Tag: Binny Bansal

  • Flipkart buys Myntra. Finally!

     

    By Archana Rai

     

    So, finally Flipkart has bought Myntra, exposing an open secret and sending a not-so-subtle message-to rival Amazon. Despite loud protestations, it is quite clear that the investors, three of whom own shares in both companies, played a big role in seeing this deal through. Bringing together India’s largest online retailer and the country’s hippest fashion portal makes financial sense for the investors, and also strategic sense. The hard part is going to begin now.

     

     

    Flipkart-Myntra deal: The anticipated FDI in e-retail a big driver

     

    By Mehak Chawla

     

    The Indian e-commerce industry has fared pretty well, especially if we consider that there are only about 200 million internet users in India. This number could grow to 500 million by 2015, according to consulting firm McKinsey & Co.

     

    The size of India’s e-commerce market in 2013 was around $13 billion, according to a joint report of KPMG and Internet and Mobile Association of India (IAMAI). The online travel segment contributed over 70 per cent of the total consumer e-commerce transactions last year.

     

    Online retail companies earned revenues of around 139 billion rupees ($2.24 billion) in the financial year that ended on March 31, 2013, according to a Crisil report. Though this is just 0.5 per cent of the total revenues of brick-and-mortar retail companies, online retail sales have been growing much faster. Revenue of e-commerce firms grew by 56 per cent annually between the financial year that ended March 31, 2008, and the year ended March 31, 2013, according to Crisil.

     

    The pressures on e-commerce companies have long been known, be it cost competition with brick and mortar retail or the first mover advantage. And while the Flipkart-Myntra acquisition is surely a step to combat Amazon, the looming FDI regulation could also be a big factor in this deal. Once the 100 per cent FDI in e-commerce comes in, big retailers like Amazon and eBay will be able to follow an inventory-based model, as against the marketplace model they are currently bound to follow.

     

    Currently, global B2C e-commerce firms like Amazon and eBay operate in India as online marketplaces. In this model, these companies do not own any inventory and do not sell any of their own merchandise to Indian shoppers. They offer products from third-party sellers. This model can completely upturn if the 100% FDI in e-retail is to come in. Indigenous products from the likes of Amazon and Walmart (and their own inventories) can change the dynamics of the Indian e-commerce industry like never before. No wonder then, that the home-grown players like Flipkart are upping their ante.

     

    Though the stand of the Modi led government on 100% FDI in retail, especially in e-retail is not yet very clear, chances are that the regulation will go through. According to Vishal Tripathi, Principal Research Analyst, Gartner India, chances are that FDI in e-retail will happen. “Even if they don’t allow 100% FDI investment in retail immediately, chances are they will make the retail environment (including online retail) friendlier. NDA has always leaned towards private enterprises and they are likely to bring business savvy regulations.”

     

    The pressure on the government to pass this regulation is also high with the likes of Walmart lobbying for it and UK based Tesco showing a keen interest in entering the Indian e-commerce space.

     

    When 100 per cent FDI in (online) retail does come in, chances are that we shall see a lot more consolidation happening in the e-commerce space, believes Tripathi. Given the fact that global brands will intensify the competition in an already fiercely competitive e-commerce space, desi ventures are likely to start rolling up their sleeves.

     

    Other than the FDI in retail segment consideration, there are of course other elements that both Flipkart and Myntra were dealing with. The biggest of them being the cost considerations. According to market sources, Flipkart is losing close to Rs 70 crore a month. Myntra on the other hand, is fast losing market as well as mind share to the likes of Jabong.

     

    As a result, the deal seems like a win-win for both the parties because they have several synergies in their processes (and investors) that they can exploit for innovation. “The e-commerce market will be eventually decided by the customer experience. And Flipkart and Myntra have a lot to do in that regard in order to match up to the Amazon experience,” says Tripathi.

     

    Source:The Economic Times

    Copyright © 2014, Bennett, Coleman & Co. Ltd. All Rights Reserved

    Licensed to republish

     

    Instead of Flipkart and Myntra burning more cash to battle each other and the rest of the lot in the crowded online retail industry, investors now have the comfort of knowing their money will be used to fight the real challenger- Amazon-whose founder Jeff Bezos views India as a key market where he is willing to commit considerable sums of money from his considerably large war chest.

