Thread regarding Giant Eagle layoffs

It’s official and I told all of you

Giant Eagle officially was bought by Krogers for $1.65 billion dollars. I knew back then 10-15 years ago and I had tried warning folks. I think I made a post about it on here back then and was accused of making it up and one person even said it looks like a toddler posted it. When I began seeing Giant Eagle doing a lot of cuts and penny pinching trying to make their books look good, I knew then they were either going out of business or trying to get bought out. Then there was a lot of turnover at their corporate offices and it seemed like corporate didn’t care what went on at their stores anymore too. I knew something was going on.


by
| 577 views | | 20 replies (last ) | Reply
Post ID: @OP+1kwf32ade

20 replies (most recent on top)

These posts are too funny. Glad we all agree that the original poster is just a bitter little man (maybe woman?) who cant move on with their life and sees this acquisition as some sort of vindication for their perceived wrongs. IF you actually own a business, good for you. Now its time for you to grow up & act like an adult. Lots of peoples lives are affected by this. Clearly yours is one of them however sad of a redlection on you that may be.

Also, Im telling everyone now, theres going to be explosions all throughout the sky on Saturday night. I'll be back to claim my prize on Sunday. Also, water is wet.

by
| | Reply
Post ID: @gt+1kwf32ade

And PLEASE, do not call your baby clothes selling Facebook Marketplace account a business.

by
| | Reply
Post ID: @gq+1kwf32ade

While you are doing your research, I have another mo--nic observation on your last post for proof of your existence. You will NOT have to file bankruptcy for a lawsuit on your business as THAT is what shielding and a clad proof SLE is designed for. Ugh.

by
| | Reply
Post ID: @gp+1kwf32ade

Because you don’t know me, which just proves you are a mo--n. In fact, I DO own my own, VERY profitable, business with an EBITDA margin 2x higher than your IQ.

I’ll give you a minute to google what EBITDA means, I have time.

by
| | Reply
Post ID: @gn+1kwf32ade

@gh We don’t see you owning a business either. You can’t start one with the pay they’re giving you working at Giant Eagle and with that $0.05-$0.15/ hour annual raise they give you. He-l, you wouldn’t even be able to afford rent on a trailer let alone buy one working for them. They don’t even hire anyone in full time either especially if you’re working the front end. The only reason why some of you are getting by is because some of you all had to marry someone financially better off than you are just to survive. Their car and house is in your spouses name that’s making way more money than you are to make that car note and mortgage payment. The ones not married and are alone are the ones on government assistance, have to take a bus to work, they live in government housing, etc. I don’t have to worry about a spouse paying for all of that because I make way more since leaving Giant Eagle. I don’t want to own my own business because of the risks involved such as things like lawsuits and whatnot that can bankrupt a business. Then with the economy being cr-ppy right now, that’s not a good idea right now.

by
| | Reply
Post ID: @gj+1kwf32ade

I love how people working a dead end job while living in a trailer park (sorry to the many fine folks who live in a trailer park out there for being lumped into this mo--n’s category) are sooooooooo business savvy and financially intelligent that they know what a business is doing wrong, yet they have no business skills themselves or have ever owned a business. IE) the mo--n post writer of the original message above.

Get a grip!

by
| | Reply
Post ID: @gh+1kwf32ade

The world will end, you heard it from me first folks. Remember that one day when the world ends and I come back to say I told you so!

