Does Whole Foods' Status as "America's Healthiest Grocery Store" Matter?

In its most recent annual report, Whole Foods Market management calls its positioning as "America's Healthiest Grocery Store" one of its key competitive advantages. In fact, Whole Foods has actually trademarked the phrase "America's Healthiest Grocery Store." Is this a competitive advantage really worth investing in?

Whole Foods "Health Starts Here" campaign touts its award-winning "healthiest" status. Image: Whole Foods

Healthiest vs. just healthyWhole Foods uses its "Health Starts Here" campaign to point out its various awards, ratings, and guideline compliance to show why its products are the healthiest in the industry, and why its higher-quality food resonates so well with increasingly health-conscious consumers. There's no denying that Whole Foods is at the top of most lists of healthiest grocery stores, such as the healthiest grocers list fromHealth.com.

But is this a competitive advantage that can be sustained over the long term? As other grocery chains catch up, the gap between "healthiest" and just "healthy" may not be as much of an advantage as previously thought. By being a "just healthy" option, but with the ability to appeal to a more mass market of consumers, other grocers are catching up fast.

Competition isn't creeping up, it'ssprintingWhole Foods' competitors have obviously discovered the market opportunities in natural and organic foods, and may start beating Whole Foods at its own game.The Kroger Co.,Safeway, Wal-Mart Stores, and other mainstream grocers have all jumped on the organic-food band wagon and most of them are able to offer their organic and natural options at a lower cost than Whole Foods.

This mass-market natural-food approach has led to a massive increases in sales. For instance, in 2014 Kroger sold nearly $2 billion worth of its own natural and organic exclusive brand called "Simple Truth." Some analysts expect that by 2017, Kroger will actually beat out Whole Foods to be the largest seller of natural and organic food.

Why mass market health food could be bad for Whole FoodsWhole Foods is not in an industry where the product can move forward by leaps and bounds to attract new consumers. It's not like an electronics company like Apple that can have a breakthrough product that changes the industry. Organic food is very different from smartphones in that Whole Foods is pretty much already selling items in the luxury end of the industry without the ability to really innovate its competitors out of the field. The real competitive differences are on quality and price, and lately consumers are telling WFM that competitors' options -- perhaps of slightly less quality and cheaper -- will do just fine.

Don't take my word for it. Just look at the same-store sales for Whole Foods and some of its lower-cost competitors over the last few years. (Same-store sales, aka comps, measure sales at stores that have been open at least a year.) From FY 11 to FY 14, Whole Foods' same-store sales growth dropped from 8.5% to just 4.3%, while competitors have been increasing same-store sales growth during the same time.

Source: Companies' 10-k filings

What to expect in 2015The figures are drawn from fiscal-year data and end in 2014. However in the most recent quarter reported, Whole Foods same-store sales growth was even lower, down to just 3.6%. These are same-store sales, so new store sales could provide a boost in revenue and earnings. However, with around 40 new stores planned for 2015, these new stores won't make up for same-store growth dropping to around 3%.

Clearly Whole Foods Market is losing some of the competitive advantage it had in the past as companies like Kroger and Safeway offer more mass-market-friendly healthier-food options. WFM investors should be looking at how Whole Foods can keep "America's Healthiest Grocery Store" a real competitive advantage worth a long-term investment rather than letting it fade to just a catchy trademarked phrase.

The article Does Whole Foods' Status as "America's Healthiest Grocery Store" Matter? originally appeared on Fool.com.

John Mackey, co-CEO of Whole Foods Market, is a member of The Motley Fool's board of directors. Bradley Seth McNew owns shares of Apple. The Motley Fool recommends Apple and Whole Foods Market. The Motley Fool owns shares of Apple and Whole Foods Market. Try any of our Foolish newsletter services free for 30 days. We Fools may not all hold the same opinions, but we all believe that considering a diverse range of insights makes us better investors. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.

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