Tag: Spencer’s Retail

  • Reliance Retail to turn hypermarkets into wholesale stores, to court kirana shops

    By Rasul Bailay

     

    Mukesh Ambani’s Reliance Retail is converting some of its big hypermarkets into wholesale cash-and-carry stores, in an apparent sign of modern retail’s inability to effectively take on neighbourhood stores in India.

     

    The Reliance Mart hypermarket in Bhopal’s Aashima Mall is currently under renovation and getting refitted to be reopened in February in a new avatar, as a cash-and-carry store.

     

    This 44,000-sq-ft hypermarket is among Reliance’s big-box stores, including one in Ludhiana and another in Aurangabad, that are being converted into cash-and-carry formats.

     

    The company has realised that in some locations, low-frills wholesale stores have better prospects of making money sooner than consumer-centric hypermarkets, which have wide margins but also are more expensive to operate, two people with knowledge of the development said on condition of anonymity

     

    So, in order to convert the adversaries – the mom-and-pop stores in this case – into allies, Reliance is adopting a simple strategy: It is courting them.

     

    In the cash-and-carry format, companies sell to bulk buyers, such as neighbourhood or kirana stores, who are their members. Reliance is setting up its wholesale stores in places where the concentration of kiranas is high as it is easier to make them customers than competing with them. The business also offers huge potential.

     

    Industry experts estimate cash and carry in India to become a $22-billion (about Rs 1.4-lakh crore) annual opportunity by 2017, and the market leader in the segment is expected to corner $4 billion to $5 billion of this. The main rival for modern cash-andcarry stores in India is “wholesale retailers” – thousands of small retailers crowded into large markets, such as the Sadar Bazar in Delhi.

     

    “Reliance Retail continues to evaluate its offerings and realign them in specific locations in order to establish sustainable relevance of the business with the consumer ecosystem,” a Reliance Retail spokesman said in an e-mailed reply to queries on the company’s plans on its cashand-carry business. In the traditional retail segment, the going hasn’t been smooth for organised players.

     

    Over the past five years, Reliance Retail, Aditya Birla Retail, Spencer’s Retail and others shuttered hundreds of smaller convenience stores to focus on expanding big boxes as the smaller stores faced direct competition from kirana stores.

     

    But hypermarkets, generally spread over 40,000 sqft to 60,000 sqft, come with their own set of challenges, such as high cost structure associated with a large number of staff, look and feel of the store as well as logistical cost that ultimately eat into overall profitability On the other hand, cash-and-carry business generates much higher volumes – as customers buy in bulk, albeit at low margins – with smaller operational cost. Cash-and-carry stores can be low-frills in terms of look and feel and ambience, and they save on logistical costs as companies and distributors would supply merchandizes directly to these stores.

     

    Generally, Reliance Markets, as Reliance’s wholesale stores are called, allows only bulk buyers through memberships.

     

    But the store at Bhopal’s Aashima Mall is also likely to sell to consumers apart from traditional kirana stores even after it is turned into a Reliance Market, according to Ashish Jain, marketing manager of the company that owns and runs the mall. “Since it is in a mall with a heavy consumer footfall, it will also cater to consumers,” he said.

     

    Reliance, in fact, is undertaking an aggressive plan to expand its cashand-carry chain. It entered this business with a store in Ahmedabad in 2011 and the pilot was tested for the next one-and-a-half years before opening another one in Bangalore. In the past nine months, however, Reliance has opened about a dozen cashand-carry stores. Plans are also afoot to make an upcoming store at Mohali in Punjab, which was originally planned to be a Reliance Mart, into a wholesale store as well, one of the persons cited earlier said. In comparison, Germany-based Metro AG, a pure cash-and-carry player that has so far opened 17 stores in India since its entry into the country a decade ago.

     

    An industry analyst said converting a hypermarket into the cash-and-carry format may not work in some cases. Hypermarkets and cash-and-carry stores are two entirely different formats with different demands and economies, Amitabh Mall, partner at Boston Consulting Group, said.

     

    “Converting any hypermarkets into cash-and-carry has to negate the disadvantages of lower margin at the cash-and-carry with the high rentals (of the existing hypermarkets),” Mr Mall said. “That is the equation someone needs to solve. It could work in some cases and may not in others. So it’s a mixed answer.”
    One of the anonymous persons cited above said Reliance has plans to convert many more hypermarkets into cash-and-carry in the coming months. However, Reliance denied this and said the conversion is limited and selective.

     

    Further, as a conscious approach, locations and stores are identified as opportunities for the entire retail business and the precise format or offering is finalised after due consideration of the consumer demography,” the company spokesman said.

     

    Source:The Economic Times

    Copyright © 2013, Bennett, Coleman & Co. Ltd. All Rights Reserved

    Licensed to republish

     

     

  • Tihar Jail in talks with Reliance Retail, Spencer’s & Vishal Retail to sell products

    By Rasul Bailay

     

    TJ’s, a brand of FMCG products made exclusively in Tihar Jail, Asia’s largest prison complex, will soon be available in the outlets of Reliance Retail, one of the largest retailers in the country.

     

    “Over the months, every Reliance Retail food and grocery store in Delhi will display TJ’s products,” said Neeraj Kumar, former director-general of Tihar Jail, who earlier this month assumed office as the commissioner of Delhi Police.

     

    TJ’s branded products, including spices and bakery products, are being sold in Reliance Retail outlets in Gurgaon for the past two months.