#id--t

by
| | Reply
Post ID: @ge+1kwf32ade

not just 1.6 billon they also sold Echo realty 2 billon Get go 1.57 billon, so I think the five families did pretty well to get five billon

by
| | Reply
Post ID: @g8+1kwf32ade

@g1 Thankfully I don’t work at Walmart. I was actually working on my Bachelors Degree in Business while working for Giant Eagle, then I went to an investment firm soon after. I wasn’t going to become a lifer at Giant Eagle (especially when I noticed which way the wind was blowing with them), nor did I go to any other retailer. The investment firm that hired me paid for my training to take my SIE, Series 7, and Series 63 and they’re paying me way more than Giant Eagle was. There’s no money to be made in retail and the pay is pi-s poor too.

by
| | Reply
Post ID: @g4+1kwf32ade

@ds OK Miss Cleo...lol. As if it wasn't known Kroger has had interest for years. Eventually families lose interest (or die). Doesnt take a very bright person to know things dont last forever. Hope youre happy at Walmart checking receipts or wrangling buggies.

by
| | Reply
Post ID: @g1+1kwf32ade

@c0 Nobody is being a sad mo--n. Kroger actually came to Giant Eagle corporate around 2016/17-ish. They tried keeping it hush hush but when corporate was out visiting stores, he told our store manager that they were out there back then trying to either merge or take the company over. It fell through at the time. The only one that’s a sad mo--n is you. You probably were oblivious to what was going on and are probably an employee that was a Giant Eagle cultist that thought nothing was going to ever happen to the company. We knew it was coming, but didn’t know when. It took time because Giant Eagle sat there doing a lot of business decisions that made it obvious that they were trying to either merge or go out of business. This is why corporate was doing a lot of ridiculous things over the past few years and a lot of folks jumped ship. They even knew what was going on. I’ve been through mergers and closures before and Giant Eagle was doing the same cr-p other companies were doing right before they either merged or went belly up.

by
| | Reply
Post ID: @ds+1kwf32ade

This is good news for everyone. The customers the employees the shoppers. They were never going to survive without help.

It’s just the beginning

by
| | Reply
Post ID: @c4+1kwf32ade

Original author of this post is a mo--n. Saying you "knew" something was going to happen then saying "called it" when it happens a decade+ later is laughable at best. Sad little man/woman. Sorry you couldn't hack it.

by
| | Reply
Post ID: @c0+1kwf32ade

@a1 At least it’s not the size of a shrimp, lol!

by
| | Reply
Post ID: @be+1kwf32ade

@b5 Not only that, they took away that thing where you could drop your kids off while you shop, took out the video rental thing and the banks, then they bought Value King and then shuttered it 6 months later. Then they wouldn’t update their POS terminals or take care of the store in general. They were closing a lot of stores too. They even got rid of security too.

by
| | Reply
Post ID: @bd+1kwf32ade

It's been talked about for as long as I can remember. Different financial circumstances across the last 30 years would bring the conversation to the forefront, but the spitting of GetGo operations and eventual sale was the first step in the family cashing out. This is the final step.

Geographically Kroger has always been the most logical buyer - and they finally get back in the market after exiting in the mid-80s. I also worked in IT for quite a while - hoping my remaining friends at corporate find a path out.

$1.65B is almost a fire-sale price frankly and at the low end of probable valuation.

by
| | Reply
Post ID: @b5+1kwf32ade

Your jobs were being outsourced to the capability center regardless

by
| | Reply
Post ID: @af+1kwf32ade

https://www.cbsnews.com/pittsburgh/news/kroger-buying-giant-eagle/
It says Giant Eagle will still exist as a division of Kroger

by
| | Reply
Post ID: @a7+1kwf32ade

Was only a matter of time. Like many other industries, regional store chains just can't compete against the mega chains indefinitely. The megas can absorb losses to drive the regionals out of business then raise prices when the regional is badly wounded or after they're gone. Grocery is an especially difficult market because the margins are so so thin. Selling off pieces of themselves (GetGo) is an obvious tell.

BTW, I worked for GE in IT in RIDC for five years in the early 2010's and still have friends who (hopefully will still) work there.

Of the four main brands in the area (Walmart, Shop n Save, Aldi and GE), GE is always my last choice because they just aren't competitive on price to buy a complete shopping list of items. I'll stop there for specific sale items but never a full carts worth.

by
| | Reply
Post ID: @a5+1kwf32ade

You must have an enormous schvanzstucker.

by
| | Reply
Post ID: @a1+1kwf32ade

Post a reply

: