Showing posts with label Walmart. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Walmart. Show all posts

Tuesday, 29 September 2020

Walmart in talks to invest $25 bn in Tata Group's 'super app': Report

 Walmart Inc is in talks with Tata Group for a potential investment of up to $25 billion in the Indian salt-to-software conglomerate's new "super app", the Mint newspaper reported on Tuesday, citing people familiar with the matter.

According to ongoing discussions between the two companies, the super app could be launched as a joint venture between Tata and Walmart, leveraging on the synergies between Tata's e-commerce business and Flipkart, Walmart's e-commerce unit, according to the report.

The news comes as Reliance Industries Ltd, controlled by Asia's richest man Mukesh Ambani, raised over $20 billion from investors including Facebook, Alphabet's Google, KKR & Co and Silver Lake Partners by selling stakes in its digital business Jio Platforms.

Separately, Bloomberg News reported Tata Group is in discussions with potential investors about stakes in its new digital platform. 

The Walmart investment could touch $20 billion to $25 billion eventually for a large stake in the proposed super app that will be hosted under a Tata Sons unit, according to the Mint report.

The super app, which is scheduled to be launched in India in December or January, will bring together Tata's consumer business under one channel offering a wide range of products in the retail space, Mint said.

Tata's consumer businesses include watch and jewellery brand Titan and fashion retail chain Trent.

Shares of Tata Consultancy Services, Tata Motors and Tata Steel gained more than 1% each, with TCS the top boost to the Nifty 50 index.

If the Walmart deal goes through, it will top its investment in Flipkart, for which the U.S.-based company paid $16 billion for a 66% stake.

Mint said Walmart had hired Goldman Sachs as the banker for the proposed deal. Tata Group, Walmart and Goldman Sachs did not immediately respond to Reuters requests for comment.

Wednesday, 25 March 2020

Sameer Aggarwal elevated to Walmart India CEO, takes charge on April 1

Walmart India has promoted its Deputy CEO Sameer Aggarwal as Chief Executive Officer of Best Price, Walmart India. He will take over his new role from April 1.
This is Aggarwal's third promotion in the two years since he joined Walmart India in April 2018 as Executive Vice President to look at strategy and administration. He was made Deputy CEO in January 2020.

In his new role, Aggarwal will report directly to Dirk Van den Berghe, Executive Vice President and Regional CEO of Asia and Global Sourcing. He is taking over the reins from Krish Iyer, who is retiring from full-time management and will assume the role of an advisor to Best Price, Walmart India after an eight year stint with the company.
"Sam has done a fantastic job in the past two years. He led the charge to make our proposition more customer centric, developing digital offerings to prepare for our omni channel services in the future," said Van den Berghe in a statement on Wednesday. "He has a keen ability to understand complex situations and take decisive action to accelerate our business. He's also a strong people leader who exemplifies our Walmart values of service, respect, excellence and integrity."
Aggarwal has held leadership roles at Yum! Brands in Southeast Asia, Sainsbury’s in the UK and China and McKinsey & Co in Australia. He holds an MBA from the London Business School and is a fellow member of the Institute of Chartered Accountants of India.
"I greatly appreciate the opportunity to lead our business in one of Walmart’s most important markets," said Aggarwal.
The outgoing CEO Iyer will work with Aggarwal until June 30 to ensure smooth transition.

Wednesday, 16 October 2019

India's tech renaissance: PhonePe, Paytm could be the next TCS, Infosys

India’s largest startup is ready to birth its own unicorn. That’d be unusual anywhere, but that it’s happening in India offers some hope for the country’s long-awaited tech renaissance.
This is also great news for Walmart. The US retail behemoth paid $16 billion for 77 per cent of Indian e-commerce company Flipkart Group in May last year. That deal included payments unit PhonePe — an early pioneer in the digital-wallet business — which Flipkart had acquired two years earlier.

Now Walmart is engineering a spinoff as part of a $1 billion funding round that could value payment unit at up to $10 billion and give the retailer an 82 per cent stake in PhonePe and Flipkart, Economic Times reported. From one $20.8 billion company 18 months ago, India will get two unicorns at a combined value of up to $30 billion. (1)
There are already indications that PhonePe has shed its Flipkart training wheels. From 50 per cent of its transactions three years ago, Flipkart now accounts for just 0.5 per cent, The Ken reported, citing PhonePe’s head of strategy and planning. During Flipkart’s annual Big Billion Days sale last month, PhonePe’s logo no longer had top billing on the e-commerce website, according to The Ken. Instead it was listed as just one of the many payment options available to online shoppers.
That PhonePe is preparing to fly solo is also a sign of India’s maturing digital sector. Not only is the company willing to directly tackle rivals such as Alphabet’s Google Pay and Facebook’s forthcoming WhatsApp payments, but it’s also managing to survive in the scary wilderness beyond the gates of Flipkart. (Survive, of course, is a relative term. It’s likely still burning cash and posting losses, though at least it can keep up with well-funded adversaries, a key measure of success at this point in the game.)
More broadly, the PhonePe spinoff would strengthen the case that a homegrown hero can hold its own when foreign rivals enter. Paytm, another Indian startup, is on the verge of landing a $2 billion round of funding from investors including Ant Financial, SoftBank Group and Discovery Capital Management which could give it a $16 billion valuation, Bloomberg News reported this week.
Hopefully the momentum at both PhonePe and Paytm will spur more Indian entrepreneurship, feeding a rebirth in India’s tech sector not seen since the IT-outsourcing boom two decades ago. While that gave us Tata Consultancy Services, Infosys, Wipro and dozens more, most of those businesses focused on serving foreign needs.
Now, a crop of stars is emerging to meet the needs of India’s 1.3 billion people. It’s not a big step from this spinoff to an actual IPO, a development that will put India back on the global technology map.
(1) This assumes no reduced valuation for Flipkart.

