Previous research has shown that most consumer packaged goods markets are in long-run
competitive equilibrium. In most categories, a given brand’s market share is stationary, showing
remarkable stability over long time horizons (10 years). This empirical generalization has been
attributed to consumer inertia and to competitive reaction elasticities that lead to offsetting
marketing spending which nullify attempts by one brand to take unilateral action to increase
share. We find a clear exception to this rule — during the period 1987-94 the retailer’s private
label consistently showed positive market share evolution. In 225 consumer packaged goods
categories, private labels trended upward 86% of the time. The trend persisted even after
controlling for marketing spending by both national and store brands. We consider the viability
of alternative explanations including changes in consumer and national brand behavior and find
that none of them can adequately account for the trend in private label share. We offer an
analytical explanation and empirical support for why private labels can grow even though
national brands shares are relatively stable. We argue that the retailer is in the best position to
opportunistically appropriate different sources of category growth because not only does it
control it own marketing spending, it also exerts some influence over the ultimate marketplace
spending of their national brand competitors.