The Pak Banker

Amazon bets on Prime Day in Latin America to battle local rivals

- MEXICO CITY -AFP

Amazon.com Inc's total sales have soared during the coronaviru­s pandemic, yet in Latin America, the world's biggest online retailer is locked in a dogfight with local rivals as it rolls out its Prime Day event in Mexico and, for the first time, Brazil.

During the Tuesday and Wednesday annual shopping event that spans 19 countries, the company will again showcase the discounts and free shipping that come along with a paid Prime membership - a strategy that has helped Amazon reel in repeat shoppers around the world. Even so, analysts say Amazon faces an uphill battle in Latin America's top two economies, where success or failure will set the bar for whether it can take on the rest of the region.

"Amazon in Latin America is not the monster that it is in the United States," said Marcos Pueyrredon, president of Buenos Aires-based eCommerce Institute. Amazon does not release country-specific sales data, yet website traffic statistics suggest Amazon is struggling to keep up with Argentina's MercadoLib­re.

In Mexico, where Amazon launched its marketplac­e in 2015, it trailed second behind MercadoLib­re for most unique visitors in August, according to the media analytics firm ComScore. In Brazil, a more fragmented market that Amazon joined in 2017, it sat in fifth place after MercadoLib­re and local e-commerce powerhouse­s like B2W, Via Varejo and Magazine Luiza.

Gloria Canales, head of marketing for Amazon in Mexico, said the company has been pleased with growth there, and will keep investing. "We strive everyday to add selection, to improve shipping rates, to improve our payment methods. We're confident that that's what makes us successful."

It is not like Amazon, which in July posted the biggest profit in its 26year history, cannot afford to play the long game. Prime, which in Mexico charges users 99 pesos ($4.67) a month or 899 pesos ($42.38) a year and offers a slew of music, games and original television along with free shipping, "has been one of the biggest engines of growth that we've had in the country," she said.

Just in time for Prime Day, Amazon recently opened its first socalled fulfillmen­t centers outside the Mexico City area, one in Guadalajar­a and another in Monterrey. These massive warehouses boasting inventorie­s of key products will help to speed up shipping to more regions.

In Brazil, where Prime costs 9.90 reais ($1.79) a month or 89 reais ($16.09) a year, Amazon began offering membership­s just a year ago. Since then, it has seen the fastest subscripti­on growth of any Prime market, with members now in 95% of municipali­ties, Amazon said in a statement. Yet, Prime alone may not be enough to boost Amazon's fortunes, said Gene Munster, managing partner of Loup Ventures, pointing out inventory and distributi­on as two key areas where Amazon needs to improve. "Undoubtedl­y it's growing," he said of the Prime program. "But it's not a question about growing, it's about trying to keep pace with MercadoLib­re."

That can be a challenge despite the fact that the local champion lacks a membership perks program on par with Prime. Adding to MercadoLib­re's headstart since its 1999 founding, the company has a broad base of sellers and understand­s the local terrain.

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-REUTERS ?? Indonesia's Islamic groups, students join hands to stage protest against jobs law.
JAKARTA -REUTERS Indonesia's Islamic groups, students join hands to stage protest against jobs law.

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