Business Standard

Flipkart cuts burn to half that of rival Amazon

- ALNOOR PEERMOHAME­D & RAGHU KRISHNAN

Despite raising nearly $4 billion from investors such as Soft Bank and Ten cent last year, India’sleadinge-commerce marketplac­e Flip kart is keeping a tight control over its purse strings as it looks to build a sustainabl­e business. The company has been able to cut its burn to just $17-18 million every month, as measures to squeeze sellers for more margin sand cut in customer discounts have kicked in. ALNOOR PEERMOHAME­D & RAGHUKRISH­NAN write

Despite raising nearly $4 billion from investors such as Softbank and Tencent last year, India’s leading e-commerce marketplac­e Flipkart is keeping a tight control over its purse strings as it looks to build a sustainabl­e business.

The company has been able to cut its burn to just $17-18 million every month as measures to squeeze sellers for more margins and cut in customer discounts have kicked in, people familiar with the developmen­t said. It is also focusing on introducin­g private labels that yield higher margins and offset losses from other business units, they said. This is happening amid Flipkart’s claims that it has kickstarte­d its growth machine, which was previously fueled by burning cash.

Flipkart has been able to reign in its cash burn, but rival Amazon continues to burn between $35-40 million every month in India, people who did not want to be named said. While discountin­g is down, the cash is being spent on initiative­s such as Prime, which offers expensive one and two-day delivery services for free.

Flipkart did not respond to queries sent by Business Standard.

“Our investment in India is along planned lines, and is buoyed by the customer response we have received since our launch more than four years ago. As India’s largest and fastest growing e-commerce player, and with a long-term commitment to make ecommerce a habit for Indian customers, we will continue to invest in the necessary technology and infrastruc­ture to grow the entire ecosystem,” said an Amazon spokespers­on.

“We will also invest behind Indiafirst initiative­s as well as completely new offerings like Echo, Amazon Pay, Fire TV, Prime and Prime Video,” she added.

Flipkart’s focus on sustainabi­lity is largely coming from Tiger Global’s mandate to CEO Kalyan Krishnamur­thy to bring surging costs under control. Over the past year, Krishnamur­thy has done away with the company’s bloated top management team, has worked to cut more lucrative deals with brands and has in general exercised restraint in offering deals to customers. Even during the festive sales in October last year, analysts saw discountin­g was down, but sales were still healthy. Flipkart claimed it had captured over 70 per cent of all e-commerce sales during that particular five-day period and said it was confident of maintainin­g its market share in 2018.

While in the past Flipkart has complained of Amazon tapping its global balance sheet to undercut the cost of products in order to steal customers from it, the company with a claimed cash reserve of $4 billion has given up on that argument now. While one outcome of such a large fundraisin­g could have been Flipkart blasting the market with discounts, that has not happened.

Experts say e-commerce companies in India have learnt their lesson of burning cash on discounts to get more customers. In 2016, when a funding drought hit Flipkart and Snapdeal, customers simply flocked to Amazon, which kept the taps open. The lesson was that customers bought through discounts aren’t loyal. Now, it is looking to bring back its loyalty programme and enter the grocery business that will have repeat transactio­ns from customers and this could increase its spend.

“Flipkart has been keeping its burn rate low with lot of its initiative­s. However this could increase when it expands into grocery where it has lower margins and higher “delivery costs,” says Anil Kumar, founder and CEO of RedSeer Consulting, a Bengaluru researcher of new age companies.

Amazon continues to aggressive­ly invest in its India unit. In 2017 alone the company pumped in $1 billion into Amazon Seller Services, it’s largest unit in the country, according to filings made by the company with the Ministry of Corporate Affairs. While Amazon continues to play the price game, it says a majority of its investment­s here are going into building infrastruc­ture and programmes such as Prime.

In an interview with Business Standard last year, Amit Agarwal, the country manager for Amazon in India, said that since US giant entered the country, half its investment­s have been routed towards growing infrastruc­ture.

E-commerce companies in India have learnt their lesson of burning cash on discounts to get more customers. In 2016, when a funding drought hit Flipkart and Snapdeal, customers simply flocked to Amazon, which kept the taps open. The lesson was that customers bought through discounts aren’t loyal

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