Meet POCO, the ‘Aldi-style’ frontrunner that could buy up to 20 Masters sites

POCO

Source: Instagram

By Anthony Colangelo

A little-known home furnishing and hardware store has entered the race to take over sites vacated by Woolworths’ doomed Masters Home Improvement chain.

The new contender, POCO, is a South African-owned warehouse retailer which stocked discount furniture, hardware and other low cost household items.

POCO is one of the biggest players in Germany’s large scale homeware retail scene, claiming it had everything to “make your house a home”.

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A retail expert told The New Daily that POCO was the Aldi of the home-hardware scene.

POCO stocked everything from white goods, to furniture sets, decorative items and bedding.

Its South African parent company, Steinhoff International, also owned big name outlets Freedom Furniture and Snooze.

Steinhoff International did not respond to The New Daily‘s request for comment, nor did POCO’s Australian based media team.

Fairfax Media reported that POCO was planning to move into 20 vacated Masters sites around Australia.

Prior to that, trade publication Channel News reported a Steinhoff International source said the company wanted 45 Australian POCO stores in two years and as many as 100 outlets within five years.

Bunnings, Costco and Ikea had been the frontrunners to taker over the 14,000-square-metre Masters sites.

Currently, POCO had two stores on Australian shores, in Blacktown and Casula, Sydney. It had no online store.

Woolworths bungled its DIY warehouse project and accumulated losses beyond $500 million, with its 62 Masters warehouses set to close.

There were also suggestions Steinhoff could purchase appliance store The Good Guys, which was weighing up an $800 million to $900 million trade sale or initial public offering.

‘The Aldi of homeware and hardware’

Queensland University of Technology retail expert Dr Gary Mortimer told The New Daily that POCO was to Bunnings what Aldi was to Coles and Woolworths.

“The POCO model tends to be an Aldi or to a lesser extent a Costco-style one,” Dr Mortimer said. “Fairly good quality, but low price. Not a significantly large range or a lot of branded products.

“POCO will tap into that value seeking consumer that wants relatively good furniture, cheap white goods but still good quality.”

He said to expect a “bit of a mix” of products including a range of outdoor furniture, hardware, soft furnishings and some electrical goods.

Dr Mortimer said it was a very different offering to Masters, which meant POCO would have a better chance of standing up to Bunnings.

“What Masters did was try to emulate Bunnings but in a high end air conditioned store. That inferred to the shopper it would be high price,” he said.

“They didn’t understand their market. People would go to buy hardware but also see cushions and throw rugs.”

Anthony Colangelo is a reporter for The New Daily, where this article was first published.

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