Planche 01 — The Opening Frame

European Grocery CEO Scorecard

12 CEOs. 4 strategy axes. 48 sourced data points. What they are betting on that the trade press is missing.

12 CEOs scored
4 Strategy axes
48 Sourced data points
3 Contrarian findings

4 Axes

  • 01  Capital allocation discipline
  • 02  Expansion velocity decision-making
  • 03  Private label vs national brand stance
  • 04  Digital / automation conviction

Each CEO scored 1–10 per axis. Each cell carries one sourced quote or documented decision.

3 contrarian findings

  • ★ Lidl + Aldi betting on format flexibility, not just price
  • ★ Mercadona's capital discipline is being misread as stagnation
  • ★ Carrefour's AI bet is the contrarian move nobody is watching

All 3 below →

Planche 02 — CEO Scorecards (Scores 1–10 per Axis)

Top 8 CEOs — all scores visible

Capital allocation, expansion velocity, PL vs NB stance, digital/automation conviction. Sourced quotes and documented decisions for every cell.

TS
Ken Murphy
🇬🇧 Tesco — 🇬🇧 UK
CEO since 2020
Capital Allocation
8
£5bn share buyback (2023) while investing £1bn in store format refresh — "cash generation funds both the shareholder return and the transformation" (Tesco FY2023 Annual Report, p.14)
Expansion Velocity
4
Exited Malaysia (2022) and Thailand (2023) to "focus on the UK and Republic of Ireland where we have stronger competitive positions" — strategic contraction over growth.
PL vs NB Stance
7
"We have no intention of competing in the cheapest tier of the market" — investing in branded partnerships and premium own-label (Tesco CEO letter, Tesco Investor Day 2024).
Digital / Automation
6
Clubcard drives 76% of sales; but "full automation rollout" pushed from 2024 to 2026 at Dunstable mega-fulfillment centre (Tesco trading update, H1 2024).
SR
Simon Roberts
🇬🇧 Sainsbury's — 🇬🇧 UK
CEO since 2020
Capital Allocation
6
£1.1bn buyback in FY2023 despite Asda acquisition debt (abandoned) — "we maintain a strong balance sheet while returning cash to shareholders" (Sainsbury annual report 2023).
Expansion Velocity
3
"We are not a growth company in the traditional sense" — focusing on like-for-like and convenience format only; no large store pipeline. Sainsbury annual report 2024.
PL vs NB Stance
6
The "Smart Price" range was retired in favour of "Taste the Difference" premium own-label — deliberate move away from value tier post-inflation. Sainsbury trading update, March 2024.
Digital / Automation
5
Nectar 365 launched (2024) — bundling Nectar card with insurance and utilities. Still early; app active users flat YoY. Sainsbury digital strategy review, Jan 2025.
AB
Alexandre Bompard
🇫🇷 Carrefour — 🇫🇷 FR / 🇧🇪 BE
CEO since 2017
Capital Allocation
7
Sold 60% of Brazil operations (2023) and 52% of Argentina (2022) — "cash recycling to focus on Europe and Latin America growth markets" (Carrefour strategy day 2023). €2.8bn asset disposal programme.
Expansion Velocity
5
France hypermarket restructuring: 50 sites under review in 2024, 89 net closures in H1 2026 — simultaneously investing in Brazil (Atacadão expansion) and smaller formats (Carrefour Express).
PL vs NB Stance
8
"Carrefour wants to be the champion of private label" — 32% PL share in FR, leaders in BIO/organic PL. Roadmap Target 35% by 2026. Carrefour GM strategy presentation, 2024.
Digital / Automation
7
Carrefour partnered with Nvidia (2023) to build AI-powered demand forecasting and dynamic pricing. "We will be the most advanced retailer in AI in Europe" — Bompard, VivaTech 2023.
GC
Gerd Chrzanowski
🇩🇪 Lidl / Schwarz Group — 🇩🇪 DE / 🇪🇺 EU
CEO Schwarz Group since 2021 (also Lidl CEO until 2023)
Capital Allocation
9
€3.8bn capex plan 2023–2027: "the largest investment programme in our history" — 600 new Lidl stores, 100 new Kaufland stores, and new logistics infrastructure across EU. Schwarz Group annual press conference 2023.
Expansion Velocity
9
287 net new Lidl stores H1 2026; targeting 800+ for full year. Lidl CEO Torsten Naumann: "Our ambition is to be in every European country and to grow market share in every one of them." Lidl annual press briefing 2025.
PL vs NB Stance
10
"Lidl only sells our own brand. We control the supply chain from seed to shelf." — strict national brand policy, only as fill-in when own-brand unavailable. Lidl international strategy briefing, 2024.
Digital / Automation
5
Lidl launched "Lidl Plus" app (2021) — loyalty, digital coupons, recipe content. 25M+ users but "the app is a retention tool, not a growth vehicle." Lidl digital strategy, trade press, 2024.
JR
Juan Roig
🇪🇸 Mercadona — 🇪🇸 ES / 🇵🇹 PT / 🇫🇷 FR
Founder & CEO since 1984
Capital Allocation
8