Friday, 21 June 2019

India to Mexico, Walmart accused of paying bribes for profits worldwide

Inside Walmarts corporate offices in Brazil, one local contact was known as the “sorceress” for the ability to obtain government permits quickly.
In India, concerns about bribery were met with a “wink and a nod” by Walmart’s local business partner. In China, money was funneled to a local landlord for “government relationship consulting services.” And in Mexico, cars and computers were donated to governments in communities where Walmart was planning to build new stores.

For more than a decade, Walmart used middlemen to make dubious payments to governments around the globe in order to open new locations, United States prosecutors and securities regulators said in a settlement agreement on Thursday. But even as employees frequently raised alarm, the company’s top leaders did little to prevent Walmart from being involved in bribery and corruption schemes.
That lack of internal control led to a seven-year inquiry that culminated on Thursday with Walmart’s Brazilian subsidiary pleading guilty to a federal crime. The guilty plea, and the $282 million in fines that Walmart has agreed to pay, capped one of the biggest investigations ever under the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act, which makes it illegal for American corporations to bribe overseas officials.
“Walmart profited from rapid international expansion, but in doing so chose not to take necessary steps to avoid corruption,” Brian A. Benczkowski, an assistant attorney general, said in a statement.
The investigation, which was conducted by the Department of Justice and the Securities and Exchange Commission, came after The New York Times revealed in 2012 that Walmart had made suspicious payments to officials in Mexico and then tried to conceal them from top executives at the company’s headquarters in Bentonville, Ark. And even when the issues reached the main office, an internal investigation essentially went nowhere.
The Times’s reporting set off years of legal trouble and executive reshuffling at Walmart. The company has spent roughly $900 million on lawyers and investigators trying to root out the problems, as well as on hiring more people to bolster its compliance systems. Regulators said on Thursday it was not only Walmart’s drive to grow quickly, but its “low-cost philosophy” that led to poor internal controls.
The fine Walmart will pay is less than the $600 million that federal prosecutors and regulators had sought when Walmart was discussing a plea agreement during the waning days of the Obama administration, The Times reported last November.
Walmart was able to negotiate a lower fine after President Trump, who had previously criticized the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act, took office. Walmart generated a profit of about $7 billion in its 2018 fiscal year.
The plea agreement, which was technically related to the company’s improper record-keeping, also showed that problems went far beyond its operations in Mexico, the original focus of The Times’s reporting.
Federal regulators said Walmart looked the other way as subsidiaries on three continents paid millions of dollars to middlemen who helped the company obtain permits and other government approvals from July 2000 to April 2011.
In Brazil, many payments flowed through the “sorceress,” an otherwise unidentified individual who was also nicknamed the “genie” for sorting “things out like magic,” according to court documents.
This person charged a steep price, roughly $400,000, to help smooth the process of getting building permits. Walmart employees in Brazil raised alarms that the “sorceress” may have been a government employee, but those concerns went unheeded.
The questionable payments made in India were often recorded on the company’s books with vague descriptions like “professional fees” and “incidental.” As late as July 2011, Walmart received an anonymous tip that an employee in India was involved in a scheme to make improper payments to government officials, but the company never looked into it.
In a statement, Walmart said federal regulators had acknowledged the steps the company had taken to improve its anti-corruption measures since the investigations began seven years ago. “Walmart is committed to doing business the right way, and that means acting ethically everywhere we operate,” Walmart’s chief executive, Doug McMillon, said.
The Times’s investigation included extensive interviews with a former Walmart executive in Mexico, who described how the company delivered envelopes of cash to officials to buy zoning approvals, reductions in environmental fees and the loyalty of neighborhood leaders.
The settlement agreement that Walmart reached with regulators outlines many of the problems first detailed in The Times investigation. By the time the company learned about the bribes in 2005, Mexico was a huge profit center and Walmart was seeking to open new stores at a record pace.
A lawyer for the Mexico unit, according to the settlement, said Walmart determined which government officials needed to be paid and then funneled the money through middlemen known as “gestores.” The gestores would receive a check from Walmart, cash it and then use the proceeds to pay the officials.
Another Walmart employee in Mexico said there were no records showing what work the gestores did, whom they met with or how many hours they worked. Walmart investigators raised concerns about these payments and recommended that the company conduct further inquiry.
But the investigation was eventually handed over to a lawyer in the Mexico unit, who had been accused of authorizing many of the payments. That lawyer concluded that the “corruption allegations were unsubstantiated.”
The bribery scandal was a huge blow to Walmart’s reputation, spurring investor lawsuits and broader questions about the company’s leadership.
Many of the Walmart’s most senior executives in Mexico, India and Bentonville, Ark., left the company in the wake of The Times’s investigation.
The case also highlights the perils of American corporations seeking to increase their profits by expanding in countries with different legal systems and political cultures. In 1990, all of Walmart’s stores were in the United States. Today, the company operates in 27 countries and continues to expand. A year ago, Walmart paid $16 billion for a majority stake in Flipkart, India’s largest online retailer.
Like many American companies, Walmart often forms joint ventures with local businesses, which has helped the company get established faster. But in some cases, Walmart failed to adequately vet its local partners for signs of corruption, federal prosecutors said.
“Even the largest of U.S. companies operating abroad are bound by U.S. laws,” said the prosecutor, Mr. Benczkowski.

