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Tops Markets LLC

 
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TOPS Markets, LLC

Contact Information
TOPS Markets, LLC
6363 Main St.
Williamsville, NY 14221
NY Tel. 716-635-5000
Toll Free 800-522-2522

Type: Private
On the web: http://www.topsmarkets.com

TOPS Markets tops the list for shoppers in Buffalo, New York. The regional supermarket chain operates about 70 supermarkets and five franchised stores under the TOPS Friendly Markets banner in western New York, including the Rochester area, and northwestern Pennsylvania. TOPS Markets is doubling its store count as a result of its recent purchase of 79 stores from bankrupt rival Penn Traffic. The acquisition gives TOPS more stores in New York and Pennsylvania, and extends its reach into Vermont and New Hampshire. TOPS Markets is owned by the private equity unit of Morgan Stanley, which purchased the chain in 2007 from Dutch grocery operator Royal Ahold.

Officers:
President and CEO: Frank Curci
EVP, Retail Operations: Peter Labbe
EVP, Finance and CFO: Rick Herring

Competitors:
ALDI
Wal-Mart
Wegmans

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Company History:

Tops Markets LLC

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Incorporated: 1977 as SB Investors Inc.
NAIC: 445110 Supermarkets and Other Grocery (Except Convenience) Stores

Tops Markets LLC is a subsidiary of the U.S. operations of Dutch supermarket giant Royal Ahold N.V. In addition to the Tops chain, Ahold also owns Stop & Shop, Giant Food, BI-LO, and Bruno's Supermarkets. With its headquarters located in Williamsville, New York, Tops is comprised of some 160 Tops Friendly Markets, more than 200 Wilson Farms and Sugar Creek convenience stores, and B-Kwik Food Markets superettes. Tops' units are located in central New York and neighboring parts of Pennsylvania and Ohio.

The Castellani family has been the driving force in the development of Tops throughout its history. The roots of the company can be traced to the 1920s, when Ferrante Castellani opened a small neighborhood grocery store in Niagara Falls at a time when orders were still being filled by clerks and before the self-service concept was pioneered by Clarence Saunders and his Piggly Wiggly stores. In the years following World War II, the modern supermarket took shape. Ferrante's son, Armand, would take the family business into this new era. He learned the business from an early age, serving as manager of his father's store when he was only 16. After a stint in the military, he struck out on his own, establishing the Great Bear Market in Niagara Falls in 1951. He then forged a partnership with Thomas A. Buscaglia, a grocery equipment salesmen, to create the T.A. Buscaglia Equipment Company in 1953, a business that equipped grocery stores. Later in the decade, the company became involved in the retail food business, offering support services for an alliance of small company-owned and third-party grocery stores in Upstate New York, primarily in the Buffalo area, which would evolve into the Tops chain. In 1960, the business was renamed Niagara Frontier Services, and in the same year the company opened its first modern supermarket, a 25,000-square-foot store located in Niagara Falls. The Tops Friendly Markets chain was launched in 1962 as a franchise system for supermarkets and the B-Kwik banner was coined for smaller stores.

Thomas Buscaglia died in 1967. Armand Castellani succeeded him as Niagara's chief executive officer and continued the company's growth. A year after his partner's death, Castellani took the company public. In 1969, Niagara opened its first convenience store under the Wilson Farms Neighborhood Food name. As the company became a regional leader, it ceased franchising and began to expand beyond the Buffalo area, by the mid-1970s moving into the Rochester market and northern Pennsylvania. Whenever possible, the company bought out its franchised stores. For the most part, however, Niagara flew under the radar screen. Armand's son, Larry Castellani, told the Rochester Business Journal in 1993, "We were virtually ignored through the '60s and '70s, and I think one of the reasons we were able to grow through our infancy was probably because a lot of the national chains many, many times our size ignored us." Larry Castellani, representing the third generation of his family to be involved in the grocery business, started out at the age of five sorting bottles and sweeping up at his father's Great Bear Market. In 1962, as a teenager, he went to work as a Tops stock boy. He studied business administration at Niagara University but never earned his degree, opting instead for a practical education with the family business. He graduated to director of operations in 1975 and became president of Top's retail division in 1980.

