DFI Exits SG Grocery Market With Minimal Disruption Expected

Edge
Jun 12

Macrovalue acquired DFI’s Cold Storage and Giant stores in Singapore for $125m.

The sale of Dairy Farm International’s (DFI) Singapore food retail operations to Malaysia’s Macrovalue is unlikely to trigger a major shift in the nation’s supermarket landscape, according to a new report from DBS Group Research.

In the report titled “Modern Grocery Retail – Supermarket shake-up or savvy break-up?”, analysts Zheng Feng Chee and Andy Sim frame DFI’s divestment not as a response to structural market failure but a strategic move in the face of intensifying competition and dwindling margins.

“DFI’s exit appears to be a strategic move, not due to structural problems in [the] SG market, as competition from NTUC FairPrice and Sheng Siong intensifies,” the report stated.

Macrovalue acquired DFI’s Cold Storage and Giant stores in Singapore for $125m. However, early signs suggest a conservative approach under the new ownership.

“We observed no major strategic or pricing shifts,” DBS noted. “Macrovalue’s entry is unlikely to materially disrupt the Singapore grocery landscape.”

A field study conducted in Johor Bahru—where Macrovalue previously took over Giant Malaysia—revealed that apart from swapping out DFI’s Meadows house brand for its own, little has changed in store layout, product mix, or pricing.

Instead, DBS believes Macrovalue is focused on stabilizing the business, likely aiming to improve operational efficiency rather than engage in margin-eroding price wars.

The firm’s apparent restraint in rolling out aggressive changes suggests it sees upside in running a lean, premium-focused retail portfolio, similar to its handling of Cold Storage.

This measured approach stands in stark contrast to DFI’s challenges in the Singapore market. DBS points to DFI’s difficulties in scaling digital revenue and maintaining profitability in both the value and premium segments, ultimately concluding that the group’s decision to exit “was a pragmatic, strategic decision.”

With Macrovalue’s plans unlikely to alter the competitive equilibrium, the spotlight shifts to other players like Sheng Siong and NTUC FairPrice—retailers better positioned to thrive in a market shaped by strong urban planning, rising HDB estate demand, and post-COVID consumption shifts toward home dining.

Sheng Siong, in particular, is highlighted for its no-frills, high-efficiency model that supports industry-leading margins. Investors, DBS suggests, should look there—not to Macrovalue—for long-term sector exposure.

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