     

    Myntra, which informed observers estimate has been valued at around $370 million, is a strategic fit for Flipkart. As fashion becomes the premier battleground for online portals in India, Myntra with its higher margins from branded apparel, will help bolster Flipkart’s defences.

     

    With a product mix dominated by electronics, books and low-cost apparel, the seven year-old company founded by IIT-Delhi graduates Sachin Bansal and Binny Bansal has demonstrated that it is willing to think different and think big.

     

    Even as talks with Myntra’s Mukesh Bansal started and stalled in recent months, Flipkart has been busy. Inhouse logistics arm eKart now delivers products sold by rivals, while payment gateway PayZippy is being nurtured as a separate business, the first of several technology products the company says it will build.

     

    But these are just good beginnings. So far, Flipkart’s Bansals, who hope to sell everything apart from cars and groceries, have wooed customers with steep discounts that have coloured their books red. To grow faster, they need higher margins that are delivered mostly by products designed in-house.

     

    Myntra will help with its portfolio of private label apparel that enjoy margins of up to 60%, but Flipkart needs more such arrows in its quiver. Private label electronics-as Kindle has done for Amazon-can boost notoriously low margins in the segment. They can also do well by scouting for ideas and products in India’s technology startup space that is throwing up innovations ranging from wearable devices to technology that can automate warehouses and help customers get a feel of the clothes displayed on their portal.

     

    More boldness has to be the calling card for the Bansals, who claim to draw inspiration from Jack Ma’s Alibaba, as they take on Bezos’s challenge on their home turf. Investors who have sunk money into this battle and are banking on Sachin Bansal’s famed “cool temperament” to see them through, will need to ensure he has enough motivation to invest skin in the game.

     

    Bezos owns nearly 18% of Amazon, while Ma’s 8.9% in Alibaba is set to deliver a fortune to the Chinese entrepreneur who has built an empire that spans the gamut from a wholesale portal to an investment platform for online shoppers Flipkart’s Bansals are estimated to together own about a fifth of their company that is now valued at about $ 2.5 billion. With Myntra in the fold, surely they have much to do battle for.

     

    Source:The Economic Times

    Copyright © 2014, Bennett, Coleman & Co. Ltd. All Rights Reserved

    Licensed to republish

     

  • Ready to take on Amazon

     

    By Rahul Sachitanand

     

    Eleven months ago, India’s e-commerce sector got an ominous warning of a sleeping giant’s rise. Amazon, the $74.5-billion giant, which had been quietly watching the local market grow from $2.5 billion in 2009 to $16 billion in 2013, according to industry lobby Assocham, decided to make an understated entry.

     

    Even as its largest Indian rival, Flipkart, was cruising towards a billion dollars in revenues and another, Snapdeal, was making similar intentions known, Seattle-based Amazon made a low-key foray. It launched in a couple of categories – books and movies and TV shows – with firm plans to take a large bite of a market expected to reach up to $56 billion by 2023. Amazon has been quick off the blocks.

     

    Since its launch in June 2013 (it launched Junglee India, an online comparison engine in 2012), the company has gone from two categories to 24, from zero sellers on its marketplace to around 1,000.

     

    Amazon has been on the move, not only by launching category after category, but pushing the envelope on other fronts. It was the first to launch next day and same day delivery; it innovated by piloting deliveries at HPCL and BPCL outlets and even dropping off packages at small kirana stores in select locations.

     

    “We believe that the growth is at an inflection point and there is tremendous opportunity,” says Amit Agarwal, vice-president and country manager, Amazon India. “India is a large opportunity from a consumer and service standpoint to create differentiation and we were ready when we launched to take advantage of that.”

     

    Amazon is dead serious about the Indian market. It spent nearly $3.5 million on lobbying in 2013, according to filings to the US Senate, including efforts to push through foreign direct investment in retail. In the first quarter of this calendar year it again spent around $1.5 million to press its case.

