WHY THE SYSCO–JETRO DEAL SIGNALS A STRUCTURAL ANTITRUST PROBLEMThe Food Supply Chain Is Consolidating Faster Than Antitrust Is RespondingBy Luis Gonzalez for The Last WireI spent 50 years in the restaurant industry, and I’ve seen consolidation come in waves.
Most of the time, it gets sold as “efficiency,” “lower costs,” and “better logistics.” And sometimes that’s true. But anyone who has actually run a kitchen, dealt with distributors, or tried to keep margins alive through inflation knows there is always another layer underneath: control over leverage.
What’s happening with the Sysco–Jetro deal doesn’t look like a normal merger cycle. It looks like structural consolidation of the food distribution system itself.
This isn’t just one company getting larger on a balance sheet. It’s the stacking of control points across the entire food supply chain—delivery on one side, wholesale cash-and-carry access on the other.
For independent restaurants and small operators, that matters in very practical terms. Fewer suppliers doesn’t just mean fewer options—it means fewer fallback positions when prices spike, when contracts tighten, or when shortages hit. And once those alternatives shrink, negotiating power doesn’t disappear—it moves upward.
From a market-oriented perspective, this is where consolidation stops being “efficiency” and starts becoming structural dominance. Not necessarily through intent, but through outcome: fewer independent channels, more centralized control over distribution pathways, and increasing dependency on a small number of gatekeepers.
We’ve seen this pattern before in other industries—logistics, tech platforms, even agriculture. The common thread isn’t just size. It’s control over access points. And once those are concentrated, the market stops behaving like a competitive system and starts behaving like a managed one.
My latest piece breaks down why this deal raises deeper antitrust concerns than the headlines suggest—not just market share, but control over the infrastructure that moves food from warehouse to plate.
Read on at The Last Wire.At what point does “efficiency” stop being competition... and start becoming controlled access to the market itself?
— Gonzo