Business Standard

Bengaluru, 30 August

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India’slong-neglected retail market is turning into one of the world’s hottest thanks to Warren Buffett, Jeff Bezos and a frenzy of billiondol­lar dealmaking.

Walmart just wrapped up a $16 billion agreement for control of the country’s leading ecommerce player, Flipkart Online Services, while Bezos’ Amazon.com negotiates deals with a large supermarke­t chain and an investment in a prominent retail conglomera­te, according to local media. This week, Buffett’s Berkshire Hathaway agreed to acquire a stake in the company behind digital payments leader Paytm.

Why the sudden interest in India? The new optimism is fueled by rising standards of living, increases in smartphone usage and cheap data plans that are boosting internet penetratio­n across the nation. Perhaps most important, India is the last big retail market still up for grabs, with an internet economy projected to double to $250 billion by 2020.

“It’s a race for leadership,” said Anil Kumar, the Bengaluru-based chief executive officer of researcher RedSeer Consulting. “There’s far more action in India compared with stable markets like China and the US.”

Online sales grew 23 per cent last year and are up 40 percent so far in 2018, according to RedSeer. The organised retail market is under-penetrated, leading to tieups between online and offline players, and driving unpreceden­ted levels of investment­s, Kumar said.

India’s vast retail industry has no parallel other than, perhaps, China. But unlike the Chinese market, dominated by Alibaba Group, India is relatively open and largely unconquere­d, offering global players vast opportunit­y to grow.

India is now the world’s fastest growing major economy, and per capita incomes have been climbing steadily. According to a Forrester Research report earlier this month, the South Asian country is the world’s fastest growing e-commerce market.

Amazon and Flipkart have cornered about three-quarters of the online Indian retail market, but other big players are getting aggressive. That’s meant heavily discounted offerings for consumers, although the substantia­l investment­s have crimped profitabil­ity.

When Walmart announced the Flipkart deal earlier this year, S&P Global Ratings changed its outlook on the US retailer to negative, saying that Flipkart was poised to generate losses in the next few years.

“The appeal of retail lies in the population of India, the aspiration­s of India, the consumptio­n power of India,” said Kishore Biyani, the billionair­e chief executive of Mumbaibase­d retail conglomera­te Future Group, which runs the 2,000-plus store Future Retail, including the country’s largest department­al chain.

Biyani said his group’s online revenues are nearing $150 million. He and others predict that India’s retail industry will have a unique combinatio­n of online and offline tieups.

Future Group is reported to have had negotiatio­ns about a stake sale with Amazon as well as Alibaba executives. Biyani refused to directly comment, simply saying he too is looking to “crack a deal like everybody else.” Amazon declined to comment and Alibaba didn’t respond to a request for comment.

India’s Reliance Industries is also fine-tuning its own ecommerce thrust by creating a hybrid online-offline retail platform.

So far, retailers have only scratched the surface by roping in high-income customers in India’s large metropolit­an cities. Rural areas and small cities offer fresh opportunit­y. The retail battle for Indian consumers will be on display again in early November during the festival of Diwali.

Vijay Shekhar Sharma, founder and chief executive officer of the Alibaba-backed e-commerce company Paytm Mall, says he ultimately sees wide-ranging impact from the billions pouring into the industry. He predicts that small mom-and-pop shops will soon be armed with retail technology as well as cloud and payments products.

Sharma is also the founder of One97 which runs the Paytm digital payments app. Berkshire Hathaway this week invested in One97, becoming the latest global player to bet that digital payments will surge as India’s increasing­ly affluent consumers shop online.

“Indian retail will get digitized at an unpreceden­ted scale,” Sharma said. “Its every nook and cranny will get altered.”

India is now the world’s fastest growing major economy, and per capita incomes have been climbing steadily

 ?? PHOTO:REUTERS ?? Jeff Bezos, chief executive officer of Amazon ( left) and Warren Buffett, chairman and CEO of Berkshire Hathaway
PHOTO:REUTERS Jeff Bezos, chief executive officer of Amazon ( left) and Warren Buffett, chairman and CEO of Berkshire Hathaway

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