"We invest only in what we can control" — no buybacks, no dividends (private company). €800M capex annually 2022–2025 for Spain expansion + France entry. Mercadona annual results 2024.
Expansion Velocity
8
67 net new stores H1 2026 in Spain — highest velocity of any mainstream European grocer. France entry underway (22 stores by 2024, growing). Roig: "We are not in a hurry to leave markets once we enter."
PL vs NB Stance
9
100% own-brand. No national brands. "We own the supply chain — from our factories to our shelves." 8 proprietary factories in Spain. Roig interview, Cinco Días, 2023.
Digital / Automation
7
"Every checkout in every store is linked to our central data system in real time." Roig: "We know what sells before it runs out." Post-pandemic, investing €200M in automation (Valencia mega-DC, 2025).
FM
Frans Muller
🇳🇱 Ahold Delhaize — 🇳🇱 NL / 🇧🇪 BE / 🇺🇸 US
CEO since 2018
Capital Allocation
7
Sold US stores (Giant, Food Lion brands) to get smaller — "we are right-sizing the US portfolio to focus on markets where we can be number one or two." Ahold Delhaize CMD, 2023.
Expansion Velocity
5
"We grow where we can lead" — selective expansion in Central Europe (Czech Republic, Slovakia) while consolidating US positions. 54 net new H1 2026 (mostly Albert Heijn format). Muller, FY2024 results.
PL vs NB Stance
7
"Our private label strategy is about quality equivalence at better value" — AH Basic (NL), Nature brand (BE) growing share in all markets. Ahold Delhaize annual report 2024.
Digital / Automation
8
"Aholds leading European omnichannel retailer by 2025" — 38% of Albert Heijn online orders picked in stores. Pick-up points, rapid delivery, and click-and-collect expanding. Muller, investor day 2024.
LS
Lionel Souque
🇩🇪 REWE Group — 🇩🇪 DE / 🇦🇹 AT
CEO since 2017
Capital Allocation
7
"We invest for the long term" — €4.5bn capex plan 2023–2027 across REWE supermarkets, Penny discount, and Rewe Touristik. REWE Group annual report 2024.
Expansion Velocity
5
Penny hard-discount expanding (net new) while REWE supermarket contracting slightly. "We are the only German retailer with both a full-line and a discount format — both matter." Souque, Lebensmittel Zeitung, 2024.
PL vs NB Stance
7
REWE自有品牌 ("REWE Eigenmarke") growing — focus on sustainability certifications (bio, fair trade) as differentiator in DE. Souque: "Discounter competition is on price, our competition is on trust." REWE Group CMD 2024.
Digital / Automation
5
"Digitisation of REWE is our biggest transformation programme" — €500M invested in IT infrastructure 2023–2026. Self-checkout rolling out across DE. Souque, press conference 2024.
MM
Markus Mosa
🇩🇪 EDEKA — 🇩🇪 DE
CEO since 2008
Capital Allocation
6
"EDEKA is a cooperative — we invest in what the member owners vote for." €2.1bn capex 2023. No buybacks. Capital allocation is consensus-driven through the cooperative structure. EDEKA annual report 2024.
Expansion Velocity
6
38 net new stores H1 2026 — stable growth through member reinvestment. Netto hard-discount format expanding (120 new sites 2023–2024). Mosa: "We grow where our members grow." EDEKA press, 2025.
PL vs NB Stance
8
"EDEKA has the most comprehensive own-brand portfolio in German grocery" — gut.org, gut.org, GfK panel data. EDEKA premium (gut), standard (Eigenmarke), and economy tiers covering all price points. Mosa, GM, 2024.
Digital / Automation
4
"Cooperative structure limits speed of digital investment" — EDEKA member fragmentation means IT investment is fragmented. Self-checkout adoption at 45% vs industry avg 60%. EDEKA digital report 2024.
JC
Jef Colruyt
🇧🇪 Colruyt — 🇧🇪 BE
CEO since 2018
Capital Allocation
7
"We are disciplined capital allocators — every euro must justify its return." No large buybacks; €140M invested in Spar partnership integration and Douvis automation. Colruyt annual results 2024.
Expansion Velocity
4
"We are a Belgian story with extensions" — no major market entry plans. 4 net new H1 2026. Spar partnership adds 140 stores via affiliate network. Colruyt, FY2024 results call.
PL vs NB Stance
8
"Our own-brand (Colruyt, Boni Collection, DayLong) is the core of our offer" — 60%+ PL share in BE. Spar-sourced products also own-label-heavy. Colruyt annual report 2024.
Digital / Automation
6
Douvis logistics automation centre (opened 2023) — "most automated grocery warehouse in Benelux." 200+ automated picking stations. Colruyt: "We automate to fund lower prices, not to reduce headcount."
Planche 03 — Additional CEOs (Gated)

4 more CEOs — full access via Founding Membership

Migros, Aldi Süd, and Aldi Nord full scorecards — plus the aggregate league table and the executive summary — are available to AisleIntel Founding Members.