     

    “We are already an official vendor to Reliance Retail and have a vendor code,” a jail spokesman said. He said jail officials are also in talks with other retail chains such as Spencer’s Retail and Vishal Retail to sell TJ’s products through their outlets.

     

    Behind the walls and iron gates of the Central Jail of Tihar, more than 600 inmates are working in two shifts in a factory within jail No. 2, making a range of products, including bakery items, spices, stationery, furniture, garments and detergents.

     

    Police Commissioner Kumar said jail authorities plan three shifts as TJ’s products find their way into the lucrative modern retail market. These products were earlier sold only through government offices, Khadi outlets and Kendriya Bhandar stores.

     

    Mr Kumar said jail authorities are in the process of fulfilling requirements such as adding barcodes to products and mentioning the nutritional value of food products before taking them to all Reliance Retail stores in the National Capital Region. “All these formalities are done,” he said.

     

    Reliance Retail did not respond to an emailed questionnaire till late on Tuesday.

     

    TJ’s brand was born in 1995 with bakery products. Over the years, the portfolio has expanded to include handloom and textile, apparel, furniture, mustard oil, stationery paper products and even phenyl for household uses.

     

    In recent months, it has started making soaps, detergent powders and blankets, among other items. In the pipeline are cosmetic items such as face wash and henna. TJ’s products comply with global food safety norms and are certified under various ISO norms. Tihar’s backing school is certified by London-based global technical agency Moody International.

     

    TJ’s revenues have risen from Rs2.36 crore in 2004-2005 to about Rs18 crore in the last fiscal year. TJ’s products’ first brush with the organised retail happened late last year when jail authorities showcased products at Select Citywalk Mall in the city, and got overwhelming response from shoppers. This prompted the jail to open a kiosk in the mall to sell TJ’s products.

     

    Mr Kumar credits brand consultant Suhel Seth, who visited the jail in April, for initiating talks with retail chains. Mr Seth said that after visiting the jail in April he wrote to a host of corporate honchos, calling for promoting TJ’s. “This is a great branding opportunity,” he said.

     

    He expects TJ’s to become a Rs300-crore business, with net profit of Rs30 crore, in the next one year mainly by retailing through branded stores. This would help the jail ramp up capacity and supply products to other cities, Mr Seth said.

     

    Source: The Economic Times

    Copyright © 2012, Bennett, Coleman & Co. Ltd. All Rights Reserved

     

  • Shoppers at retail chains buy premium items

    By Sarah Jacob & Writankar Mukherjee

     

    Shoppers at food and grocery retail chains appear disconnected from the overall weak consumer sentiment in the country as they upgrade to premium products and buy bulk packs, helping big retailers and consumer goods firms boost average realisation per sale.

     

    Daily use products like hair oil, refined edible oil and toothpaste, and impulse-driven categories such as biscuits, beverages, salty snacks, instant noodles and chocolates are growing much faster in sales value than the number of units sold in modern trade, a report by market tracker The Nielsen Company says.

     

    Modern or organised retail within food and groceries refers to convenience stores, supermarkets and destination outlets called hypermarkets. This is opposed to the traditional kiranas or neighbourhood stores.

     

    Modern retail shoppers seem to be less impacted by economic factors like inflation, high interest rates and slower growth, says Nielsen’s April report.

     

    Industry officials say this trend also has to do with consumer’s shopping motivations. “Consumers are purchasing larger packs, and more value-added products in modern retail since they are showing a tendency to complete their monthly shopping in such stores. They are topping up with smaller purchases from kiranas,” said Dabur India CEO Sunil Duggal. Value growth of one-litre Real juice pack is almost double in modern retail than kiranas.

     

    Manish Tiwary, executive director-sales and customer development at the country’s largest consumer goods company Hindustan Unilever, said modern retail consumers are comparatively better off. “The profile of shoppers in modern trade clearly reflects a higher living standard measure. This is one of the main reasons for the slightly more premium portfolio (in big chains),” he said. HUL’s largest brands within the personal wash category in modern trade are Dove and Pears, while Lux and Lifebuoy rule the roost overall.

     

    Nielsen says stronger purchasing power of modern trade consumers and wider product assortment at such chains encourages impulse purchases and deal-based large-pack buys. “This mix of affluence and experimentation is an invaluable asset for all stakeholders. This can be useful in times of uncertainty like 2011 since the sharp increases in value growth indicates resilience amongst them,” said Adrian Terron, Nielsen Company’s executive director (retailer and shopper).

     

    He said refined edible oil and instant coffee are examples of categories where value growth outpaced volume growth by 2-3 times. Of course, product prices have increased 2-8 per cent over past year, but Nielsen says the effect has more to do with shopping behaviour.

     

    Spencer’s Retail chief (operations and merchandising) Mohit Kampani said nearly 30 per cent of growth that Spencer’s Retail posted across its 189 outlets was from consumers upgrading purchases last year. “This is also because the price points of products being stocked have widened considerably. A year ago, skincare brands would have been priced between 10 and 800 while today it is between 10 and 2,200,” he said.

     

    Devendra Chawla, president (Food Bazaar category) of India’s largest retailer Future Group, said value-added categories are incubated at modern trade outlets: “A lot more cookies, cream and health biscuits have been launched in the past 18 months than mass biscuits, which makes value contribution higher, although the category is growing double digits by volume.”

     

    Even in personal care, anti-ageing and performance creams are growing much faster than general-purpose creams.

     

    HUL’s Tiwary said it sometimes launch certain pack sizes in modern trade first and then in other channels. