Home Venture Capital Rick Cohen’s Symbotic Expands Deal to Automate Walmart’s Warehouses To All 42...

Rick Cohen’s Symbotic Expands Deal to Automate Walmart’s Warehouses To All 42 Regional Distribution Centers

120
0

Rick Cohen’s warehouse robotics firm Symbotic has expanded its partnership with Walmart to all 42 of the retailing giant’s regional distribution centers. The deal officially ups the number of Walmart warehouses that Symbotic will outfit from 25.

The expanded Walmart partnership is a huge win for Wilmington, Mass.-based Symbotic and for Cohen, the owner and executive chairman of C&S Wholesale Grocers, the nation’s largest grocery wholesaler with $25 billion in revenue. Cohen started Symbotic 15 years ago to build automation that could help his own logistics issues at C&S, funding it with his own cash.

While Cohen built Symbotic largely in stealth, the company, which posted $252 million in revenue for fiscal 2021, is now in the process of going public in a $5.5 billion deal with a special-purpose acquisition company, or SPAC, sponsored by venture-capital giant SoftBank. In March, Symbotic named Michael Loparco, who had been executive vice president and CEO of electronics manufacturing services at Jabil, as its CEO.

The scale of Symbotic’s automation is hard to grasp. In a large-scale warehouse, more than 400 of Symbotic’s autonomous bots—or even potentially more than 1,000—could zip up and down ten levels of narrow aisles completing more than 30 transactions per hour. “It’s a big Rubik’s cube, a big Tetris game is what we call it,” Cohen told Forbes last year. “It’s the miniaturization of the warehouse.” Forbes estimates Cohen and his wife Jan’s wealth at $6 billion, the majority of it coming from Symbotic rather than C&S.

The expanded Walmart deal comes as warehouse logistics have been in the spotlight, as consumers demand ever faster shipments of ecommerce orders and stores, too, need speed and reliability to stock their shelves. Symbotic’s ability to build palletized loads of sorted inventory can help Walmart (revenue $573 billion) get products to its more than 4,700 stores quickly. Joe Metzger, executive vice president of supply chain operations at Walmart U.S., has called the Symbotic technology “a game changer.”

Switching over the warehouses to the new technology takes time, however, and Walmart and Symbotic expect the complete retrofitting to take more than eight years.“The need for accuracy and speed in the supply chain has never been more visible, and we’re confident that now is the time to move even faster by scaling Symbotic’s technology to our entire regional distribution center network,” Walmart’s senior vice president of innovation and automation David Guggina said in a statement.

Walmart will retrofit all 42 of its regional distribution centers with Symbotic’s robotics over the next eight-plus years.

In addition to Walmart, Symbotic’s customers include Albertsons and Target, as well as Cohen’s own C&S. Its revenue increased to $173 million for the six months ended March 26, up six-fold from the $29 million it reported in the same period the previous year. The company posted a $53 million net loss in that period, and a $122 million net loss for the 2021 year, according to SVF 3’s latest registration statement. Symbotic’s backlog of committed sales is now more than $11 billion.

Symbotic is expected to begin trading on Nasdaq under the ticker SYM. The SPAC, known as SVF Investment Corp. 3, is slated to hold a virtual special meeting on the deal on June 3.

For more on Symbotic, see our December 2021 profile of Rick Cohen, “Meet The Billionaire Robot Overload Reinventing Walmart’s Warehouses.”

Source link

Previous article10 Best Dividend Stocks to Buy According to Noam Gottesman’s GLG Partners
Next articlePortfolio Diversification: How should young investors diversify?

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here