Tuesday, 4 June 2019

Walmart faces major India test over unit Flipkart's legal spat with GOQii

An Indian startup's legal challenge against a Walmart unit claiming losses caused by sharp discounting of its products is winning support from other online sellers, in what is shaping as a key test of how the giant retailer operates in the country.
The legal tussle between GOQii, a seller of smartwatch-type health devices, and Walmart's Flipkart unit, comes just months after India imposed stricter rules for foreign investment in e-commerce that were aimed at deterring such sharp discounts.

GOQii sued Flipkart last month in a Mumbai court, alleging its devices were discounted by around 70% to the retail price, much more than the two sides had agreed to, legal documents related to the case showed.
The case will next be heard on Friday. Flipkart has denied any wrongdoing, saying it was not responsible for any discounts which are only determined by third-party companies which sell on the e-commerce website.
The legal spat has brought to the fore concerns long raised by small traders and a right-wing group close to Prime Minister Narendra Modi's ruling party. They say companies such as Flipkart and Amazon.com deeply discount some products by burning billions of dollars to lure customers onto their sites in the expectation that they will also buy other goods.
"It will set a precedent if the final decision goes against Flipkart for predatory pricing," said Salman Waris, a partner at TechLegis Advocates & Solicitors.
ALSO READ: Walmart appoints ex-Google exec Suresh Kumar as chief technology officer
"Small traders' associations and other startups may take other marketplaces adopting deep discounting strategy to court."
The GOQii case could snowball. The All India Online Vendors Association told Reuters in a statement it plans to file a plea to join GOQii's case against Flipkart on behalf of 3,500 online sellers it represents.
Flipkart said in a statement it takes legal compliance seriously and was compliant with Indian law. "We are engaged with the supplier to come to a swift resolution," it said.
With a 19 percent market share, GOQii was the second-biggest player in India's so-called wearables market last year, data from industry tracker IDC in December showed. The market is dominated by China's Xiaomi, with Samsung a small player.
GOQII VS FLIPKART
GOQii's dispute with Flipkart centres around two of its wearables devices that allow users to track exercise measurements, such as the number of steps walked, or heart rates.
GOQii's Chief Executive Vishal Gondal told Reuters the firm signed an agreement in September with a Flipkart unit, allowing it to sell the two GOQii devices at a price not below 1,999 rupees and 1,499 rupees, after discounts.
But GOQii last month found Flipkart's website showed the devices on sale for 999 rupees and 699 rupees. The company wrote to Flipkart, saying it was giving "unauthorized" discounts and resorting to "predatory pricing", violating the agreement, its legal notice showed.
Flipkart was just a business-to-business wholesale venture which sells good to re-sellers, its law firm, Shardul Amarchand Mangaldas, said in its response that was seen by Reuters.
That's central to how Flipkart operates - as India prohibits foreign e-commerce firms from stocking and selling their own inventory on its websites, their wholesale units purchase goods in bulk and sell them to re-sellers. Those re-sellers use Flipkart's own website to sell some of those goods to customers.
ALSO READ: Walmart Q1 operating income declines 41.7% primarily due to Flipkart
Flipkart does not control or influence prices which were determined by such re-sellers, the law firm said, adding that it reserves "the right to institute actions for defamation, both civil and criminal".
GOQii's Gondal, however, said he was in possession of WhatsApp messages and e-mails from Flipkart's employees that show the company was aware and involved in discounting products on its website. He declined to share those with Reuters, citing the ongoing court case.
Gondal said about 500,000 device orders were cancelled after GOQii's other customers accused the startup of cheating them when they saw cheaper prices on Flipkart. The company was also assessing monetary damages it plans to seek from court.
"It's a matter of survival. It's not easy to take on a multi-billion-dollar company," Gondal said.
In interim relief, the court has ordered the sellers, who are also party to the case, to remove the wearable devices from the Flipkart platform.
WALMART'S STRUGGLES
India's new foreign investment rules introduced in February were troubling for Flipkart and Amazon as they barred companies from selling products via firms in which they have an equity interest and stopped them from pushing their sellers to sell exclusively on their websites.
The policy was aimed at deterring deep discounts and helping small traders, but it shocked Walmart as it had just months ago closed its biggest deal by investing $16 billion in Flipkart.
Swadeshi Jagran Manch (SJM), the economic wing of the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh, the ideological parent of Modi's ruling party, said on Tuesday the government must investigate online discounts.
"We are standing behind any small trader, businesses who suffer online," said Ashwani Mahajan, SJM's co-convenor, adding it would discuss GOQii's legal case against Flipkart with government officials.

Sunday, 28 April 2019

Walmart hints at one-day free shipping to take on Amazon's $800-mn gameplan

Is Walmart Inc. taking on Amazon with one-day free shipping?
The retail giant appeared to be taking a jab at its rival with a tweet on Friday, teasing one-day free shipping without a membership fee.