     

    Junglee , meanwhile, has emerged to be India’s No. 1 comparison site with over 30 million products, over 1,900 online sellers and over 80,000 local sellers. Even as the global giant goes to battle, its two largest rivals aren’t prepared to be sitting ducks.

     

    Sachin Bansal

    According to industry insiders, the battle is evolving into an Amazon vs Flipkart one, with Snapdeal as a scrappy third rival. Sachin Bansal, CEO and co-founder of Flipkart, has had a firsthand view of Amazon’s global adventure, as a software engineer for the web giant for nearly two years between 2006 and 2007.

     

    It was this stint that convinced him to team up with IIT Delhi batchmate Binny Bansal, to start an online book selling venture in 2007 that began in a rudimentary 800-sq ft office and grew into a billion dollar online hypermarket, with over 100,000 shipments a day for products across some 20 categories. Today, Sachin Bansal is preparing to go to battle with the company he ardently admires.

     

    “We are prepared to take on global rivals,” he says. “We are strongly customer-focused and we believe we have the best logistics, supply chain and technology in the industry.”

     

    This strong focus has helped Flipkart. The company, which has raised $550 million from marquee investors such as Tiger Global and Accel amongst a host of others, started off as an inventory-led e-retailer but transitioned into a full-fledged market place, lining up an assortment of 4,000 sellers in its quest for $1 billion in revenue.

     

    Having reached that landmark (a year before its expectations), Sachin Bansal believes that the next battle will be fought not on computers and broadband connections but over mobile broadband users. “In our next stage of evolution, we want to be recognized not as an e-commerce company, but as an m-commerce company,” he says.

     

    The firm is rapidly adding sellers and expects to rapidly increase this to up to 15,000 sellers in the next year. Flipkart’s switch from an inventory-led company to a market place was hardly trouble-free. The firm struggled with plunging customer satisfaction, quality issues and logistical headaches as it faced up to an exponentially larger business.

     

    More recently, it found itself in hot water for allegedly violating the Foreign Exchange Management Act to the tune of Rs 1,400 crore. While this investigation by the Enforcement Directorate dates back to before April 2013, when it switched to the market place model, Flipkart says it had broken no rules even back then.

     

    With Amazon making its presence felt in the fast-growing Indian market, its largest domestic rivals know they need to act and act decisively. The market has been through several rounds of churn, as VCs initially chased opportunity in the market, only to see many of their investments crash and burn.

     

    According to estimates from NextBigWhat, a website focused on entrepreneurship, 136 e-commerce firms shut shop between November 2012 and April 2013. According to other data from Allegro Capital, an investment banking boutique in Bangalore, 80 per cent of all Indian ecommerce companies are on their last legs, having failed to raise fresh funds.

     

    Between 2010 and 2013, 52 e-commerce firms raised some $700 million in funding, but just 18 of them attracted a follow-up round. In the past year to 18 months, there has been a substantial clear-out in India’s e-commerce space, as investors have been wary of investing in this space, either backing largescale players such as Flipkart or putting smaller amounts into high-margin niche start-ups.

     

    The Other Challenger

    Snapdeal’s co-founder and CEO Kunal Bahl says that with their initial focus – on group buying – the company risked being swept away in this tumult. Instead, Snapdeal pivoted from its early focus to also become perhaps India’s largest marketplace with some 20,000 sellers on its platform. Now, Bahl claims, the firm is on track to clock revenues of $1 billion – within five years of starting up.

     

    “When we launched in the group buying segment, we were the seventh player and in six months there were 50 more rivals jockeying with us,” says Mr Bahl. “We got 70 per cent market share in 14 months and, when we decided to change business strategies, our idea was called ridiculous, stupid and dumb.”

     

    Despite the criticism, the founders of Snapdeal persisted and, backed by funding from the likes of eBay, today claim they are months away from clocking revenues of $1 billion. “Had we run an inventory business, we would have been a distant follower,” says Mr Bahl.