The 1980s saw changes in ownership for the company. In May 1983, Niagara was taken private in an $82.6 million leveraged buyout by SB Investors Inc., a subsidiary of New York City Investment firm AEA Investors Inc. AEA negotiated terms for the acquisition and arranged for the financing. Of that $82.6 million, $58.6 million came from bank loans and through the issuance of $24.5 million in stock and notes. Armand Castellani, who remained chairman of Niagara, earned more than $11 million in stock and stock options, then turned around and paid $2.1 million to SB Investors for a 14.3 percent interest in Niagara.

Over the next three years, Niagara spent more than $75 million on its largest capital program in company history. Tops moved into the profitable superstore concept, which featured more high margin products and specialty departments. Eight Tops Friendly Markets were converted to superstores and another seven superstores were built during this period. In addition, Tops introduced a number of initiatives, including direct debit service, Instabank ATMS, and the first CarryOut Café service. During this period, Niagara acquired four supermarkets from franchisees and greatly expanded the number of Wilson Farms stores, which increased from 39 in 1982 to 60 by 1986. At this stage, the company also owned and operated 53 Tops Friendly Markets and two B-Kwik superettes. In addition, it franchised another 11 Tops markets, 11 BiKwiks, and six Wilson Farms, along with owning a 10 percent stake in Supermarket Operators of America Inc., a Minneapolis-based company involved in the franchising of Cub super warehouse food stores. For the fiscal year ending June 1984, Niagara generated sales of $705.6 million and posted a profit of $6.15 million. A year later, revenues improved to $742.9 million but net income fell off, totaling $5.42 million.

As was the case with many companies, Niagara was taken private, then spruced up to be once again taken public in an offering that would prove highly profitable to investors. In preparation for a new offering, SB Investors changed its name to Tops Markets Inc. in January 1986. An offering was then completed on March 12, 1986, with 2.12 million shares sold at $19.50 a share. The company netted $18.6 million, which was then used to pay off outstanding debt. However, Tops would be publicly owned for little more than a year. After recording revenues of $790 million and net profits of $6.6 million for the year that ended June 28, 1987, Tops was again taken private. Management hired New York investment banker Goldman Sachs, which then found a buyer: the Los Angeles-based merchant banking firm of Riordan, Freeman & Spogli, which paid about $280 million, including debt, for the company. RFS already owned other supermarket concerns, including Bayless Southwest Cocompany in Phoenix, P&C Foods in Syracuse, Boys Markets in Los Angeles, and Piggly Wiggly Southern in Vidalia, Georgia.

Tops would be owned by RFS for less than four years. During this transitional phase, Larry Castellani was named president of the company. Tops continued its expansion efforts, although the balance did not reflect its overall health. The company lost $13.3 million in 1988, $12.1 million in 1989, and $2.8 million in 1990, but according to management these results were essentially "paper losses" connected to the 1987 buyout. Annual revenues reached $812 million by this point. Moreover, the chain experienced a significant increase in operating income, and cash flow improved by 50 percent. An objective reflection of the company's state was provided in 1991 when the Dutch conglomerate Ahold N.V., through its U.S. subsidiary, Ahold USA, decided to buy the chain. Ahold, which generated more than $10 billion in annual revenues, split equally between the United States and the Netherlands, was interested only in acquiring quality properties. According to a statement issued by Ahold USA president Rob Zwartendijk, "Top Markets represents a remarkably good fit with Ahold's existing U.S. operations in terms of its retailing formats, market approach and geographic location." The acquisition also elevated Ahold to the status of a top ten food retailer in the Unites States. According to a Tops management statement, becoming a part of the Ahold family was also a positive development for the supermarket chains: "Backed by the extensive financial and technical resources of a highly successful international retailing group, Tops Markets is about to enter a bright new growth phase in its development." With the financial backing of its new corporate parent, Tops hoped to accelerate the conversion of existing stores to the superstore format and open new units, as well as to extend its geographic reach.

Over the course of the 1990s, with Larry Castellani now serving as CEO, Tops expanded into central New York state and Northeast Ohio. In 1994, it opened a new headquarters in Williamsville, New York, then in 1996 opened a major state-of-the-art distribution center in western New York. Tops also launched a number of marketing initiatives. Allying itself with M&T Bank, the company co-branded a popular Visa credit card that offered stores credits. Tops also opened Fantastic ticket outlets in some of its stores to sell tickets for the Buffalo Bisons minor league baseball team and Buffalo Sabres National Hockey League team, as well as to events held at the venues where the teams played. Tops added significantly to its portfolio in 1996 when Ahold merged its Ohio-based Finast supermarket chain into the operation, adding 43 stores, mainly located in northeast Ohio. Although they adopted the Tops colors and added the Friendly Markets tag, the supermarkets retained the Finast name until 1999, when all the northeastern Ohio stores were rechristened Tops Friendly Markets. In another development in 1996, Ahold announced that it was going to use the Tops banner on supermarkets it planned to open in Thailand as part of a joint venture with Bangkok-based Central Group. For the parent corporation, this alliance was part of a larger effort to expand its supermarket operations into Malaysia, Indonesia, and Singapore.

