Khaleej Times

Alibaba goes offline with a $2.9B stake in China grocer

- Reuters

beijing — Internet giant Alibaba Group Holding Ltd said on Monday it would invest HK$22.4 billion ($2.87 billion) for a major stake in China’s top hypermart operator, Sun Art Retail Group Ltd, part of a wider push into offline retail.

As part of an alliance with Auchan Retail S.A. and Ruentex Group, Alibaba would buy the stake from Ruentex while Auchan Retail would boost its stake, the three companies said in a joint statement.

The alliance would target opportunit­ies in China’s $500 billion food retail sector, as Alibaba races to build big-data capabiliti­es in the offline retail market where roughly 85 per cent of sales are made.

“Physical stores serve an indispensa­ble role during the consumer journey, and should be enhanced through data- driven technology and personalis­ed services in the digital economy,” Alibaba chief executive officer Daniel Zhang said in the statement.

Shares of Hong Kong-listed Sun Art, which were suspended on November 13, resumed on Monday and were down 5.3 per cent in morning trade, while the benchmark index was flat.

The deal would give French retailer Groupe Auchan, China’s Alibaba Group and Taiwanese conglomera­te Ruentex 36.18 per cent,

Physical stores serve an indispensa­ble role during the consumer journey, and should be enhanced through datadriven technology and personalis­ed services in the digital economy Daniel Zhang, CEO of Alibaba

36.16 per cent and 4.67 per cent stakes respective­ly in Sun Art. Alibaba would replace Ruentex as the second-largest shareholde­r.

Alibaba has invested upwards of $9.3 billion in brick-and-mortar stores since 2015. It has launched many un-staffed concept shops in the past year, including grocery and coffee stores.

The $474 billion firm is taking more risks to secure offline, rural and overseas buyers as China’s urban e-commerce market shows signs of saturating, including purchasing extensive infrastruc­ture which it had previously avoided.

“They’re getting into a territory that’s not their core strength... for example securing a property, the licences to sell certain products, paying tax, more labour and so on,” said Weiwen Han, managing partner for Greater China at Bain & Company. —

 ?? Reuters ?? Alibaba has invested upwards of $9.3 billion in brick-and-mortar stores since 2015. —
Reuters Alibaba has invested upwards of $9.3 billion in brick-and-mortar stores since 2015. —

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