China Daily

Metro sells majority stake to Wumei

- By WANG ZHUOQIONG wangzhuoqi­ong@chinadaily.com.cn

German wholesaler Metro AG’s decision to sell a majority stake in its Chinese operations to Beijingbas­ed Wumei Technology Group has highlighte­d the growing challenges faced by internatio­nal retailers and the rise of domestic retailing companies.

Metro said it would sell close to 80 percent of its stake in the Chinese operations and retain a 20 percent stake. The transactio­n values Metro China at an implied total enterprise value of 1.9 billion euros ($2.09 billion).

Jason Yu, general manager of Kantar Worldpanel, said the price indicates the investors’ optimistic views on Metro’s profit capabiliti­es.

“Metro’s years of penetratio­n into the country’s business-tobusiness clients, middle-income consumers, and its strengths in product quality and global supply chains, strong property assets, have given it an advantage in the deal,” said Yu.

The German company has developed sales channels including O2O as well as fast-growing food service distributi­on and welfare and gifting business lines.

Unlike other foreign retailing giants that have left the market as a result of financial losses, Metro has actually managed to gain sound revenue and profit in recent years.

It earned a revenue of 2.7 billion euros and has 97 stores in 59 cities, with robust sales growth over 23 years, and an EBITDA margin of more than 5 percent for the financial year 2017 to 2018.

With 17 million members, Metro also has strong core ownership, solid food safety record and its own brand offerings. But its business-tobusiness model has been found challengin­g in the local market where caterers and shop owners prefer to shop in wholesale markets or directly source products from distributo­rs, said Yu. Most of all, Metro’s global focus on becoming a fully-fledged wholesaler has pushed the retailer to look for a buyer in China.

It is not exaggerati­ng to say that the dynamic and fast-paced Chinese retail market has been a graveyard for multinatio­nal retailers.

In recent years, several internatio­nal retailers have exited the market, with Walmart the sole exception, thanks to its high-end membership format Sam’s Club.

In June this year, Nanjing-based home appliances retailer Suning said it was buying an 80 percent stake in French supermarke­t giant Carrefour China in a deal worth 4.8 billion yuan ($670 million). British retailer Tesco in 2014 sold its 131 stores to China Resources, after incurring losses of more than 11.3 billion yuan. In the same year, Kingfisher, the United Kingdombas­ed home improvemen­t retailer, sold its B&Q China business to Wumei Holdings Inc for 140 million pounds ($219 million).

Wumei attracted Metro’s attention thanks to its local sourcing strengths for fresh food and its digital capacities from technology partner Dmall, a mix to accelerate Metro China’s growth and digital transforma­tion.

Wenzhong Zhang, founder and chairman of Wumei, said: “We are convinced that Wumei and Dmall are the ideal partners for Metro AG to fully realize the potential of Metro China given our unique combinatio­n of retail DNA and digital excellence, our local knowledge and our strong and proven expertise in consolidat­ing and growing multinatio­nal brands in China to deliver an enhanced customer propositio­n.

Metro China will remain a stand-alone business led by Claude Sarrailh, Metro China’s chief executive officer. The joint venture will maintain the current store footprint and all commercial operations while planned store openings will continue, according to Wumei.

Wumei Technology Group is one of the largest leading Chinese retailers, operating more than 1,000 hypermarke­ts, convenienc­e stores, department stores and home improvemen­t formats, generating annual sales in excess of 50 billion yuan.

“The joint venture will lift Wumei as a national retailer from its current position as mostly a regional player if excluding the group’s home improvemen­t formats,” said Yu.

 ?? PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY ?? A promotion attracts consumers at a Metro supermarke­t in Jinan, capital of Shandong province.
PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY A promotion attracts consumers at a Metro supermarke­t in Jinan, capital of Shandong province.

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