TRIBUNAL CONFIRMS COMMISSION & SHOPRITE CHECKERS CONSENT AGREEMENT CONCERNING LONG-TERM EXCLUSIVE LEASE AGREEMENTS

 13 October 2020


The Tribunal has confirmed, as an order, a consent agreement between the Competition Commission (the Commission) and Shoprite Checkers (Pty) Ltd (Shoprite) whereby the retailer agrees to immediately stop enforcing exclusivity provisions in its long-term exclusive lease agreements with its landlords against small, medium and micro enterprises (SMMEs) and speciality and limited line stores such as butcheries, bakeries, liquor stores and greengrocers.

 

In effect, this agreement stops Shoprite from excluding competition from smaller suppliers such as spaza shops, supermarkets, green grocers, and butchers who will now have better access to letting space in shopping centres where a Shoprite-owned store is located.

 

The consent agreement follows the release of the Grocery Retail Market Inquiry (GRMI) report in November 2019 which found, among others, that long-term exclusive lease agreements were widely prevalent in the grocery retail sector and impeded competition in the sector.

 

The GRMI report recommended that the Commission must secure voluntary compliance by national supermarket chains with its recommendations concerning long-term exclusive lease agreements. 

 

Shoprite– which had participated in the work of the GRMI - resolved to agree with the Commission concerning its recommendations.

 

A copy of the consent agreement will be made publicly available on the Tribunal’s website at www.comptrib.co.za in due course. Below, is a summary of the contents:

 


CONSENT AGREEMENT

 

The agreement immediately prohibits Shoprite stores located in non-urban areas (including townships and areas outside towns and cities) from enforcing exclusivity provisions against all other retailers. A list of more than 400 Shoprite stores in non-urban areas is included in the consent agreement. Shoprite stores located in urban areas will face the same restrictions, except that they will be permitted to phase out the enforcement of exclusivity provisions against other supermarket chains within five years.

 

In terms of the consent agreement, nothing contained in it amounts to or should be taken as an admission of any facts, conduct, liability or wrongdoing on the part of Shoprite.

 


Franchise Business

 

In relation to the Franchise Business (the supermarket franchise business conducted by Shoprite as franchisor currently under the name and style of OK Foods), Shoprite will comply with the provisions as set out above where it holds the lease of or head lease to a Franchisee’s Supermarket.

 


Background

 

Long-term exclusive lease agreements, entered into between property developers and supermarkets, include provisions that restrict the landlord from letting premises in the same shopping centre to potentially competing grocery retailers and specialty stores (exclusivity provisions).

 

The GRMI report noted that these types of agreements harm customers by limiting consumer choice in shopping centres. In addition, it found that the continued presence of long-term exclusive lease agreements will perpetuate observed concentration levels and sustain the existing incumbency patterns, thus depriving consumers of dynamism and innovation in the grocery retail sector.

 

The GRMI concluded that there were no compelling justifications to substantiate the continued unfettered presence of long-term exclusive lease agreements.

 

The full retail market inquiry report can be accessed here.



 

Issued by:

 

Gillian de Gouveia, Communications Officer
On behalf of the Competition Tribunal of South Africa

Tel: +27 (0) 12 394 1383
Cell: +27 (0) 82 410 1195
E-Mail: GillianD@comptrib.co.za
Twitter: @comptrib


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