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PRIVACY
Retail & Consumer

Co-op admits to 107 breaches of order to stop blocking rivals from opening nearby

The group has admitted to 107 breaches of an order to stop supermarkets imposing restrictions that block rivals from opening competing stores nearby, the Competition and Markets Authority (CMA) said

The Co-op is headquartered in Manchester(Image: PA Media)

The Co-op has become the latest º£½ÇÊÓÆµ supermarket to be targeted by the Competition and Markets Authority (CMA) in its campaign against 'unlawful land agreements' in grocery retailing.

The group has confessed to 107 breaches of an order prohibiting supermarkets from imposing restrictions that prevent competitors from opening nearby stores, according to the watchdog, as reported by .

The CMA stated that its campaign aims to "ensure that shoppers have more choice and so benefit from a wider range of groceries and access to cheaper prices".

The watchdog expressed concern over the "concerned that this substantial number of breaches demonstrates a significant failure of compliance for a business of Co-op's size", given the group's ownership of nearly 2,400 stores across the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ and its 5.2 per cent market share in the £190.9bn supermarket industry.

Daniel Turnbull, senior director of markets at the CMA, commented: "Restrictive agreements by our leading retailers affect competition between supermarkets and impact shoppers trying to get the best deals."

He added: "We know that Co-op has made a considerable effort to amend all their unlawful agreements, given this Order has been in place since 2010."

He urged Co-op and other designated retailers to "Co-op and the other designated retailers must make sure they do the right thing by their customers in the future."

This action follows similar measures taken by the CMA against Tesco in 2020, Waitrose in 2022, and Sainsbury's, Asda, M&S and Morrisons in 2023.