单选题 If the bidding frenzy over Safeway were any indication, you'd think that big grocery stores had become luxury collectibles. Every one of Britain's top retailers—Tesco, Wal-Mart owned Asda, Morrisons and Sainsburys--are making a play for Safeway, which became a takeover target when sales started lagging at its 480 stores. But the real appeal of Safeway has little to do with the value of its stores: it's about the land they sit on. There's now so little property available for commercial development in Britain, or in Western Europe, that buying old stores is the fastest way to find space for new ones.
This explains why European retail is one of the few industries anywhere on the globe that have been generating a steady stream of dealmaking buzz. At a time when global mergers and acquisitions have fallen 81 percent from a 2,000 peak of $ 3.4 trillion, the Safeway deal has been generating headlines since January. The bids, which started at £22.9 billion, are now under review by Britain's Competition Commission, the national trustbuster. Its recommendation could decide the winner.
The commercial-land shortage is largely a result of the campaign to prevent the Wal-Martification of Europe. In recent years authorities have imposed stiff limits on the growth of superstores, effectively blocking the opening of new ones in countries from Britain to France, Germany and the Netherlands. Safeway has become a particularly hot commodity in part because many of its stores have the combination of size and location that big-box retailers crave. "There are Safeway stores in this portfolio that will have directors of the other companies salivating," says David Southwel, spokesman for the British Retail Consortium trade group.
Gone are the days of the '70s and '80s,when lax zoning laws made it easy to build new stores in Britain, and towns generally welcomed the tax revenue and jobs. According to IGD, a food and-grocery-industry think tank, the number of superstores in Britain shot up from 403 in 1985 to 990 in 1995 but slowed the next year, after passage of new development rules. Designed to protect the economic vitality of town centers, the 1996 rules require developers to demonstrate that a superstore is needed outside town, and there are no available alternatives in the center. "Most of the zoning legislation has got the retailers by the throat," says Haley Meyers, head of European retail research at London based Mintel Research.
In the early 1990s Tesco foresaw the end of the building binge, and began snatching up land already approved for retail development. By "land banking" in this way, says Safeway spokesman Kevin Hawkins, big retailers could keep building through the 1990s and sidesiep the red tape. But when land banks run dry, there is little choice but to buy other chains. Last October, Fretail giant Carrefour acquired a further 20 percent stake in Spain's largest retailer, Centro Commerciale Carrefour, for 1 billion. "The food and general retail sector has recently seen a good degree more merger activity than other sectors," says Tim Atten, retail analyst at BNP Paribas. "It's difficult for these players to expand in many countries in Western Europe without buying other stores."
It's even more difficult on the Continent than in Britain. German law essentially prohibits stores larger than 1,200 square meters if local authorities object. French law requires strict reviews of stores larger than 300 square meters, and states that preserving the nation's economy, lifestyle and culture must be weighed against any new project. "It's virtually impossible to open a hypermarket in France," says Johanna Water-ous, director at McRinsey Consulting. "The planning laws in France make the ones in the U. K. look like the American Midwest."
The real megastore action is moving outside Western Europe. Tesco is now "placing emphasis on other parts of the world, "says a spokesman. Carrefour is heading in the same direction: in 2002, it opened one hypermarket in France and four in Poland.
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单选题 Britain's top retailers all covet Safeway because
【正确答案】 C
【答案解析】推断题。由题干中的Britain's top retailers定位至首段。末句指出一些商家收购Safeway的原因:英国现在可用于商业发展的土地太少了,因此,购买旧店就成了发展新店的最快途径。故[C]为答案。倒数第二句提到吸引这些大零售商接管Safeway的原因不是其店铺价值,而是the land they sit on。虽然提到了这些连锁店的占地,但并未就其面积进行评论,排除[B]。[A]在文中未提及,排除。[D]过于绝对,排除。
单选题 Which of the following statements is NOT true of some European countries?
【正确答案】 A
【答案解析】细节题。第三段首句指出:商业用地短缺主要是抵制欧洲出现沃尔玛现象运动的结果。这里说的是欧洲防微杜渐,防止出现沃尔玛这样的超大零售商,垄断市场,并非沃尔玛本身,[A]不符合文意,故为答案。第二句指出:In recent years authorities have imposed stiff limits on the growth of superstores, effectively blocking the opening of new ones in countries...”其余三项符合文意。
单选题 In the past, all of the following might welcome new stores in Britain EXCEPT
【正确答案】 D
【答案解析】推断题。由题干中的new stores in Britain定位至第四段。首句指出:lax zoning laws made it easy to build new stores in Britain, and towns generally welcomed the tax revenue and jobs.既然能为城镇带来税收,解决就业,应该受到当地政府和失业人员的欢迎,[A]和[B]符合文意。第二句中的“the number of super-stores in Britain shot up from 403 in 1985 to 990 in 1995”表明零售商自己也非常愿意开设新店,[C]符合文意。只有[D]未提及,无法推出,故为答案。
单选题 According to the passage, the author
【正确答案】 C
【答案解析】态度题。本文开篇介绍大型零售商竞争收购Safeway的情况。之后分析原因,介绍前因后果,文章多处引述他人观点,但全篇未出现个人评论,可见作者对此事只是做客观描述,未进行任何倾向性的评论,故[C]为答案。