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Technology Stocks : Peapod (PPOD) -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Moominoid who wrote (1165)7/17/2001 7:36:15 PM
From: Glenn Petersen  Respond to of 1170
 
WBVN's was doomed to fail as soon as they committed to an aggressive national roll out. PPOD wins (sort of) by playing the tortoise to WBVN's hare.

suntimes.com

Peapod wins battle, but loses online
war

July 17, 2001

BY SANDRA GUY BUSINESS REPORTER

Chicago's last online grocer couldn't survive as a publicly traded company, even
after besting its online competitors, and will be taken over by the brick-and-mortar
grocer that rescued it in April 2000.

Skokie-based Peapod, which plans to keep its headquarters here, is being bought
outright by its majority owner, grocer Royal Ahold NV of Zandaam, Netherlands.

Ahold, which owns 58 percent of Peapod, will pay $35 million in cash to acquire
the remainder of the online grocer's stock. The offer of $2.15 a share, or 72
percent more than Friday's closing price, is below the $3.75 a share paid when
Ahold bought an initial stake last year, said Ahold spokesman Jan Hol.

Peapod shares jumped 86 cents on Monday to close at $2.11. The stock traded
as low as 69 cents in January.

The partnership appears to be one of the few successful business models for online
grocers because so much capital and infrastructure are required to be successful,
said David Kathman, stock analyst for Morningstar Inc., a Chicago investment
research firm.

Peapod will become a wholly owned subsidiary of Ahold after the takeover is
completed in the third quarter, which ends Sept. 30. Peapod also will be de-listed
from Nasdaq at that time.

Ironically, Peapod's board of directors accepted Ahold's takeover after a special
committee determined that it was the only way to raise the money required to keep
Peapod listed on the Nasdaq exchange.

A company must have more than $4 million in net tangible assets on its balance
sheet to remain on the Nasdaq. Peapod's assets would have fallen below $4 million
in the third quarter that started July 1, said Peapod President and CEO Marc van
Gelder.

No other financing was available because venture capital has dried up for dot-com
companies and Ahold already held 58 percent of Peapod's common stock, van
Gelder said.

Initially, Ahold offered $1.50 a share. Negotiations went up to $2.15. William Blair
& Co. assisted in the transaction.

Royal Ahold's purchase of the remaining 42 percent of Peapod strengthens the link
between online sales and the Dutch company's supermarket chains in the United
States.

The takeover follows last week's Chapter 11 bankruptcy filing by rival Webvan
Group Inc., which lost more than $800 million trying to sell groceries over the
Internet. Peapod's sales have soared 50 percent in the Chicago area since
Webvan's demise, said van Gelder, who declined to give figures.

Homeruns.com, which competed with Peapod in Boston and in Washington, D.C.,
also ceased operations late last week, leaving Peapod the only online grocer
standing in the five markets it serves.

''Peapod is now profitable in its home market of Chicago,'' Hol said. ''The whole
concern is expected to have a profit in 2003.''

Ahold initially bought a 51 percent stake in Peapod, and later increased it by 7
percent. In February, Ahold increased an existing loan to Peapod from $20 million
to $50 million.

After Ahold stepped in last year, Peapod closed operations in San Francisco to
focus on the East Coast, where Ahold is the market leader with its Stop & Shop,
Giant and other chains.

Ahold's purchase of Peapod will be ''almost neutral'' on Ahold's 2001 earnings per
share, the company said.

In Amsterdam, Ahold shares fell 49 cents, or 1.4 percent, to close at 35.6 euros.



To: Moominoid who wrote (1165)8/14/2001 7:03:17 PM
From: Glenn Petersen  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 1170
 
Interesting article on PPOD:

business2.com

Why Peapod Is Thriving: First-Failure Advantage
The online grocer went down early, but with enough time -- and
Royal Ahold funding -- to stage a dramatic comeback.
By John Frederick Moore, August 14, 2001

Sometimes it pays to stand at the brink of
disaster. Where so many online grocers have
failed, Peapod (PPOD) is still, surprisingly,
standing tall -- even though the company
appeared ready to go the way of Webvan just
over a year ago.

Last week Peapod announced that it had
expanded its service in the Washington, D.C.,
area, taking over territory that had been the
domain of HomeRuns, which closed last month
after running out of cash. This is the second time
that Peapod, based in Skokie, Ill., has moved into
an area abandoned by a failed online grocer.
When Webvan went out of business last month,
Peapod began targeting the defunct company's
customers in Chicago -- a market in which Peapod
reached operating profitability earlier this year.

The catalyst behind Peapod's renewed vigor:
Dutch grocery giant Royal Ahold, which bought a
controlling share ($73 million) in Peapod in April
2000 and has since agreed to acquire the
remaining 42 percent of the company. Peapod
currently operates in five markets -- Washington,
Chicago, Long Island, Connecticut, and Boston --
and rang up more than $90 million in sales last
year.

Peapod "lucked out," says Kevin Murphy, an
analyst at Gartner (IT), because it was "the first
to fail." (Ironic, given that the company launched
in 1989, well ahead of the dawn of the commercial
Internet.) On the verge of bankruptcy in the
spring of 2000, it came at a bargain-basement
price to its new and deep-pocketed parent, long
before the greater dotcom disaster had been fully
realized.

In aligning itself with a major grocery concern,
Peapod received not only much-needed cash, but
a change in strategy as well. Instead of running
huge, expensive inventory warehouses, Peapod
now uses existing Royal Ahold stores -- such as
Stop & Shop -- for its inventory. It's a model
similar to that employed by Tesco, the U.K.
grocery giant that took a 35 percent stake in
Safeway's GroceryWorks.com.

"It would cost Webvan $30 million to build a
warehouse," Murphy says. Tesco, he says, buys
two trucks per store, and only for stores in
neighborhoods surrounded by enough good
customer prospects -- on-the-go, upscale,
suburban homeowners -- to ensure a decent
return on the capital expense.

Putting itself under the aegis of a brick-and-mortar grocer also helped Peapod
reduce marketing costs. Webvan spent between 25 and 35 percent of its
revenue on advertising, compared with about 1 percent for traditional grocery
chains, according to Rob Rubin, an analyst at Forrester Research (FORR).

The hybrid model also helps Peapod target its markets with greater precision.
Online grocers typically ramped up their inventories for demand that never
materialized. Also, as Rubin points out, only about 25 percent of households
that buy groceries online place two or more orders a month. By tapping into
Royal Ahold's in-store inventory, Peapod doesn't need an expensive
infrastructure built for a sporadic customer base.

"You put the URL on the shopping bags, you already know which of your stores
are in the upmarket neighborhoods where this kind of service would be viable,
and all of a sudden your cost of business goes down," Murphy says.

The future of this market, Murphy and Rubin agree, lies with the offline/online
model that has brought Peapod back from the brink. For the time being,
Peapod is nestled safely in the catbird seat. But as more brick-and-mortar
grocers join the online world, it's doubtful that a single dominant player will
emerge.

"The grocery chains in the U.S. are highly fragmented," Murphy says. "There
are at least a dozen big players, and their markets don't overlap much. All of
those guys will eventually have online grocery-delivery services, but there will
be few of them in each geographic area."