Business Standard

VIVO PULLS OUT OF IPL AS TITLE SPONSOR AMID BORDER ROW

Cricket board to scout for one-year sponsor; handset brand could be back next year

- VIVEAT SUSAN PINTO

Chinese mobile phone company Vivo pulled out as the Indian Premier League’s title sponsor for this year. Vivo declined comment but the cricketing body, officials said, was seeking a one-year replacemen­t for the brand since it could make its way back next year. This arrangemen­t, they said, would be for three years, stretching from 2021 to 2023 on revised terms, and would depend on the geopolitic­al situation.

Images of raging protests against Chinese goods appear to have pushed the country’s third-largest smartphone player, Vivo, to temporaril­y step back from its title sponsorshi­p of the Indian Premier League (IPL).

On Tuesday, officials of the Board of Control for Cricket (BCCI) said that Vivo had decided to pull out of the IPL’S title sponsorshi­p for a year.

Vivo declined comment on the matter but the cricketing body, officials said, was seeking a oneyear replacemen­t for the brand since it could make its way back next year.

This arrangemen­t, they said, would be for three years, stretching from 2021 to 2023 on revised terms, and would depend on the geopolitic­al situation between the two nations.

The original contract with

Vivo was from 2018 to 2022 for Rs 2,200 crore. The firm was paying ~440 crore annually, but had been in the eye of a storm since the deadly clash between Indian and Chinese soldiers in Ladakh.

It is unclear who will replace Vivo, since the T20 tournament is only a month-and-a-half away. It will be held in the United Arab Emirates from September 19.

Praveen Khandelwal, secretary general, Confederat­ion of All India Traders (CAIT), who had criticised the BCCI’S decision to retain IPL sponsors on Monday, said that all other contracts with Chinese companies for the cricket league should be reviewed following Vivo’s exit.

Firms such as Paytm, Swiggy, Dream11 and Byju’s, which are associated with the IPL, have Chinese investment­s. Byju’s is also associated with IPL franchisee­s such as Kolkata Knight Riders.

“We have been running a ‘Boycott China’ campaign since June. The pressure on Chinese brands was growing. Vivo’s exit is a result of this,” Khandelwal said.

But persons in the know said that the entry of the Swadeshi Jagran Manch, an affiliate of the Rashtriya Swayamseva­k Sangh, during protests on Monday drove Vivo to take the final call.

BCCI is said to be in continuous dialogue with Vivo for an amicable exit from the 2020 edition and has not floated a new tender yet for its replacemen­t. It is expected to do so in the coming days.

Brands experts say that Vivo’s decision has come as a surprise. “I was shocked to hear about Vivo’s exit from the 2020 edition. But the protests were simply mounting. I see them back next year though, since they have not exited the India market,” said N Chandramou­li, chief executive officer of brand insights firm TRA Research.

The share of Chinese brands in India’s smartphone market fell to 72 per cent in the April-june period versus 81 per cent in the first three months of the year, market researcher Counterpoi­nt Research said last week, as most brands faced a supply crunch due to the lockdown. Imports by Chinese firms were also blocked at ports in June, hitting production and sales.

Experts say that it was important for Chinese firms to make their presence felt in the IPL, if they wish to gain share. A key reason for this being that the IPL this year will coincide with the festive season, an important period for handset brands. It also is the only high-impact sporting property from an India perspectiv­e this year.

That opportunit­y has clearly fizzled out for Vivo. Other handset brands such as Xiaomi, Oppo, Oneplus and Realme were busy preparing their media plans for the festive season, media agency executives said. They may now recast their strategy in line with current developmen­ts.

The Indian government has already banned 59 Chinese mobile applicatio­ns after Chinese soldiers used stones, nail-studded sticks, iron rods and clubs to carry out a brutal attack on Indian soldiers after they protested the erection of a surveillan­ce post by China on the Indian side of the Line of Actual Control in Galwan. Twenty Indian soldiers lost their lives in the clash, the biggest confrontat­ion between the two militaries since 1967.

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