The National - News

AMAZON BEGINS SALE OF GOODS THROUGH SOUQ.COM ACQUISITIO­N

▶ Branded products are company’s first foray into UAE through recently purchased retailer

- JOHN DENNEHY

Amazon has begun selling products to UAE consumers through the recently acquired Souq.com, as the world’s largest retailer takes its first steps towards creating an online shopping culture in a country still dominated by bricks and mortar retail.

It began with a handful of Amazon-branded products this week but marked a significan­t step for shoppers who have long complained of hiked up prices in the country’s upmarket malls.

Experts said the move, which followed the purchase of Souq for US$580 million (Dh2.13 billion) in March, would give shoppers access to a service that has transforme­d global retail.

“While currently the range is very limited, basically featuring mobile and other consumer electronic­s accessorie­s, we strongly expect the range would be increased within the consumer electronic­s and travel accessorie­s segments,” said Rabia Yasmeen, an analyst at Euromonito­r in Dubai.

At present, shoppers can order directly from Amazon but pay steep costs to shop and ship goods or for delivery through courier companies.

“The launch of AmazonBasi­cs will give consumers access to a global label at prices lower than Amazon.com,” she said.

AmazonBasi­cs is the company’s brand of affordable products ranging from USB wires to kitchen utensils and Amazon-branded Apple Mac covers, from just Dh29.

There are currently several dozen items from the range available on Souq, compared with about a thousand on the AmazonBasi­cs US website, with prices ranging from Dh20 to Dh60.

For example, an Apple-certified lightning-to-USB cable costs Dh25, a laptop sleeve costs Dh29 and a gadget bag is for Dh65. Travel accessorie­s such as a four-piece packing cube set are Dh55. Free shipping is available and there is also an extra 25 per cent discount on offer.

The move is the first clear linkup between Amazon and Souq since the US company completed its acquisitio­n of the Middle East’s largest online retailer. Users could already use Amazon accounts to login to Souq’s website.

Announcing the move, Souq founder and chief executive Ronaldo Mouchawar said the arrival of AmazonBasi­cs meant UAE customers now could access a “great selection of bestin-class products at very affordable prices”.

But while the developmen­t is welcome for hard-pressed consumers, it raises the question of when local buyers will have direct access to services seen in other markets, such as overnight delivery from Amazon, plus Amazon Prime and Echo.

Amazon showed its economy of scale on Monday week when it dramatical­ly slashed prices of products at the recently acquired Whole Foods, the upmarket organic food chain, by as much as 43 per cent.

“The convention­al supermarke­t has not evolved much in decades,” Karen Short, an analyst at Barclays Capital, told Bloomberg.

“But Amazon will likely drive drasticall­y different shopping behaviour in grocery. The survival of the fittest has begun.”

E-commerce in the UAE has been relatively small scale in recent years, and shoppers still flock to malls boasting lavish food courts and other attraction­s. But, the expected arrival of new online marketplac­es such as the $1bn investment Noon.com business will likely change that.

Consultant­s AT Kearney expect e-commerce to grow at a compound annual growth rate of 25 per cent a year up to 2020, with Frost and Sullivan estimating the market could be worth up to $10bn by next year.

“Anyone who executes the correct way in the next couple of years can get into the big league,” said Pratik Gupta, co-founder of Wadi.com, an online market platform that launched with great fanfare in Saudi Arabia and the UAE in 2015, earlier this month.

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 ?? Pawan Singh / The National ?? The UAE retail sector, dominated by malls, above, is set for a shake-up by Amazon, which acquired the region’s biggest online retailer, Souq.com, left
Pawan Singh / The National The UAE retail sector, dominated by malls, above, is set for a shake-up by Amazon, which acquired the region’s biggest online retailer, Souq.com, left

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