Venezuela’s Chavez in talks to buy French retail chain

CARACAS – Venezuelan President Hugo  Chavez said yesterday he had opened talks to buy a  supermarket chain owned by France’s Casino, a month after  expropriating another chain owned by the same group.

Buying out the Cada supermarket chain would give Chavez,  who has nationalized a swath of the nation’s industries,  considerably greater control over food distribution over two  years after food shortages dented his popularity.

He also ordered the expropriation of warehouses belonging  to diversified food processing company Polar, the maker of  Venezuela’s most popular beer and part owner of Cada.

“I have ordered a friendly negotiation to acquire all of  Cada and its distribution centre,” Chavez said in a televised  speech. The takeover would give Chavez access to a network  including 35 Cada grocery stores, eight distribution centres  and a fleet of trucks.

The leftist leader in 2003 decreed price controls on staple  products and in 2008, as food prices soared at the height of  the commodities boom, decreed a law giving the Venezuelan state  unprecedented control over the sale and distribution of food.

The issue of food prices came into focus again last month  after a sharp currency devaluation led Chavez to take over the  Casino-owned hypermarket chain Exito.

Cada is owned by a group called Cativen, which is majority  owned by France’s Casino and partly owned by Polar.

“I am sure that we can reach an agreement such that the  republic will be owner of Cativen,” Chavez said during the  inauguration of a state-run chain created from the old Exito  stores. Chavez’s popularity suffered in 2007 after products such as  chicken and milk became increasingly scarce, due partly to  price controls that were out of step with inflation.

He eased that problem by making price controls more  flexible and launching a massive food imports campaign.

The announcement came hours after Chavez slammed Polar in a  television broadcast for maintaining warehouses in the middle  of the Venezuelan city of Barquisimeto, urging that housing be  built there instead.

“What is Polar doing with warehouses in the middle of the  city?” Chavez said. He said he instructed the governor and  mayor, with whom he is politically allied, to order Polar to  move the warehouses to the outskirts of the city.

He told the labour minister to carry out an inspection of  the company’s facilities following complaints by Polar workers  in the eastern part of the country that they were not being  paid appropriately.

Inspections by Venezuelan state agencies have in the past  been a prelude for nationalizations, most notably in the steel  and cement sectors, which were taken over in 2008.

Chavez also said yesterday he was replacing Commerce  Minister Eduardo Saman, who has for months led government  efforts to ensure companies obey price controls on staple goods  that Chavez decreed in 2003.