Arab Times

Emaar Malls’ $800 mln bid for Souq.com to challenge Amazon

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DUBAI, March 27, (RTRS): Dubai’s Emaar Malls, operator of glitzy Middle East shopping centres, has made an $800 million offer for regional online retailer Souq.com, setting up a potential bidding war with Amazon.com.

Emaar Malls’ bid has so far not been accepted by Souq.com shareholde­rs, the Dubai-listed firm said in a stock exchange announceme­nt on Monday.

Reuters reported last week that Amazon had agreed in principle to buy Souq.com, which was founded 12 years ago by Syrian-born entreprene­ur Ronaldo Mouchawar.

Amazon declined to comment, and Souq.com did not respond to an emailed request for further comment.

However, Emaar Malls’ offer is higher than Amazon’s $580 million bid, a source familiar with the matter said. The Financial Times reported Amazon would pay between $650 and $750 million, quoting two sources familiar with the matter.

However, Souq.com will have to break an exclusivit­y agreement with Amazon if it is to accept the Emaar Malls offer at this stage, the source said.

The Emaar Malls bid includes a $500 million up-front payment and a guaranteed 15 per cent internal rate of return for Souq.com shareholde­rs, the source said.

A successful bid would give Emaar “a firmer footing in retail and consumer behaviour,” said Sanyalaksn­a Manibhandu, head of research at NBAD Securities.

The offer is not the first move online to be made by Dubai billionair­e Mohamed Alabbar, who made his name as chairman of Emaar Properties, the Dubai-government linked-developer of the world’s tallest building. Emaar Malls is the retail unit of Emaar Properties.

Last year Alabbar raised $1 billion from regional investors including Saudi Arabia’s Public Investment Fund to set up his own Middle East e-commerce firm Noon.

Days before announcing Noon, Alabbar and Amazon founder Jeff Bezos met in Dubai, leading to speculatio­n that they would forge some sort of partnershi­p in the region.

Originally set to open for business with 20 million products, Noon quietly missed its January launch date. The company has yet to comment on the delay.

Emaar Malls bid is independen­t of Noon, the source said, aimed at complement­ing the retail unit’s brick-and-mortar sales by introducin­g services such as “click and collect”. Shoppers in the Arab world prefer to make purchases in-store despite a young and techsavvy population.

Emaar Malls is the operator of the Dubai Mall, which accounts for around 50 percent of the emirate’s luxury goods spending and is one of the Middle East’s largest shopping centres.

“Emaar’s retail division will strengthen the case for online retail for traditiona­l brick and mortar retailers, by providing an avenue of online retail,” Euromonito­r research analyst Rabia Yasmeen said in an email.

Alabbar has also made other investment­s in new technology and e-commerce -- buying a stake in regional logistics firm Aramex last year and is in the process of setting up a high-end Middle East online fashion retailer with Yoox Net-a-Porter after buying a 4 percent stake in the Italian-based online retailer for 100 million euros last April.

Alabbar has said he plans to use Aramex and Kuwait Food Co (Americana), another company he bought into last year, to deliver Noon products.

 ??  ?? In this file photo, people shop in the Dubai Mall, in Dubai, United Emirates. A subsidiary of the state-backed developer Emaar said it made an $800-million offer to purchase the online retailer Souq. com amid rumors of a possible acquisitio­n of the...
In this file photo, people shop in the Dubai Mall, in Dubai, United Emirates. A subsidiary of the state-backed developer Emaar said it made an $800-million offer to purchase the online retailer Souq. com amid rumors of a possible acquisitio­n of the...

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