The Financial Express (Delhi Edition)

Amazon to Flipkart clash in India’s nascent online market

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March 28: Craigslist could learn a thing or two from Quikr. The Indian equivalent of the free classified­s service publishes product ratings, handles payments and shipping and — crucially — releases payment only after a buyer gives their purchase a once-over and a virtual thumbs-up.

In so doing, the site that lists for sale everything from smartphone­s to cars is trying to solve problems familiar to every local flea-market bargain-hunter: the typically loud and messy business of haggling, unwieldy transport, and a distrust of smaller merchants. The app’s man- ifold services illustrate the extent to which local companies have to innovate and tailor their approaches in a hyper competitiv­e market.

“We are trying to make it as easy as buying something new,” said Pranay Chulet, whose eight-year-old Quikr is backed by Warburg Pincus and EBay Inc. “Instead of the Western ‘we’ll connect you and you go figure the rest’ approach to classified­s, we Indian-ized it.”

India’s shaping up to become the next big e-commerce battlegrou­nd for global players from Alibaba Group Holding and Amazon.com to local champions Flipkart and Snapdeal. Despite concerns that industry valuations may have gotten ahead of present reality, with a Morgan Stanley fund writing down its Flipkart stake by more than a quarter, the lure is a $25 billion market growing at up to 40 percent annually that’s still considered virgin territory. A historic rate of first-time smartphone usage and under-developed logistics and payments render the industry ripe for investment.

Mutual attraction

India’s attraction is growing also because China and the US have been staked out by a handful of operators.

The country draws frequent comparison­s to China, that other vast Asian market that in the past decade learned the ropes of online commerce and welcomed foreign investors. Yet EBay pulled out after taking a drubbing from Alibaba, while Amazon has struggled to make headway. Contrast that with India, where the US leader ranks No. 3 and Alibaba is a major investor in both Snapdeal and rising payments provider Paytm Mobile Solutions Pvt.

“India is the last big thing in e-commerce,” said Nandan Nilekani, the billionair­e co-founder of IT services firm Infosys Ltd. and an active startup investor. China created indigenous companies in most spaces and blocked US firms, yet the Chinese themselves haven’t been successful in the US, he said. Bloomberg

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