China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Auchan move may prompt Carrefour rethink

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A partnershi­p between French retailer Auchan and internet giant Alibaba could push Carrefour further behind in China and could even persuade its new boss to pull out of the country.

Alexandre Bompard took the helm at Carrefour, the world’s second-largest retailer behind Walmart, in July; on Jan 23 , 2018, he will unveil his turnaround plan for the French company, which issued a profit warning in August.

Bompard has to decide whether to stay or go in China, where Carrefour has spent years trying to fix a business whose sales still fell 5.4 percent in the third quarter amid fierce competitio­n from local players and a buoyant online market.

Asked whether he had made a decision on China, the CEO told Reuters on the sidelines of an investment conference in Paris on Tuesday: “I will speak about it very soon.” He confirmed that the subject would be included in his January presentati­on.

“Until now, the only Western retailers to have successful­ly establishe­d themselves in this country have done so via partnershi­ps with local retailers, like Auchan with Sun Art Retail,” Bryan Garnier analysts said in a research note.

“A combinatio­n of offline and online is also an option, as seen with the recent agreements between Walmart and JD.com ... and Auchan and Alibaba ... Failing the rapid conclusion of such a partnershi­p, a decision could be taken at Carrefour to sell assets in China,” they added.

On Monday, Alibaba announced a HK$22.4 billion ($2.9 billion) investment for a stake in Sun Art, China’s top hypermarke­t operator, in which Auchan has the biggest stake. Carrefour has been trying to reposition in China, where it makes 5 percent of group sales, having been too focused on large hypermarke­ts. It has been expanding into e-commerce and convenienc­e stores and opening logistics centers to cut costs.

Former CEO Georges Plassat repeatedly said Carrefour would stay in China and did not rule out a deal with a local partner, although nothing materializ­ed.

Brick-and-mortar retailers have taken action to forge alliances with e-commerce players.

Among internatio­nal retailers, Walmart and Carrefour have begun to see market share recovery on a quarterly basis though they are still closing non-performing stores; they are proactivel­y reformatti­ng their existing stores to be more competitiv­e and appealing to shoppers, according to Kantar Worldpanel China.

They are introducin­g new stores that are 30 percent to 50 percent smaller than the old ones to make their merchandis­e more accessible and reduce the sales area for nonfood, according to the report.

In June, Carrefour opened its first Easy Carrefour store in Wuxi and this is the first time the retailer introduced the smaller format store outside its home base in Shanghai. More recently, it launched its own digital wallet, called “Carrefour Pay,” together with UnionPay to facilitate more mobile payments in store.

“Carrefour is seeing more recovery lately, as they are making efforts to move from (a) hypermarke­t only model to a multi-format strategy by opening more Easy Carrefour and launching compact hypermarke­ts,” said Jason Yu, general manager of Kantar Worldpanel. However, on e-commerce, Walmart and RT-Mart are likely to get upper hand with the JD and Alibaba alliance,” he said.

 ?? PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY ?? Two customers head for the exit after shopping at a 24-hour Carrefour supermarke­t in Shanghai. Carrefour is the second largest retailer in the world behind Walmart.
PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY Two customers head for the exit after shopping at a 24-hour Carrefour supermarke­t in Shanghai. Carrefour is the second largest retailer in the world behind Walmart.

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