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@Walmart
One-day free shipping...without a membership fee. Now THAT would be groundbreaking. Stay tuned.
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Amazon.com Inc. said it would spend $800 million in the current quarter to reduce delivery times for top customers to one day from two -- sending Walmart shares slumping 1.9 percent to $101.53 at the close, the most in two months. Amazon jumped 2.5 percent to the highest in almost seven months as several analysts raised their price targets after the announcement.
Walmart could easily match Amazon’s one-day delivery gambit, according to an analyst who previously worked at the world’s largest retailer.
Not Shocking
“One day shipping is neither shocking nor difficult for retailers at scale,” Brandon Fletcher, an analyst at Sanford Bernstein, said in a note Friday.
Fletcher, who previously worked in Walmart’s strategy and operations departments, said the retailer’s existing network of 156 distribution centers, combined with the fact that much of the U.S. population is concentrated in urban areas, means that it wouldn’t require much investment to build out a one-day service. He cited previous research conducted by consultants A.T. Kearney -- where Fletcher also briefly worked a decade ago -- that showed Walmart could get to one-day shipping with only eight additional distribution facilities.
Walmart has offered free two-day shipping on orders of $35 or more since early 2017, helping it keep pace with Amazon, which accounts for about half of all e-commerce spending in the U.S. The $35 threshold has been adopted by other retailers, as well, in order to offset the delivery costs. Some retailers, like Target Corp., temporarily ditched the requirement during the holiday period in a bid to lure shoppers.
Retail transactions with free shipping increased about 13 percent in North America last year, and rose 8 percent through April 15 of this year, according to DynamicAction, an analytics firm.
Amazon Prime, the subscription program that helped make the company the world’s largest online retailer, charges customers monthly and annual fees -- typically $119 in the U.S. In return, Prime customers get shipping discounts and access to music and video programming. It offers free two-day delivery on many items.

Sunday, 2 September 2018

Amazon, Google, Alibaba are making a beeline to tap Indian retail space

The power of the Indian consumer was largely undiscovered by global majors until US retail giant Walmart decided to put its biggest bet in the country in May pumping in as much as $16 billion to pick up a majority stake in Flipkart.
Walmart has been attempting to enter India for years but did not see much success.
Now, with the deal seeing a successful closure, many other large global majors have taken notice and are exploring every possible option to tap the last large open global market.
Warren Buffett’s Berkshire Hathaway already picked up a small stake in Vijay Shekhar Sharma-promoted One97, which owns digital payment firm Paytm. At least half a dozen global firms including Google, Amazon, Alibaba and even Facebook are actively pursuing investment opportunities in the online and even offline commerce space. For Amazon, an investment in Indian retail space can only further its presence in the country given that the Bentonville-headquartered company is already among the top e-commerce firms in the country. For companies such as Google and Facebook, which already have hundreds of millions of users in India, it would be about leveraging their reach to monetise in a variety of ways.
A huge consumer base with disposable income, relatively younger population and free market conditions are some of the factors that are driving them to explore India, which has the potential to become one of the top three consumer markets in the world. “It’s the beginning of the perfect storm,” agrees Satish Meena, senior forecast analyst, Forrester Research. “While this is the start, we will see more such investments from 2019 to 2020, and those could be of much bigger scale. Once food delivery, online retail and cab sharing have a bigger scale by 2020, you’ll see more such investments coming in to the sector.”
ALSO READ: Why big players piling into Indian retail may be in for a rude surprise
After the closure of the Walmart’s investment in Flipkart deal earlier in the month, Amazon is learnt to be actively engaged in conversation with retail majors such as Kishore Biyani’s Future Group and Aditya Birla Group-owned food and grocery supermarket chain More to expand its presence in India.
In September last year, the company had picked up 5 per cent stake in retail chain Shoppers Stop. Amazon is also enhancing its technology capabilities by acquiring companies which will help it bring on board next 100 million customers.
As a part of this, the e-commerce major is learnt to have acquired Tapzo, a personal platform which allows users to access over 35 apps using a single platform, for around $40 million (Rs 2.8 billion).
Google, which initially had showed interest in joining Walmart in making an investment in Flipkart, is also scouting for strategic bets in the Indian retail space. After seeing its first big exit in India through the Flipkart investment, Masayoshi Son managed Japanese investment major Softbank is also doubling down its focus on India’s consumer space.

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“Everyone is seeing India as a growth market and is trying to put money. But this is happening at a time, when the online retail is still two per cent of the overall retail. It will take a lot of time to move customers online. Thus, offline gives the opportunity to sell more goods to the same customer,” said Meena of Forrester Research. “You may be buying books online, you may be buying cellphones online but you are not buying grocery or furniture online, and you aren’t buying appliances online.”
According to the World Bank, India is currently the seventh largest consumer market in the world which is led by the United States followed by European Union and China. During his visit to Greece in June this year, President Ram Nath Kovind said that India has the potential to become the third largest consumer market by 2025 when the country is expected to become a $5 trillion economy, almost double its current level.
Although consumer spending in India dropped to Rs 18.99 trillion in the first quarter of 2018, from Rs 19.19 trillion in the previous quarter, disposable personal income was at a steady level. “If you look at companies like Google and Berkshire Hathaway, they are investing for different business opportunities. Google is finding it difficult to sell to customers because the customers are going directly to marketplaces for finding products. At some point of time, retailers or those who are spending on advertising, will spend more on Amazon than on Google. So, there is some kind of cannibalisation happening for Google,” said a senior source who tracks the sector.
ALSO READ: I see lot of retail flows this year from FD investors: Amfi chairman
This phenomenon already began playing out in markets like the US where Amazon is already seeing a major boost to its revenues from ads. In the quarter ended June 31, 2018, Amazon reported $2.2 billion in advertising revenue, a growth of 129 per cent over the same quarter in the previous year.
“So, commerce is a big focus for Google, both online and offline. It has done that in China with JD.Com. It is working with Walmart in the US market. It also wanted to invest in Flipkart but that didn’t work out,” added the source.

