The Gulf grocery puzzle
Spinneys operates 74 stores across the UAE, Qatar, and Oman, generating Dh1B+ ($272M) in annual revenue. The operation is a masterclass in how to price, format, and localize in a market where 89% of the population is expatriate — meaning traditional grocery loyalty plays don't work.
The Spinneys value proposition is: premium fresh produce (70% imported from 30 countries), western format (wide aisles, climate-controlled, English-speaking staff), and a private label (Spinneys Food) that competes head-to-head with Carrefour on quality but wins on freshness perception.
The market structure
The UAE grocery market is unusual:
- No domestic production at scale — virtually everything is imported
- 89% expatriate workforce — the primary shopper is not culturally Arab
- Carrefour dominance: Majid Al Futtaim holds the Carrefour franchise in the GCC; 200+ hypermarkets and supermarkets
- LuLu Hypermarket: the dominant destination format for value-conscious Asian expat workers
- Spinneys' gap: the premium fresh format targeting European and Western expats who want Waitrose quality at Sainsbury's prices
The private label strategy
Spinneys Food launched in 2023. Unlike Carrefour's own label (which competes on price) or Waitrose own label (which competes on provenance), Spinneys Food competes on import quality + local formulation.
Examples:
- Spinneys bakery bread: baked in-store, flour imported from France, priced 15% above local bakery but 40% below Waitrose Dubai
- Spinneys hummus: formulated for the Gulf palate (milder tahini, lemon-forward) vs. imported European versions
What the GCC expansion means
The GCC market is projected to grow from $85B to $110B by 2028. Spinneys is positioned to capture 40%+ of the premium-format growth through its expansion pipeline of 18 new stores, 8 in Saudi Arabia.
The Saudi entry is the strategic bet: same expatriate dynamics (38% of population), same premium import demand, but 3x the population of UAE. If the format translates, Spinneys' revenue doubles by 2030.