Business Standard

War with Flipkart drives up Amazon’s internatio­nal losses

- ALNOOR PEERMOHAME­D

Seattle-based online retail giant Amazon’s internatio­nal losses soared to $936 million in the three months that ended September on account of its bullish investment­s in India to overtake rival Flipkart.

The retailer’s internatio­nal business unit has seen quarterly losses grow to nearly a billion dollars from $541 million in the same quarter last year and $56 million in Q3 of 2015. At the same time, quarterly revenues have continued to climb from $8.2 billion to $13.7 billion in the past two years.

When asked about the rising internatio­nal losses during an investor call, Chief Financial Officer Brian T Olsavsky said: “It is internatio­nal expansion, primarily in India where we’re continuing to add benefits. We launched Prime there a year ago, and we’ve had more Prime members join in India than in any other country in the first 12 months.”

Amazon’s investment­s in India have been on the rise and have accelerate­d further in 2017 after rival Flipkart closed two massive funding rounds led by SoftBank and Tencent earlier this year. Flipkart claims to have put together a war chest of $4 billion to take on Amazon over the next few years.

While both firms have been locked in a battle to win customers by offering discounts, Amazon has also deployed significan­t capital in building infrastruc­ture that will enable quick deliveries through its Prime loyalty programme. Analysts have estimated that Amazon had over five million Prime members in India in the first half of 2017.

“We had the first Prime Day there (in India) this year, Prime Music, and Amazon Business is also expanding in India. So a lot of positive momentum and investment is going on in India. We are very pleased with that. We also recently announced Echo and Alexa are available in India,” Olsavsky said, when questioned about how Amazon was deploying the capital in India.

Unlike in the other markets, Amazon has to battle a third player in India — Alibaba. The Chinese ecommerce giant is becoming aggressive in India through its investment­s in the e- commerce arm of digital payments player Paytm with its Paytm Mall.

Analysts expect investment­s in the sector to soar with the global giants fighting for supremacy. Being the last large untapped open market in the world, India is extremely important for the firms. Morgan Stanley expects the market to grow to $200 billion by 2026. Despite the massive multibilli­on dollar investment­s Amazon is making in India each year, the company maintains that the market is still in its infancy and would require even more investment to grow. Analysts had earlier opined that e-commerce in India had found stability and players would look to push for making profits, but both Flipkart and Amazon seem to be proving them wrong.

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