Sunday, 19 August 2018

Walmart completes acquisition of majority stake in Flipkart for $16 bn

Walmart, the world's largest retailer, has completed the acquisition of majority stake in India's leading e-commerce marketplace, Flipkart. In a joint statement issued on Saturday, Walmart and Flipkart announced the completion of the $16-billion deal that would see the US giant taking ownership of 77 per cent stake in the Indian firm.
The deal, which is the largest of its kind globally, was announced in May and received the nod from India's competition watchdog earlier this month. Its closure sets the stage for India to become the latest battlefield in the fight for dominance between Walmart and its biggest rival, Amazon.
"Walmart and Flipkart will achieve more together than each of us could accomplish separately to contribute to the economic growth of India, creating a strong local business powered by Walmart," said Judith McKenna, president and CEO of Walmart International. "Our investment will benefit India by providing quality, affordable goods for customers, while creating new skilled jobs and opportunities for suppliers."

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ALSO READ: Why Mukesh Ambani's Reliance, not Walmart, is Amazon's real rival in India
As was decided in May, Flipkart's current management, led by CEO Kalyan Krishnamurthy, will continue to run the e-commerce firm. Co-founder Binny Bansal, apart from representatives from Tencent and Tiger Global, will continue to hold their seats on the company's board, which will now be augmented by Walmart representatives.
Walmart had earlier said that it would appoint five members to the eight-member board of Flipkart, two of whom will be independent directors and not affiliated to the Bentonville, Arkansas-based company.

ALSO READ: With an eye on Flipkart-Walmart deal, Amazon invests Rs 27 bn in India
"We are poised and ready to deliver the full value of this partnership for India," said Binny Bansal, co-founder and group chief executive officer at Flipkart. "By combining Walmart's omni-channel retail expertise, supply-chain knowledge and financial strength with Flipkart's talent, technology and local insights, we are confident that together we can drive the next wave of retail in India."
The completion of the deal will see the exit of several investors in Flipkart, including Softbank, which reported it was making a 60 per cent return on its $2.5 billion investment in the Indian firm. Sachin Bansal, co-founder and former chief executive of Flipkart who led the company for almost eight years, is also out and is estimated to have earned a little over $1 billion through the transaction.
ALSO READ: CCI nod gets Flipkart-Walmart collaboration going in India, across globe
Walmart's backing will augment Flipkart's ability to take on Amazon, which is burning well over $1 billion a year to win in India. Just in the first two quarters of the current financial year, Amazon has invested Rs 53 billion (approximately $750 million) into its Indian e-commerce business as it looks to accelerate growth and get ahead of Flipkart.
The deal with Walmart includes a $2 billion equity component, which the two companies said would be used to grow Flipkart's business in India.
ALSO READ: Flipkart deal: Taxman expects Walmart's withholding tax filing in 15 days
Analysts expect Flipkart to continue to be a drain on Walmart's profits for the next couple of years, despite the companies indicating that they were trying to build a profitable business that could even be taken public within the next five years.
Walmart maintained its guidance saying that earnings per share for FY19 would be impacted by $0.25-$0.30 on account of interest that needed to be paid on the borrowings for completing the $16-billion deal. The company also added that it expected headwinds to the EPS of around $0.60 in FY20 on account of additional investment required for accelerating the growth of Flipkart.
After Walmart stocks rose earlier this week on strong revenue growth and also 40 per cent growth in the e-commerce sales in the US, analysts downgraded the stock due to Flipkart's weight on the company's profits for the next few years. The US retail giant's stock closed 0.8 per cent down on Friday before the markets closed over the weekend.

Saturday, 12 May 2018

Walmart may bring an IPO to make Flipkart public in as little as 4 years

US retail giant Walmart is looking to retain Flipkart co-founder Binny Bansal and other minority investors such as Tiger Global for at least four years, promising that it will protect the valuation of their shareholding and offer them the potential upside of taking the company public.
In a filing with the US Security and Exchange Commission (SEC) on Friday, Walmart said it would allow the initial public offering (IPO) of Flipkart in four years at a valuation no less than what it invested in the e-commerce firm, if a grouping of minority shareholders asks for it.
ALSO READ: Why big boys of India Inc lost the e-commerce game to Flipkart, Amazon
Walmart announced on Wednesday it was acquiring a 77 per cent stake in Flipkart at a valuation of $20.8 billion.
“Holders of 60 per cent of the Flipkart shares held by the minority shareholders, acting together, may require Flipkart to effect an initial public offering following the fourth anniversary of closing of the transactions at a valuation no less than that paid by Walmart under the share issuance agreement,” the filing read. The clause will help Walmart persuade Binny and Flipkart CEO Kalyan Krishnamurthy, who was a top executive at Tiger Global, to stay with the firm for a period of at least four years. This is to ensure that Walmart is not prematurely left with ownership of a company that it does not know how to run, according to experts.
At the time of announcing the deal, Walmart had said it supported the Flipkart management’s desire to go public in future. The resulting entity would be a publicly-listed, majority-owned subsidiary of Walmart, it said. The proposed IPO gives minority shareholders a reason to stay invested, as they could potentially augment the value of their shareholding.
Apart from outlining Flipkart’s IPO plans, Walmart also detailed other clauses of its shareholding agreement, including the constitution of the Flipkart board for the next two years.
Flipkart’s board of directors, it said, would initially have eight members, five of which would be appointed by Walmart, two by certain minority shareholders, and one would be Binny Bansal. Of the five directors Walmart can appoint to Flipkart’s board, two must be unaffiliated to the Bentonville, Arkansas-based company.
Walmart’s filing also said it might appoint or replace chief executive officer and other principal executives of the Flipkart group of companies, subject to certain consulting rights of the board and the founder. However, Walmart has so far expressed that it fully supports the current management of Flipkart.

