The Mercury News

Walmart appears close to deal with India’s Flipkart

Amazon losing out on bid for India’s leading e-commerce company

- By Saritha Rai

Walmart Inc. looks likely to take the next round in the battle for India’s retail market over rival Amazon.com.

Flipkart Online Services, the country’s leading e-commerce company, is leaning toward selling a controllin­g stake to the Bentonvill­e, Arkansas-based company, rather than Amazon, because of the greater certainty in such a deal, according to people familiar with the matter. Both U.S. companies are bidding for a controllin­g stake in Flipkart at a valuation of about $20 billion,

said the people, asking not to be identified because the matter is private.

Flipkart’s board recently met to discuss the competing proposals and thinks Walmart could close a deal more quickly and smoothly, the people said. Walmart faces fewer regulatory hurdles because it has no online retail presence in the country now, while Amazon is the second-largest e-commerce player and Flipkart’s primary rival. Flipkart founders Sachin and Binny Bansal also favor Walmart because they would continue to help lead the business and the U.S. company’s executives have emphasized their commitment to the market.

A Walmart deal has been discussed since at least last year and could still change or fall apart. SoftBank Group Corp., Flipkart’s largest shareholde­r, may prefer a sale to Amazon in part because of its success in cracking open the e-commerce business, one of the people said. Amazon founder Jeff Bezos has committed $5.5 bil-

lion to India and his country chief, Amit Agarwal, has made progress by adapting the site to local conditions.

Walmart, Amazon and Flipkart declined to comment.

After Losing China, Jeff Bezos Really Wants to Win in India

Walmart is in talks to take a minority stake in Flipkart that could go up to 50 or 60 percent, said the people. The amount will depend in part on which of Flipkart’s existing shareholde­rs want to sell, including SoftBank and Tiger Global Management. Bloomberg News reported

last month that Walmart would likely pay about $7 billion for one third of the company.

If completed, the deal would give Walmart a major stake in an emerging market of 1.3 billion people. The U.S. company is the world’s largest retailer, but it has struggled against Amazon as consumers increasing­ly migrate to online commerce. India is the next big potential prize after the U.S. and China, where foreign retailers have made little progress against Alibaba Group Holding Ltd.

Amazon and Bezos are pushing hard for deal with Flipkart because they realize Walmart’s money will fortify its rival and make competitio­n even more fierce. By contrast, an Amazon

deal for Flipkart would consolidat­e the market and allow Bezos to step up investment­s in a country still in need of basic infrastruc­ture for faster delivery and high quality goods.

Still, an Amazon deal would be much more complicate­d than one with Walmart, said one person. Because of regulatory concerns, Amazon would likely have to offer concession­s to government authoritie­s, such as continuing to operate the two e-commerce sites as independen­t brands. Bezos would also have to persuade Flipkart and its board to take a chance on government approval — perhaps by guaranteei­ng a large breakup fee if the deal fails.

A $20 billion pricetag would be substantia­lly higher than Flipkart’s valuation of about $12 billion last year. It is already the most valuable startup in India.

Tiger and SoftBank are currently the startup’s largest shareholde­rs, followed by South Africa’s Naspers Ltd. If the deal goes through, it would be the biggest in the nascent history of Indian ecommerce.

 ?? NAMASBHOJA­NI — BLOOMBERG ?? Employees work in the offices of Myntra.com, a unit of Flipkart, in Bangaluru, India, in December.
NAMASBHOJA­NI — BLOOMBERG Employees work in the offices of Myntra.com, a unit of Flipkart, in Bangaluru, India, in December.

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