     

    “From being six steps behind in the race, we went to being four steps ahead.” He points out that from an overcrowded market of some 800-1,000 companies in 2011, only a handful survived and Snapdeal’s decision to pivot its business model helped it be one of them. “We have five million products on our site and we’re adding a new product every 30 seconds.”

     

    Mr Bahl wants to face up to Amazon’s might and is confident of putting up a strong fight. Despite the aggression of its domestic rivals, Amazon’s Agarwal is unmoved. “There is significant potential for innovation to improve customer experience,” he contends. “While Indian e-commerce is growing rapidly, it is still in nascent stages. It’s truly Day 1 for e-commerce in India and we are committed to aggressively invest over the long term and relentlessly focus on earning customer trust.”

     

    Rather than building a monopoly in India, he admits there is space for multiple formats and players here. “We are going to relentlessly focus on expanding our selection, bring significant cost savings, provide fast and reliable delivery, and raise the bar for online shopping experiences in India, much like we have done everywhere else in the world,” adds Mr Agarwal.

     

    Despite Amazon’s swagger, Flipkart isn’t easily intimidated – Bansal the CEO is working overtime to keep the fires going. When ET Magazine spoke to him in Bangalore, it was his wedding anniversary and he spoke to this writer in between attending a public function and before getting to other official meetings and calls. “We are constantly thinking of new ways to grow the business,” he says.

     

    “In a few years we want to go from a few thousand sellers to millions of sellers on our platform.” Flipkart can expect some stout competition from Amazon in this race to accumulate sellers. “We offer the most comprehensive suite of options for sellers to grow their business online and make profits in India,” boasts Mr Agarwal of Amazon. He points to solutions such as Fulfilment by Amazon (FBA) service, a pay-as-yougo fulfilment service, as enticements for sellers, wherein Amazon takes care of packing, shipping and delivery of sellers’ products.

     

    “We strive to do the heavy-lifting on their behalf while they focus on their core business functions,” adds Mr Agarwal. Today over 75 per cent of units shipped are FBA. Over 200,000 products are available for next-day delivery on Amazon. Over 60 per cent of existing demands are already eligible for next-day shipping.

     

    Amazon isn’t holding back in its pursuit of both sellers and buyers. Another initiative it is aggressively rolling out is Amazon Easy Ship, an assisted shipping service that makes it easy for sellers to ship products across India. With Easy Ship, after order confirmation, sellers pick and pack the shipment, confirm to Amazon that they are ready to ship and Amazon collects the shipment and ensures that the product is delivered to the customer.

     

    Sellers benefit from low shipping rates, COD and pre-paid orders, scheduled pick-ups, faster delivery and automated shipment tracking. Experts feel that India’s e-commerce industry has reached an inflection point. “Amazon’s entry has bought some urgency and competition into the market,” says Pragya Singh, associate vice-president, Technopak, an advisory firm.

     

    According to her, the arrival of Amazon will likely catalyze a further consolidation in the market, which will see the emergence of three or four large Indian players and a long tail of high-margin speciality players in categories such as apparel, accessories and jewellery.

     

    “With electronic retail accounting for barely 1 per cent of overall organized retail, there is plenty of headroom for growth,” adds Ms Singh. It is this headroom that both Flipkart and Snapdeal are chasing, with varying strategies. Analysts and investors say that Flipkart has built a stronger brand for itself due to its stronger urban reach and positioning, while Snapdeal is stronger in the hinterland.

     

    Flipkart is also the more valuable of the two – it was valued at $1.6 billion in its last round of funding – compared with $400 million for Snapdeal (as in February). Both Flipkart and Snapdeal are bulking up with an eye on the future.

     

    Flipkart’s chief executive Mr Bansal told this writer in a previous interaction at the headquarters in Bangalore that the firm was open to inorganic growth. One such deal may shortly come its way, as it seeks to nail down a protracted deal for Myntra, a provider of fashion and apparel online. While the deal appeared to be progressing on schedule, at least two investors said the Myntra team balked at a final valuation.

     

    To try to have the scale to compete with Amazon, Snapdeal too is keen on inorganic growth. Most recently it acquired Doozton, an online product discovery firm, to expand its presence in apparel and fashion. Previously, it acquired Grabbon, Esportsbuy and Shopo to expand into areas such as sports equipment and Indian handicraft and strengthen its presence as a full-fledged e-commerce market place.

