Bangkok Post

Alibaba buys into hypermarke­t chain

Pays $2.9bn for 36% of Sun Art Retail Group

- DANIELA WEI LULU YILUN CHEN

HONG KONG: Alibaba Group Holding Ltd’s $2.9 billion deal to buy a slice of China’s largest hypermarke­t chain pits it against Wal-Mart Stores Inc in the world’s largest retail arena.

China’s biggest e-commerce company agreed to acquire 36% of Sun Art Retail Group Ltd, which operates about 400 hypermarke­ts under the Auchan and RTMart banners.

As part of the deal, France’s Auchan Retail SA will raise its stake in the Hong Kong-listed company to a similar level, and form an alliance with the internet giant to tackle the same Chinese food retail sector Wal-Mart’s targeting.

Alibaba’s essentiall­y using Sun Art to quicken an assault on the $4 trillion brickand-mortar retail arena, escalating competitio­n with Wal-Mart in the hypermarke­ts that hawk everything from fresh produce to electronic­s.

The world’s largest retailer is focused on turning around a sluggish Chinese operation through a partnershi­p with JD.com Inc that could widen its customer base beyond cities, and expanding a network of Sam’s Club stores targeted at consumers looking for premium and imported goods.

“Alibaba and Sun Art are forming a strong alliance: China’s dominant e-commerce giant and its best hypermarke­t operator,” said Veronica Wang, an associate partner with OC&C Strategy Consultant­s. “They can leverage the alliance and bring more benefits than Wal-Mart and JD.”

Alibaba’s manoeuvre again shows how it’s outspendin­g Jeff Bezos in overhaulin­g old-school shopping. It’s the latest in a string of multi-billion dollar investment­s in physical retail that’ve deepened a lead over Amazon.com Inc, which kicked off its own foray into groceries by buying Whole Foods Market Inc for $13.7 billion.

Unlike that acquisitio­n, Alibaba’s taking advantage of a years-long revenue decelerati­on and uncertain prospects to get Sun Art on the cheap — at a 24% discount to its most recent valuation.

Alibaba’s bent on transformi­ng retail by infusing stores with technology to better manage inventory and customer data. WalMart and JD.com too are doing the same, marrying online commerce with data and combining their network of warehouses and cold storage for same-day delivery to customers.

The US giant increased its stake in its Chinese partner to just over 10% last year, according to a regulatory filing, cementing their alliance.

But Sun Art now gets the technology and resources needed to take the battle to its deep-pocketed American foe. In return for a massive discount, investors in Sun Art — which had bet since February on a capital infusion — hitch a ride on a potential turnaround. Its shares gyrated yesterday as investors debated the merits, sliding 14% before recovering to close 4% lower.

“Sun Art has a pretty good supply chain so cost-wise it might make more sense than Alibaba doing everything from scratch,” said Julia Pan, a Shanghai-based analyst at UOB Kayhian.

“The new-retail strategy seems to be the new trend for e-commerce giants.”

It’s early days in Alibaba’s grand experiment, but if it works, it could deepen a lead over Bezos’ Amazon in the fragmented world of physical retail.

Jack Ma’s company spent billions buying into grocers, shopping malls and even department stores long before Amazon picked up Whole Foods Market.

The over-arching idea is to connect virtual and offline worlds, boosting online orders while amassing valuable customer purchasing data. It’s betting that a move into physical commerce will pump-prime its main online business, rope in millions of new shoppers, and expand its network into a relatively untapped Chinese hinterland.

“Sun Art can help Tmall to penetrate into lower tier cities,” Pan said.

Sun Art, for its part, needs the capital and technology infusion. Auchan and RT-Mart have the biggest slice of China’s hypermarke­t business with about a 15% share, followed by Wal-Mart with 10%, according to Euromonito­r. But the company’s sales growth has sputtered as more Chinese shop online.

Like other retailers, Sun Art is exploring ways to combine i nternet commerce with physical retail in a so-called “online-to-offline” or O2O model.

It’s partly owned by an arm of France’s closely-held Auchan Holding SA, which operates more than 3,700 outlets across 17 countries and reported revenue of €51.7 billion ($60.8 billion) last year.

Sun Art has sought to make inroads into e-commerce after acquiring control of web grocery store Fields HK and Shanghai Diqi Network Technology Co’s Xiaohehe e-commerce business in 2015.

But decelerati­ng growth and narrowing margins may be why Alibaba’s getting into Sun Art for about HK$6.50 a share versus HK$8.60 before shares were suspended Nov 13.

Once the acquisitio­n is complete, Alibaba, Auchan and a third company will own more than 77% of the company. As they may be considered “acting in concert,” the group may be required to make an offer for the remainder of Sun Art shares, the listed company said in its filing.

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