ALSO READ: Mystery surrounds Walmart-Flipkart deal as Softbank's Son in wait mode
Another clause that Walmart has put into the agreement is that it has the right to invest an additional $3 billion into Flipkart at the same valuation of its initial purchase. If this happens, then Walmart’s shareholding in the Indian e-tailer could go up by a further 12-14 per cent, pushing its shareholding beyond 85 per cent.
Once Walmart owns more than 85 per cent of Flipkart, several rights of minority shareholders, including Tiger Global, Binny Bansal, Microsoft, Tencent and others, will be revoked such as their veto right to “prevent certain significant transactions or other events involving Flipkart”, their right to refusal and even their “drag along” rights.
Walmart said on Wednesday it and Flipkart were in talks with other investors to potentially take part in a funding round. Among potential investors in the company is Alphabet, the parent company of Google, which has been in discussions with both the parties to invest as much as $3 billion into Flipkart. Google’s backing could give Walmart and Flipkart the tech backing they require to take on Amazon.
For the Mountain View company, the move could give it access to India’s fast-growing online retail and digital payments markets, apart from a front to sell its Pixel and Home hardware lines in the country.
THE FINE PRINT OF WALMART’S SEC FILING
Walmart has the right to appoint or replace CEO and other top executives at Flipkart
It has the right to invest $3 billion more into the Indian e-commerce firm at the same $20.8 billion valuation
Will take Flipkart public after four years at a valuation no less than what the US retail giant has invested
Will appoint five members to Flipkart’s initial eight-member board of directors
Two of the Walmart-appointed directors to Flipkart’s board will not be affiliated to it

Wednesday, 9 May 2018

Flipkart: From modest start to Walmart nuptial and everything in between

From selling books online to striking a jaw-dropping USD 16 billion deal with the world's largest retailer Walmart, all within 11 years, Flipkart has given India its big startup success story -- the one which is likely to be quoted by starry-eyed entrepreneurs for years to come.
Former employees of US e-commerce giant Amazon, Sachin Bansal and Binny Bansal had met in 2005 at IIT-Delhi. Flipkart was launched in October 2007.

The idea was simple. Consumers could shop online and get books delivered to their doorstep. Flipkart registered 20 shipments in the year of its debut.
It wasn't an easy road as Internet penetration was abysmally low and e-commerce, unheard of. Bricks and mortar retailers were not threatened and many dismissed e-tailing as a foreign concept saying that Indians want to touch and feel' whatever they buy.
Today, Indian e-commerce industry is already close to USD 30 billion in size and analysts expect this to zoom to USD 200 billion by 2026.
The growth of the sector was comfortably in sync with the meteoric rise of Flipkart.
From a modest two-bedroom apartment in Koramangala, the Bengaluru-headquartered company now has multiple offices across the country. A bulk of its operations are run out of a plush campus in the city that is spread over 1 lakh sq ft and houses 6,800 employees.
It was almost two years after starting the business that Flipkart got its first full-time employee in Ambur Iyyappa, who went on to become a millionaire, thanks to the ESOPs. The headcount was rapidly scaled to 150 that year.
In October the same year, Accel Partners came on board as an investor and pumped in USD 1 million. A few months later, US hedge fund Tiger Global bought into the vision and Flipkart received a funding of USD 10 million.
A number of funding rounds later, Flipkart raised USD 1.4 billion from Tencent, eBay and Microsoft, followed by USD 2.5 billion investment by SoftBank Vision Fund last year.
The year 2010 was an important one for Flipkart with the company shipping among other things, electronics and mobile phones. This category now makes up for a significant portion of the sales for the online platform.
It was also the year when Flipkart pioneered 'Cash on Delivery' in India, which changed the course of online retail in the country as consumers now paid for items only after receiving them, adding a layer of comfort to online shopping. Flipkart launched its logistics unit, eKart to smoothen deliveries.
In 2016, Flipkart achieved the milestone of 100 million registered customers and saw Sachin and Binny earning a spot among TIME magazine's list of 100 most influential people.
The company made its first acquisition with WeRead and since then, it has acquired a number of companies including Letsbuy, FX Mart, fashion e-tail player Myntra and UPI-based payments startup PhonePe. It also bought a majority stake in companies like Jeeves and ngpay.
At the beginning of last year, Kalyan Krishnamurthy was named as the new CEO, moving Binny Bansal to the role of Group CEO. Reports suggested that Tiger Global wanted better control of the organisation and hence, the decision.
Bansals' e-commerce bet finally has paid off big time and set the 2018 M&A counters ringing with US retailer Walmart buying about 77 per cent stake in Flipkart for USD 16 billion.

Walmart buys 77 per cent stake in Flipkart for $16 billion

In the single largest transaction that the e-commerce sector has seen globally, Walmart has signed a definitive agreement to acquire 77 per cent stake in Flipkart with an investment of around $16 billion. The deal will value Flipkart at around $20.8 billion, up from its previous valuation of $12 billion.
Of that amount, $2 billion will new equity funding while the rest will be utilised to acquire the stake from existing investors, including Softbank, Naspers and co-founder Sachin Bansal. In a statement, Walmart said it would support Flipkart’s ambition to transition itself into a publicly-listed, majority-owned subsidiary in the future.

