Loblaw Cos. is accelerating its shift toward value-based retail, announcing a C$2.4 billion investment to open 31 new discount grocery stores and renovate hundreds of existing locations across Canada. The expansion targets a consumer base increasingly strained by food prices that have surged more than 30% since 2019, according to industry data.
Strategic Pivot to Discount Banners
The investment prioritizes the company's Maxi and No Frills banners, which have become central to growth as shoppers migrate away from full-service supermarkets. Loblaw plans to build more than two dozen additional discount locations through 2026 as part of this trajectory. Grocery prices in Canada have climbed more than 30% since 2019, according to a report from TD Cowen. The analysis suggests this increase is nearly double what would have occurred under pre-pandemic trends, forcing a permanent shift in consumer behavior toward private-label products and discount formats.
Geographically, the expansion focuses on Canada's most populous regions to capture shifting market demand:
- 27 new stores in Ontario
- 15 locations in Quebec
- 24 sites across Western Canada
- 4 new stores in Eastern Canada
Infrastructure and Pharmacy Growth
This year’s spending is a component of a larger C$10 billion capital commitment through 2030. A portion of this capital is earmarked for the ongoing construction of a large-scale automated distribution center in Caledon, Ontario, aimed at streamlining supply chain logistics. Additionally, the company plans to open 34 new Shoppers Drug Mart and Pharmaprix locations, further integrating healthcare clinics into its national retail pharmacy network.
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