     

    “We are accelerating before takeoff,” says Mr Bahl of Snapdeal. “E-commerce is going to be a $100-billion industry in the next 10 or 15 years and we need to stay nimble and scrappy and pick our battles.” Even as both companies add muscle to their businesses inorganically, the real scale may come the hard way – from adding new categories and products to their baskets.

     

    For example, Flipkart has rolled out a range of furniture and wants to expand its presence in white goods. Snapdeal too is constantly ramping up several categories – including some unexpected ones such as car tyres where it is seeing strong sales.

     

    “People are buying sets of four tyres worth Rs 40,000-50,000 online,” says Mr Bahl. It also stocks 600 types of air-conditioners, 300 varieties of refrigerators and 400 water coolers from an assortment of sellers. Ms Singh of Technopak thinks that the e-commerce industry is graduating from one where companies are relentlessly chasing consumers to the next phase, where companies focus on value-added services such as supply chain and logistics and on how to retain customers, rather than spend precious money on lassoing new ones.

     

    Having been beaten to the punch by Amazon, Flipkart and Snapdeal are both hoping to make up for lost time with their competing offerings on this front. “Value-added services will be the next big battle in India’s e-commerce market,” says Mr Bansal of Flipkart. The firm, which launched eKart, its in-house logistics arm around a year ago, is now preparing to offer its services to third parties.

     

    Even as Flipkart, Snapdeal and the rest of India’s e-commerce industry fortify themselves against Amazon, the multinational behemoth is setting itself to face the onslaught. “We are committed to the India market and we continue to invent and invest on behalf of customers,” says Mr Agarwal of Amazon India.\

     

    “With Amazon.in, we endeavour to build the most trusted and convenient shopping experience.” With revenues north of $200 million, according to industry estimates, Amazon India may have already laid down a daunting gauntlet for its Indian rivals.

     

    Source:The Economic Times

    Copyright © 2014, Bennett, Coleman & Co. Ltd. All Rights Reserved

    Licensed to republish

     

  • Billion dollar baby Flipkart crosses miletone faster than Amazon

    By Radhika P Nair

     

    Indian ecommerce flag bearer Flipkart has hit $1 billion in sales. This is a coming of age for Indian ecommerce as the market leader hits the target a year ahead of schedule. Global ecommerce giant Amazon reached the same target seven years after its launch. Flipkart, launched in October 2007, has achieved this milestone a few months faster.

     

    “We are really proud and excited to announce that we have hit a run rate of $1 billion GMV (gross merchandise value) one year before our target,” said co-founders Sachin Bansal and Binny Bansal, in a joint message. “In March 2011 we announced that by 2015 we wanted to hit $1bn in GMV. At that point in time our run rate was $10 million.”

     

    Flipkart, which started out as an online retailer of books, has raised over $550 million in risk capital funding. The company, which is backed by South African internet major Naspers and investments funds like Dragoneer Investment Group, Morgan Stanley Investment Management, Tiger Global and Accel Partners, was valued at $1.6 billion when they raised $360 million last year.

     

    The company, which started out as an inventory retailer, pivoted to an online marketplace in 2012. The company, which ships out over 1 lakh orders a day on an average, now has about 1,000 merchants on its platform.

     

    The Bengaluru-based firm, which has over 10,000 employees, has also grown beyond ecommerce. It spun out its payment solution PayZippy into a separate entity last year. This service is used by other internet companies like MakeMyTrip, Zansaar and Yepme. The company is also opening up its logistics arm, eKart, which supplies to 150 cities, to other online retailers.

     

    The company is also increasingly focusing on mobile commerce, as over 20% of its sales already comes from handheld devices. Sachin Bansal, in an earlier conversation, had said that in the near future Flipkart.com would be a m-commerce based marketplace.”

     

    Source:The Economic Times

    Copyright © 2014, Bennett, Coleman & Co. Ltd. All Rights Reserved

    Licensed to republish