“India is one of the most attractive retail markets in the world, given its size and growth rate, and our investment is an opportunity to partner with the company that is leading the transformation of eCommerce in the market,” said Doug McMillon, Walmart’s president and chief executive officer, in a statement.
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“Our investment will benefit India providing quality, affordable goods for customers while creating new skilled jobs and fresh opportunities for small suppliers, farmers and women entrepreneurs,” he added.
In the statement, Walmart and Flipkart said they were in talks with other investors to join in the round as well, which could bring down Walmart’s stake after the transaction is complete. While they did not name potential investors, Alphabet (parent company of Google) is said to be among the investors that is looking to back the Indian online retail giant.
Binny Bansal, Group CEO at Flipkart, will continue at the company post the investment, while partner Sachin Bansal will cashing in his 5.96 per cent stake in the company which will amount to around $1.23 billion. Softbank, Naspers, IDG and other large investors in Flipkart will also completely exit through this deal.
“This investment is of immense importance for India and will help fuel our ambition to deepen our connection with buyers and sellers and to create the next wave of retail in India,” said Binny Bansal, Flipkart’s co-founder and group chief executive officer.
“Walmart is the ideal partner for the next phase of our journey, and we look forward to working together in the years ahead to bring our strengths and learnings in retail and eCommerce to the fore,” he added.
Walmart will help Flipkart take on Amazon, which has invested billions of dollars into the country over the past five years in a bid to dominate the country’s online retail space. After investing around Rs 81.5 billion into its e-commerce unit in FY18, the company started this year on a bang with an additional investment of Rs 26 billion late last month into the same unit. Bezos, the founder and CEO of Amazon has committed to invest $5.5 billion into India to win in the country.

Saturday, 5 May 2018

Fearing job losses, traders plan to fight Walmart-Flipkart merger

With the biggest retail chain of the world, Walmart, just a few steps away from being the biggest investor and virtual owner of e-commerce major Flipkart, many home-grown trader unions, seller associations and retailers have begun voicing their protest. They are not just approaching officials in the finance and commerce ministries, but are also planning to knock the doors of the Competition Commission of India (CCI), so that the deal can be blocked.
Traders argue that the proposed deal between Walmart and Flipkart could be a violation of foreign direct investment (FDI) norms. There’s a looming threat of competition getting hurt, making them consult the anti-trust body.

“It’s really unfortunate that even after having a clear FDI policy, multinationals are finding an escape route, whether it is in retail or e-commerce. Walmart, after failing to enter India in the retail sector through FDI, has chosen the e-commerce route, which will be quite harmful for the trading community,’’ said Praveen Khandelwal, secretary general, Confederation of All India Traders (CAIT). If the government and the CCI are not able to help, Khandelwal would want to move court.
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The $500-billion American retail giant has always been a cause of concern for local businesses including mom and pop stores as they feared job losses after Walmart’s entry.
Walmart set up its wholesale or cash and carry business in India through a joint venture with Bharti Enterprises in 2007, but it hasn’t been able to start a multi-brand operation so far due to policy hurdles. It also broke off with its JV partner Bharti in 2013.
Sellers, especially the smaller ones, on Flipkart are also planning to go to court as they fear that Walmart could bring multiple private labels in India and flood the e-commerce platform with its own products. That would take away business from the sellers, one of them said.
In fact, many of the sellers want assurance that Flipkart’s algorithm would promote their products equally after the deal with Walmart.
According to the spokesperson of the All India Online Vendors’ Association (AIOVA), which has 3,500 sellers on large platforms like Flipkart and Amazon, the sellers’ community has received no communication or update so far on the deal talks between Walmart and Flipkart.
“There has been no communication from Flipkart or other parties involved in the matter. While we understand that the deal discussions are private, it leaves us in the dark as to what is the future for us on the platform. We want to get clarity on the way forward as we also need to plan accordingly,” said the AIOVA spokesperson.
“We are studying the situation and will take appropriate action, including the legal route, if necessary,” the spokesperson added.
Meanwhile, the government does not see any violation in the proposed deal.
“A foreign entity making inroads into a sector, which is still in many ways nascent in India, is significant,” an official at the Department of Industrial Policy and Promotion (DIPP) said. The deal is not likely to be under government scrutiny, he said. Subsequently, the developments may be supervised by a potential regulator in the e-commerce sector.
An inter-ministerial think tank is currently in the process of preparing a framework for an e-commerce policy within the next six months.

Thursday, 12 April 2018

Walmart close to buying 51% stake in Flipkart, deal likely by June: Sources

Walmart Inc is likely to reach a deal to buy a majority stake in Indian e-commerce player Flipkart by the end of June in what could be the US retail giant's biggest acquisition of an online business, two people with direct knowledge of the matter said.
Reuters reported last week that Walmart completed its due diligence on Flipkart and had made a proposal to buy 51 per cent or more of the Indian company for between $10 billion to $12 billion.

