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A Tesco (now Lotus's) store in Klang, Selangor, Malaysia. Nationwide. 99 Speedmart; AEON Group. AEON; AEON MaxValu Prime; AEON BiG; Econsave [1] Mydin; TCT Retailing Group Sdn Bhd; West Malaysia. Ben's Independent Grocer; Big 10 Grocer; Billion Supermarket; Checkers Hypermarket; C-Mart; Eco-Shop; GCH Retail. Cold Storage; Giant Hypermarket ...
As of 2023, this is a list of supermarket chains, past and present, which operate or have branches in more than one country, whether under the parent corporation's name or another name. For supermarkets that are only in one country, see the breakdown by continent at the bottom of this page.
GCH Retail (Malaysia) Sdn Bhd, doing business as Giant Mall, is a hypermarket brand and retailer chain now mainly in Malaysia, Singapore and formerly Brunei, [1] Cambodia, [2] Indonesia and Vietnam. [3] In 2016, Giant was the largest supermarket chain in Malaysia. [4] Its parent company also operates Mercató, Cold Storage and TMC in Malaysia. [5]
NTUC FairPrice is the largest supermarket chain in Singapore. [2] The company is a co-operative of the National Trades Union Congress (NTUC). The group has more than 100 supermarkets across the island, with over 160 outlets of Cheers convenience stores island-wide.
Pages in category "Supermarkets of Malaysia" The following 8 pages are in this category, out of 8 total. ... List of supermarket chains in Malaysia; M. Mydin; N.
Jaya Grocer is a Malaysian upscale supermarket chain. As of 2024, it operates 50 stores in Peninsular Malaysia, with most of its locations in the Klang Valley. [1]The chain was founded in 2007 by the Teng family, aiming to establish a premium supermarket brand.
The Algerian chain Ardis (owned by Algerian group Arcofina) is currently operating one hypermarket in the city of Mohammadia, just outside Algiers. In the future Ardis will open 19 hypermarkets in the country; the next will open near Oran in Bir El Djir. [1] [2] Carrefour ended their partnership with the Algerian group Arcofina on February 19 ...
Makro Malaysia was a partnership between its parent Dutch company, the Selangor State Development Corporation (PKNS) and PKNS-Inchcape (a joint venture between PKNS and Inchcape). In its first year of operation, Makro Malaysia invested a total of RM 90 million. It had plans to open six to eight outlets in a few years. [4]