining locations. Kroger operates approximately 1,200 stores across 16 U.S. states. Kroger operates 54 Smith's Food and Drug stores in Utah, according to the Smith's website.

The grocery chain said it is benefiting from consumers cutting back spending on dining out and lifted its sales forecast for the year. Interim CEO Ron Sargent said in an earnings call that its customers are "eating more meals at home."

Kroger's sales were also boosted by price cuts on 2,000 products and a bigger promotional push for its private labels, which are often cheaper than name brands, it said. Sales of its private label products have grown faster than sales of national brands for seven consecutive quarters, Sargent said. In the coming months, Kroger will also launch 80 new protein-rich products to capitalize on consumers' growing appetite for the nutrient.

As for the closures, Sargent said, "not all of our stores are delivering the sustainable results we need," and that the company had not reviewed its locations during the merger process as it usually does every year.

Sargent was named the interim CEO in March following the abrupt resignation of Kroger's former leader, Rodney McMullen, after an investigation into his personal conduct.

Kroger shares closed nearly 10% higher Friday.

The Key Takeaways for this article were generated with the assistance of large language models and reviewed by our editorial team. The article, itself, is solely human-written.

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Jordan Valinsky

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