
French supermarket group Auchan to cut over 700 jobs in Spain
MADRID, May 8 (Reuters) - French privately-owned supermarket group Auchan plans to cut 710 jobs and close 25 stores in Spain as it seeks to adapt to changing habits of shoppers who now shun large supermarkets for smaller stores and online shopping, it said on Thursday.
Auchan, which operates in Spain under the Alcampo brand, said it would rather focus on smaller stores and its e-commerce platform.
The retailer, which has 23,300 employees in the country and accounts for a 3% share of the retail market there, way behind Spanish rival Mercadona's 27%, disclosed the plan to unions during a meeting on Thursday.
"We will face this difficult situation, which is new involving the company, with a main objective of maintaining employment and, if employees leave, ensuring they leave under the best possible conditions," the CCOO union said in a separate statement.
The rise of e-commerce has hit the largest stores where people can buy, beside groceries, bigger-ticket items such as home appliances, bicycles or computers, as most of these products are now bought online.
Auchan, which operates a number of these giant supermarkets in France and elsewhere, is forced to reinvent itself. The company announced late last year it would cut more than 2,000 jobs in France.

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Daily Mail
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Daily Mail
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Not only is regulation needed for consumers so they can see it is a safe payment method, but Visa or Mastercard could potentially take control of or kill any stablecoin venture in order to maintain their dominance, he said. 'They have an incentive to stop innovation,' Kantor explained. There could also be difficulties in convincing consumers to adopt new technology, or traditional banks could simply adapt to the changes, said Bankrate financial analyst Stephen Kates. 'A large shift from the traditional banking and payment systems would create a huge crisis for the mainstays of the industry, such as JPMorgan Chase or Bank of America in banking, or Visa and Mastercard in payments,' he told the Daily Mail. 'However, at this early stage, it is easy to assume that the banks and payment processors could shift their businesses to accommodate the changes in merchant and consumer behavior. 'However, it is not yet clear how big of a move there would truly be. 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Third-party institutions like Visa or Mastercard offer proven security and muscle for consumers who are victims of fraud, he said, but stablecoins offer none of this. 'While companies like Walmart or Amazon have the financial resources to stand behind any future branded stablecoins, there are open questions about how stablecoin use or misuse might impact the stability of the broader financial system. 'Stablecoins, similar to other non-bank, non-FDIC insured products like money markets, are susceptible to runs, which can become panic-inducing for consumers and financial institutions when they occur.' Plus, it is unlikely to mean that lower costs from reduced interchange fees are passed down to the consumer. 'It's possible that the overall cost of goods might fall slightly, but it is more likely that there would be a discount for consumers who use it similar to the cash discount seen at certain retailers,' said Kates. Amazon's efforts to integrate stablecoins are still in the early stages, a person familiar with the discussions told The Wall Street Journal, and some of the talks have centered on having the company's own coin for online purchases. Walmart has lobbied for adding a separate amendment to the Genius Act, people familiar with the matter told the outlet. It would introduce more competition in the credit-card sector.


The Sun
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