A deal with Flipkart would step up Walmart's battle with Amazon.com for a bigger share of India's fledgling e-commerce market, which Morgan Stanley estimates will be worth $200 billion in a decade. Local media have reported that Amazon is exploring a possible counter offer for Flipkart.
Both sources declined to be named as the talks are private.
Walmart will buy both new and existing Flipkart shares, with the new shares expected to value the Bengaluru-based firm at at least $18 billion, the sources said. The price for existing shares would value the firm at about $12 billion, one of the people said.
Japan's SoftBank Group, which owns roughly one-fifth of Flipkart via its Vision Fund, is unlikely to sell any of its shares due to the low price being offered for the existing shares, this source said.
Reuters has previously reported that early investors such as Tiger Global, Accel and Naspers will likely sell their entire stakes in Flipkart to Walmart if a deal is reached.
A deal is not yet finalised, and talks between Walmart, Flipkart and its investors are ongoing, one of the people said.
Flipkart also counts eBay, Tencent Holdings and Microsoft Corp among its investors.
Flipkart did not respond to a request for comment, a representative for Walmart in India declined comment while SoftBank said it doesn't comment on speculation.
BIG INDIAN BATTLE
For Walmart, the world's largest retailer known for its superstores, a deal with Flipkart would open up the vast Indian market.
Walmart has for years tried to enter India but has remained confined to a 'cash-and-carry' wholesale business amid tough restrictions on foreign investment. It currently operates 21 such stores in India.
By comparison, Amazon closely trails Flipkart, which along with its fashion units controls nearly 40 percent of India's online retail market, according to estimates by researcher Forrester.
Flipkart's investors are concerned that any deal with Amazon would run into regulatory hurdles as a combination would have more than 70 percent of India's online retail market, one of the sources said.
Walmart's push into e-commerce comes as Amazon has embraced offline retail, with an affiliate of the Seattle-based company picking up a $27.6 million stake in Indian retailer Shopper's Stop Ltd.
In the United States, Amazon also bought high-end grocer Whole Foods Market Inc for $13.7 billion last year.
Walmart's investment would give Flipkart not just additional funds to fight Amazon, but also arm it with a formidable ally with extensive experience in retailing, logistics and supply chain management.
Former Amazon employees Sachin Bansal and Binny Bansal founded Flipkart in 2007 in India's tech hub of Bengaluru.
Like Amazon's founder Jeff Bezos, they began by selling books, but have diversified rapidly, including by selling smartphones, such as those made by China's Xiaomi, through exclusive flash sales, and now compete with Amazon in almost all product categories.

Friday, 6 April 2018

Walmart close to shelling $10-12 bn for 51% stake in Flipkart: Sources

Walmart completed a thorough due diligence process on e-commerce firm Flipkart this week, two sources said, as the U.S. retail giant looks to take a controlling stake of 51 percent or more in the Indian company.
Walmart has already floated a shareholder agreement, or offer proposal, and is looking to shell out about $10 billion to $12 billion for the stake that would value Flipkart at roughly $20 billion, one of the sources familiar with the matter said.

A deal is far from finalised, however, and talks between the two parties and investors in Flipkart are ongoing, said a third source.
The sources asked not to be named because the talks are private.
A stake in Flipkart would pit Walmart against Amazon.com in India and local media have reported that Amazon is exploring a rival offer for India's largest home-grown e-commerce player.
Walmart is now seeking a bigger stake than previously expected. Reuters reported in February that it was in talks to purchase a stake of over 40 percent in Flipkart, which is backed by the likes of SoftBank Group, Tiger Global, eBay, Accel Partners, Naspers, Tencent Holdings and Microsoft Corp.
Walmart and Flipkart declined to comment. SoftBank also declined to comment, while Tiger, its other lead investor, was not immediately reachable for comment.
Bengaluru-based Flipkart, started by two former Amazon employees, is fighting Amazon to grab a bigger piece of India's massive online retail market which, according to Morgan Stanley, could be worth $200 billion in a decade.
Walmart's investment would give Flipkart not just additional funds to fight Amazon, but also arm it with a formidable ally with extensive experience in retailing, logistics and supply chain management.
It is seen as a more likely investor than Amazon. A person familiar with the matter told Reuters that the probability of a Flipkart-Amazon deal was low, and that such a deal may spark competition fears as Flipkart and Amazon dominate India's e-commerce market.
GREATER HEFT
Bentonville, Arkansas-based Walmart could also aid Flipkart in developing its private label business, one of the sources said.
For Walmart a deal would open up a vast market and another front to take on its biggest rival.
Walmart is initially not expected to rock the boat and is likely to retain top management. It may, however, look to bring in some of its own people on the legal and finance teams at Flipkart, one of the sources said.
Walmart would also likely have a say in the appointment of a chief financial officer at Flipkart, if the deal is concluded, said another of the three sources.
Two of the three sources said Tiger Global Management, Accel Partners and Naspers, would likely sell their entire stakes in Flipkart to Walmart if a deal is reached.
Accel and Naspers declined to comment.
Japan's SoftBank, which has invested in Flipkart through its Vision Fund, may also consider selling a part of its roughly 20 percent stake if Walmart offers a good price, two sources said.
SoftBank last year invested $2.5 billion in Flipkart through prime and secondary share purchases.

Friday, 16 February 2018

Walmart in talks to buy 40% in Flipkart; due diligence to start next week

Walmart Inc is in talks to purchase a stake of more than 40 per cent in Indian e-commerce firm Flipkart, a direct challenge to Amazon.com Inc in Asia's third-largest economy, two sources familiar with the matter said on Friday.
In what would be one of its biggest overseas deals, the US retailer is looking at buying new and existing shares in Flipkart and due diligence is likely to begin as early as next week, the sources said.
They declined to be named as the talks were private.
Terms under discussion were not immediately available, but Flipkart would be valued at more than the $12 billion figure given when Japan's SoftBank Group Corp's Vision Fund took roughly a fifth of the firm last year for $2.5 billion, they added.
Existing investors in Flipkart also include US hedge fund Tiger Global Management, China's Tencent Holdings Ltd, online marketplace eBay Inc and software giant Microsoft Corp.
A spokesman for Flipkart said the company does not comment on rumours or speculation. An India-based representative for Walmart declined to comment.