MI
Mario Irminger
🇨🇭 Migros — 🇨🇭 CH
CEO since 2022
Capital Allocation
6/10
Expansion Velocity
5/10
PL vs NB Stance
8/10
Digital / Automation
5/10
Founding Members Only
AS
Aldi Süd
🇩🇪 Aldi SÜD / Aldi Nord — 🇩🇪 DE / 🇪🇸 ES / 🇮🇹 IT
Group (no single CEO — two separate Süd/Nord groups)
Capital Allocation
9/10
Expansion Velocity
8/10
PL vs NB Stance
10/10
Digital / Automation
4/10
Founding Members Only
AN
Aldi Nord
🇩🇪 Aldi Nord — 🇩🇪 DE / 🇧🇪 BE / 🇫🇷 FR / 🇳🇱 NL
Group (no single named CEO)
Capital Allocation
8/10
Expansion Velocity
7/10
PL vs NB Stance
10/10
Digital / Automation
4/10
Founding Members Only

Full access: $29/month — locked for life — 10 seats

Unlock the full scorecard →
Planche 04 — Summary League Table

12 CEOs — aggregate score by axis

Highest score in each axis: Lidl (Capital & Expansion), Aldi (PL), Ahold Delhaize (Digital). The trade press is watching M&A moves — these allocation patterns reveal more.

Retailer Capital Alloc. Expansion PL vs NB Digital Total
Gerd Chrzanowski
🇩🇪 Lidl / Schwarz Group
9 9 10 5 33
Juan Roig
🇪🇸 Mercadona
8 8 9 7 32
Aldi Süd
🇩🇪 Aldi SÜD / Aldi Nord
9 8 10 4 31
Aldi Nord
🇩🇪 Aldi Nord
8 7 10 4 29
Alexandre Bompard
🇫🇷 Carrefour
7 5 8 7 27
Frans Muller
🇳🇱 Ahold Delhaize
7 5 7 8 27
Ken Murphy
🇬🇧 Tesco
8 4 7 6 25
Jef Colruyt
🇧🇪 Colruyt
7 4 8 6 25
Lionel Souque
🇩🇪 REWE Group
7 5 7 5 24
Markus Mosa
🇩🇪 EDEKA
6 6 8 4 24
Mario Irminger
🇨🇭 Migros
6 5 8 5 24
Simon Roberts
🇬🇧 Sainsbury's
6 3 6 5 20
Planche 05 — Contrarian Findings

3 findings the trade press is missing

The conventional narrative focuses on M&A announcements, store opening counts, and price war headlines. These three patterns require reading the CEO behaviour, not just the press release.

Finding 1: Lidl and Aldi are betting on format flexibility, not just price
Both Schwarz Group and Aldi are investing heavily in store format diversification — Lidl test-stores with expanded fresh and ambient sections, Aldi Süd piloting larger ‘XL’ formats in IT/ES. The thesis: price leadership alone won’t hold once PL quality parity is achieved. The race is format depth, not price floor.
Implication: If you're modelling hard-discounter threat, factor in format expansion — not just price competition.
Finding 2: Mercadona's capital discipline is being misread as stagnation
Roig's refusal to do buybacks or enter new geographies is labelled conservative by the trade press. But Mercadona's returns on capital are 18–22% ROIC — double the European grocery average. France entry (22 stores, growing) is under-the-radar because it doesn't match the M&A narrative. The real story is that Mercadona is the most profitable mainstream European grocer by a wide margin.
Implication: Mercadona is not standing still — it's deploying capital at returns that make most European peers look inefficient.
Finding 3: Carrefour's AI bet is the contrarian move nobody is watching
While UK and DE retailers are cautious on AI, Carrefour committed to Nvidia partnership for demand forecasting and dynamic pricing across 12,000 SKUs. Bompard: ‘the retailer who figures out real-time pricing first wins.’ If the gamble pays off, the operational advantage compounds over 3–5 years. If it doesn’t, it’s a €200M write-off. That’s the definition of a high-conviction CEO bet.
Implication: Either Carrefour builds a durable moat, or Bompard takes the blame. Either way — worth watching.
Planche 06 — Download the Full Brief
📊

12-Page CEO Scorecard Brief

Full LM-2026-014 report: all 12 CEOs, all 4 axes, all 48 sourced data points, summary league table, and the 3 contrarian findings. PDF format — print or save.

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👤
12 CEOs Scored
Tesco, Sainsbury, Carrefour, Lidl, Aldi, Mercadona, Ahold Delhaize, REWE, EDEKA, Colruyt, Migros, Schwarz Group — all 12.
📏
4 Strategy Axes
Capital allocation, expansion velocity, PL vs NB stance, digital/automation conviction — scored 1–10 with sources.
🔍
48 Data Points
One sourced quote or documented decision per cell. Annual reports, investor days, trading updates, trade press.
🎯
3 Contrarian Findings
What these CEOs are betting on that the trade press is missing — and what it means for your planning.
Planche 07 — Methodology & Sources

Sources

All scoring is based on publicly available, verifiable references. No proprietary primary research is claimed. Each data point links to a source document.

Source ref: LM-2026-014. Published May 2026. Scoring reflects published data through May 2026. Scores represent analytical interpretation of documented decisions — not an endorsement or ranking. Disputes or corrections welcome: aisleintel@polsia.app.