https://www.bizjournals.com/denver/bizwomen/news/latest-news/2017/07/inside-the-tense-amazon-whole-foods-negotiations.html?page=all
At least one other company seriously courted Whole Foods Market Inc. in a takeover bid and four private equity firms were circling to potentially finance a leveraged buyout before the Austin-based grocery chain agreed to be acquired by Amazon.com Inc. for about $13.7 billion in cash.
That's according to a securities filing, which highlights the intricate moves of Whole Foods co-founder and CEO John Mackey and other top executives as they wrangled over the future of the company.
The timeline begins in April, when New York City-based hedge fund Jana Partners LLC disclosed a nearly 9 percent stake in Whole Foods and pushed publicly for the company to consider a sale or significant operational changes. On April 18, Mackey and John Elstrott, then chairman of the Whole Foods board, received a letter from an unidentified "Company X" in the same industry as Whole Foods asking to meet to discuss "strategic opportunities."
The first contact between Amazon and representatives of Whole Foods occurred in late April. Mackey had been discussing media reports about Amazon's reported interest in buying Whole Foods with Ken Meyer, executive vice president of operations, and an outside consultant when the consultant offered to make a telephone introduction with the Seattle-based e-commerce giant. On April 21 the consultant called Jay Carner, Amazon's senior vice president of corporate affairs, and the first face-to-face meeting between Whole Foods and Amazon was set up on April 30.
Then on May 8 another unidentified suitor, "Company Y," threw another wrench into the mix by contacting Elstrott about "a potential business relationship."