In October 1997, Larry Castellani resigned as Tops president and CEO in order to take a corporate position with Ahold. Stop & Shop's CEO, Bob Tobin, filled in on a temporary basis. In January 1998, a replacement was named, 39-year-old Steve Odland, who took over as president and CEO of Tops in February, despite having no retail experience other than working at the store level while attending college. After earning an undergraduate degree in business administration from the University

Further Reading

Glynn, Matt, "Departure of Tops Markets' CEO Aids Ahold Image, Analysts Say," Buffalo News, June 26, 2003, p. 1.

Hagerty, Bob, "Dutch Concern Agrees to Buy Tops Markets," Wall Street Journal, February 28, 1991, p. A4.

Hyland, Bruce, "Tops Markets Plans Return to Public Status," Business First-Buffalo, February 10, 1986, p. 1.

Janoff, Barry, "Thinking Smaller," Progressive Grocer, December 1999, p. 57.

Zwiebach, Elliot, "Tops Execs in LBO Bid for Chain's 145 Stores," Supermarket News, June 15, 1987, p. 1.

— Ed Dinger


Wikipedia:

Tops Markets LLC

Top
Tops Markets LLC
Type Subsidiary of Morgan Stanley Private Equity
Founded 1962
Headquarters Williamsville, New York
Number of locations 151 Stores (Including 5 Franchise Locations & former Penn Traffic stores)
Key people Frank Curci, CEO
Industry Retail (Grocery)
Products Bakery, dairy, deli, frozen foods, general grocery, meat, pharmacy, produce, seafood, snacks, liquor
Revenue $1.75 billion USD (2008)
Employees 15,800 (2010)
Website www.topsmarkets.com

Tops is an American supermarket chain based in Williamsville, New York, with stores in the western and central regions of that state, in northwestern Pennsylvania as well as several stores in New Hampshire and Vermont. It is a subsidiary of Morgan Stanley Private Equity.

Contents

History

Early years

Tops was co-founded by Armand Castellani, who was born in 1917 in a village outside of Rome, Italy. His family came to the United States in 1920, and eventually settled in Niagara Falls, where his father, Ferrante, opened a small neighborhood grocery store.

Following his mother's death in 1933, Castellani left school to help manage the store. He continued to do so until joining the Army in 1941. He attained the rank of captain after five years' service.

After World War II, Castellani returned to the family business. In 1951, he set out on his own and opened the Great Bear Market in Niagara Falls. Shortly thereafter, he partnered with Thomas Buscaglia, owner of a grocery equipment firm, T.A. Buscaglia Equipment Co. Throughout the 1950s, Buscaglia, as CEO, and Castellani worked together, entering into a cooperative agreement with other small stores to build the foundation of what was to become the Tops Friendly Markets chain.

As the local economy boomed in the mid-to-late 1950s, the company's operations expanded to include building construction principally devoted to supermarkets. During this time, Savino Nanula, a meat department manager, became an integral part of the company's management team.

By 1958, they had set up headquarters in Buffalo, and in 1960 opened their first modern supermarket: a 25,000 square foot (2,250 m²) store on Portage Road in Niagara Falls. The company then changed its name to Niagara Frontier Services (NFS).

1960s

In 1962, franchise systems were established for supermarkets, under the Tops Friendly Markets name, and for smaller stores as B-Kwik. In February of that year, Tops signs went up on seven stores, and the chain was born. By the end of the year, NFS was composed of 15 franchised stores throughout Western New York, employing a total of 300 associates. Throughout the 1960s, NFS implemented warehousing and centralized purchasing to allow the company to grow efficiently.

In 1967, Buscaglia died and Armand Castellani took over as chief executive officer.

The next year, NFS went public, trading on the American Stock Exchange. Subsequently, the company began construction on a perishable warehouse and acquired general merchandise distributor G&G Sales and Service.

The following year, 1969, NFS entered the convenience store market by opening the first Wilson Farms Neighborhood Food store in Tonawanda, New York.[disambiguation needed] The same year, Tops was named Retailer of the Year by the Brand Names Foundation, an honor it would again earn in 1974.

1970s-80s

The 1970s saw Tops, under the leadership of Castellani and Nanula, continue to grow in Western New York, and thrive where competitors struggled. Early in the decade, Tops began to build more company-owned stores. By the mid-70s, the company had expanded into the Rochester area, and over time, it became the only real competitor to Wegmans in the region. Also during this time, Tops opened its first Pennsylvania store in Bradford.

In 1983, SB Investors, a private, New York-based investment group, purchased NFS. By this time, operations had grown to include 65 Tops stores, 50 Wilson Farms stores and 15 B-Kwik Food Stores, employing 7,000 associates.

The next year, Tops introduced Western New York shoppers to direct debit service, Instabank ATMs and the first CarryOut Café. It was also the year that Tops won the first of eight Golden Penguin Award from the National Frozen Food Association.

In 1985, Castellani was named Chairman of the Board and Nanula succeeded him as CEO. The following spring, SB Investors became known as Tops Markets, Inc., as the company went public for the second time, this time on NASDAQ. The following year, as Tops celebrated its 25th anniversary, a $196 million leveraged buyout of the company was engineered between a group of Tops executives and private equity firm Riordan, Freeman & Spogli. In 1987, Tops installed electronic scanners, one of the last supermarkets to do so.


1990s

A new era began March 27, 1991 as Tops, which had grown to 145 total stores and 11,000 associates, was acquired by Ahold, a major international food retailer based in the Netherlands. The same year, the first Tops International Super Center opened in Amherst. At that time, the 112,000 square foot (10,080 m²) store was the largest in Western New York, and boasted the biggest in-store bakery in the entire U.S.

In the next few years additional Tops International stores opened in Niagara Falls, West Seneca, Greece, Perinton, and Ithaca, NY. Also, an International store was opened in Lockport, NY, but does not carry the International name. This is because it is a franchised location. The International stores feature additional floor space and a product mix of many foods from different world cultures which up until then had not been widely available in the Buffalo area. With many Canadians at the time regularly crossing the border due to relaxed duties after the recently-concluded Canada-United States Free Trade Agreement and the Canadian dollar at 90% of the value to its American counterpart, the new stores were in the right place at the right time and did even better business than expected.

The 1990s were marked by a new growth in operations, including the 1996 merger with Finast in Northeast Ohio, expansion across New York, the construction of a new headquarters in Williamsville, NY and the opening of a 848,000 square foot (76,320 m²) distribution center in Lancaster. By 1998, Tops' market area stretched from Sandusky, Ohio, to Utica. In January 1999, the BonusCard, its customer loyalty program, debuted. In May, all 45 Northeast Ohio Finast stores adopted the Tops Friendly Markets banner.

Tops entered into the new millennium by acquiring the Sugarcreek Stores chain, adding 87 stores to its Wilson Farms division. That summer, Tops installed self-scanning checkouts at 11 stores in Ohio and in late August, the first Tops fueling station premiered in Akron.

In 2001, Tops acquired 22 former Grand Union stores in the Adirondack region and in Central New York, further east than its market had traditionally been. They also introduced the Tops Xpress convenience store format. By the end of the year, the company celebrated another landmark with the opening of its 150th Tops store, located in Madison, Ohio.

2000s

This aggressive growth was fueled in part by deliberate understatements of Ahold's debt to the financial markets. When this came to light in 2003, Tops was forced to backtrack. By 2005 the convenience stores had been sold to WFI Acquisition Inc., which continues to operate the stores under their former names, and Tops was also looking to sell the 31 stores it had established in the Adirondack region. P&C Foods acquired 2, Price Chopper acquired six, Hannaford acquired three, and twelve returned to the Grand Union division of C&S Wholesale Grocers.

Store Closings

Store closing in Tallmadge, Ohio, which later became an Acme Fresh Market store

On July 6, 2006, Ahold announced its decision to exit the Northeast Ohio market, which consists of 46 locations. The 46 stores are located in Greater Cleveland, Akron, Youngstown and Norwalk and currently employ approximately 3,800 full and part-time employees. Tops announced on October 10, 2006 that 18 of its Ohio stores were sold to rival Giant Eagle. An additional store in Sheffield, Ohio was reportedly sold on November 29, 2006 [1]. On November 9 in a company press release, it was stated that all Tops stores in Northeast Ohio will close whether they have been sold or not. A store in Cleveland's Lee-Harvard Neighborhood and a store in Garfield Heights were converted to Dave's Markets, a small independently owned chain of grocery stores in Cleveland. In June the Tops store in Cleveland Heights became a Daves. [2] All Northeast Ohio stores closed by 3pm on December 8, 2006. [3]

Sale

Ahold announced on November 6, 2006 that the remaining 72 stores in the Tops chain, in New York and Pennsylvania, would be sold. Although they have been profitable, it is a strategic decision for Ahold to focus on other chains such as Giant and Stop & Shop [4].

On November 7, 2006 it was reported that Price Chopper may buy the chain. It had previously bought six former locations. [5]

On May 25, 2007, well-known grocery industry consultant Burt P. Flickinger III announced that he is part of a group of investors interested in purchasing the Tops Markets chain. Flickinger's family co-financed the first 60 Tops stores that opened, and stated that he hopes to restore the local focus that Tops was originally known for. [6]

On June 1, 2007 it was reported that Tops Markets agreed to repurchase its Lancaster warehouse from C&S Wholesale Grocers, Inc. C&S will continue to operate and manage the warehouse. Max Henderson, Executive Vice President and General Manager of Tops Markets, stated that he hoped repurchasing the warehouse would make Tops more attractive to a potential buyer. [7]

On October 11, 2007 Ahold announced the sale of Tops Markets, LLC to Morgan Stanley Private Equity in a transaction valued at $310 million. Morgan Stanley agreed to purchase 71 of the 72 stores in the chain.[8][9] The Baytowne Plaza store in Penfield, New York, known to Tops associates as the "Webster store", was not part of the transaction. The owners of the Baytowne Plaza notified all of their tenants that they would not be allowed to renew their lease upon expiration, and Tops Markets closed the doors of their store to the public on October 27, 2007.[10]

Morgan Stanley

At 12:01AM on December 2, 2007, Morgan Stanley Private Equity became the new owner of Tops Markets. Ahold's subsidiary Giant Food of Carlisle provided operational and support services for up to one year after the sale. Max Henderson, Executive Vice President of Tops, resigned his position from the company, and Frank Curci, a former Tops Markets CEO, returned as CEO of the company.

Tops Markets plans to bring back approximately 100 corporate positions in marketing, merchandising and finance to Buffalo, NY. Recently those positions have been run out of Carlisle, PA by Giant Food. Existing stores will resume upgrades and remodeling, and plans for new stores are in the works as well, including the addition of Tim Hortons full-service restaurant or a self-serve kiosk as well as Anchor Bar wings. [11] A growth rate of more than 10% is expected over the next four to five years.[12]

In 2009, it was announced that the chain would open a new store in Spencerport, NY [13]. This is the first time since the Morgan Stanley acquisition that the chain has opened a new store.

Penn Traffic

Tops was confirmed as the high bidder of Penn Traffic and on Jan 25, 2010 a federal judge signed off on an agreement in US Bankruptcy Court for the sale of same. The purchase will stretch the company's footprint from Pennsylvania to New Hampshire.[14]

Martin's Super Food Stores

In 2004, Tops fully remodeled a store in Perinton, and rebranded it Martin's Super Food Store[15] in an effort to revitalize the marketplace. Martin's is a brand owned by Tops' then-parent company, Ahold, via their subsidiary Giant-Carlisle. The stores were designed in a colorful manner in order to attract both new and old customers. The format worked well for the company, which prompted them to remodel another location in the Buffalo suburb of Amherst into the Martin's Super Food Store format, and then later three other stores in Dunkirk, Derby, and Batavia. As of April 16, 2006, the Martin's Super Food Store in Amherst reverted back to a Tops Market due to customer feedback, and the company announced it would no longer pursue the Martin's brand in New York.

As of February 28, 2008, the remaining Martin's locations were all returned to the Tops Markets brand as part of the sale to Morgan Stanley Private Equity. The decision was made to operate the company under one banner going forward. [16]

Its longtime ad slogan (first used in the late 1980s) is "Tops Never Stops ... Saving You More!" The slogan, temporarily put on hiatus in 2001, was brought back and refreshed in 2006, as "Tops Never Stops ... Giving You More!". The company logo was originally a spinning top, and is still reflected in the diamond design used today.

References

External links


 
 

 

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