Migros is the largest retailer in Switzerland by revenue (CHF 30B, ~$34B) and operates as a federated cooperative of 10 regional cooperatives. It is structurally impossible to acquire or replicate.
Why the cooperative model is the point:
The cooperative structure means profit isn't extracted by shareholders — it flows back into regional communities, stores, and infrastructure. Migros owns its own bank (Migros Bank, CHF 23B in deposits), its own insurance, its own travel agency. This is a moat that no external competitor can breach.
The weakness: digital:
Migros digital revenue is 6% of total — versus the Swiss average of 12%. The cooperative model creates alignment with local communities but slows investment in national digital infrastructure. This is where challengers (Coop, Lidl Switzerland) are finding space.
What European grocers can learn:
The lesson is not: copy the cooperative model. The lesson is: build assets that create structural lock-in beyond just retail. Migros Bank holding CHF 23B in deposits creates a relationship with every Swiss household that is independent of grocery shopping behavior.