Gulf Times - Gulf Times Business

The tiny deals behind Mukesh Ambani’s bid to take on Amazon

-

A $2.5bn spending spree involving more than two dozen deals provides some insight into how Mukesh Ambani is piecing together a strategy to take on Amazon.com Inc in India.

Asia’s richest man is sharpening his focus on e-commerce with a string of tiny acquisitio­ns and stake purchases to face the world’s largest online retailer, after shaking up India’s telecommun­ications industry with cheap data and free calls.

The acquisitio­ns represent a new strategy for Ambani’s Reliance Group, whose founder – his father Dhirubhai Ambani – built a petrochemi­cals business and the world’s largest oil-refining complex from scratch. It’s a clear pivot toward consumer offerings in a country that’s becoming a battlegrou­nd for giants such as Amazon. com and Walmart Inc.’s Flipkart Online Services Pvt.

“The deals may be tiny, but it’s more likely that they are putting together a team of talented people by acquisitio­ns, who can then be invested in to build out larger platform products,” said Kunal Agrawal, an analyst with Bloomberg Intelligen­ce.

Ambani is racing to grab a share of an online shopping market that Morgan Stanley estimates will grow to be valued at $200bn by 2028 from about $30bn last year. India will have 829mn smartphone users by 2022, according to Cisco Systems Inc, from a projected half a billion this year. That means a potential surge in demand for online services and products from music to food delivery, electronic gadgets and clothes.

‘Shopping experience’

Ambani outlined his plan to shareholde­rs in July, saying the effort will involve the group’s unlisted businesses Reliance Retail Ltd. and Reliance Jio Infocomm Ltd. He has already spent about $36bn on Jio, which has rolled out a nationwide 4G network and fiber broadband infrastruc­ture, causing some establishe­d rivals to pull back.

The platform will use augmented reality, holographs and virtual reality to create an “immersive shopping experience,” said Ambani, 61. Reliance’s consumer businesses will contribute nearly as much to the conglomera­te’s overall earnings as its bread-and-butter energy businesses by the end of 2028, he said.

The service will seek to get on board the millions of mom-and-pop stores that dominate the Indian retail market, providing heft to its operations. Chains and large department stores account for only 10 percent of the market.

The Reliance e-commerce platform would enable small merchants to “do everything that large enterprise­s and large e-commerce players are able to do,” Ambani said. A spokesman for Reliance Industries declined to comment on the progress of the plans.

The acquisitio­ns will help bolster this network of partners. Last week, Reliance said it would spend Rs7bn ($101mn) to buy and fund the expansion of Haptik Infotech Pvt., a company that provides customer support chat services using artificial intelligen­ce.

Radisys Corp will help Reliance in enhancing its presence in the so-called Internet of Things and 5G in a bid to launch its broader e-commerce business, while Vakt Holdings will build a digital ecosystem leveraging block-chain technology. Grab a Grub will help Reliance deliver food, groceries and other merchandis­e using bikes as a delivery method in a hyper-local approach. Infibeam Avenues will help create e-commerce market places, Mint reported on its website.

Digital ecosystem

The “acquisitio­ns will help Reliance create a unique and a very powerful digital economy ecosystem for Reliance, which is way beyond simple merchandis­e e-commerce,” says Arvind K Singhal, chairman and managing director of Technopak Advisors, a management consulting firm.

The combined value of the acquisitio­ns doesn’t include a recently terminated 2017 deal by Jio to buy airwaves, towers and fiber assets for Rs173bn ($2.5bn) from younger brother Anil Ambani’s Reliance Communicat­ions Ltd.

Ambani’s e-commerce plans have already won the support of investors. Shares of Reliance Industries Ltd surged 45% in the past 12 months and touched a record high on April 1. The rally boosted Ambani’s net worth by $9.7bn this year to $54bn, according to the Bloomberg Billionair­es Index. While Ambani puts together the building blocks to take on Amazon and Walmart, the broader fight is already taking shape in India. In a move widely interprete­d as extending a helping hand to home-grown business, the government imposed late last year restrictio­ns on the global giants, requiring them to cut cash-back payments and discounts – methods that have been criticised by smaller sellers who’ve accused the companies of predatory pricing.

To adjust to the rules, Amazon and Walmart have removed thousands of products from virtual shelves and must redraw contracts with merchants and brands as well as brace for a full-fledged e-commerce policy that is being reviewed.

Representa­tives for both Walmart and Amazon declined to comment.

Reliance’s ambition and disruptive success in telecom, however, came at a price. Its debt has ballooned since 2010 when Reliance announced its plans to re-enter the telecom sector. The tiny deals that Ambani has been stitching make more sense, in this backdrop. These acquisitio­ns are adding brands, technology or expertise to Reliance’s repertoire but not making its indebtedne­ss worse.

As the battle lines are drawn, clues to how Reliance could use its might in its latest venture may be found in the way Ambani reshaped India’s telecommun­ications landscape with Jio over two years. That approach led many rivals to retreat, including brother Anil’s Reliance Communicat­ions.

“With its own telecom network, Reliance in India can go way beyond Amazon and Flipkart,” Technopak’s Singhal said. “The Reliance ecosystem – still in progress – for digital economy has multiple, very powerful components that include retail, entertainm­ent, education and financial services.”

 ??  ?? Ambani: Sharpening focus on e-commerce with a string of tiny acquisitio­ns and stake purchases.
Ambani: Sharpening focus on e-commerce with a string of tiny acquisitio­ns and stake purchases.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Qatar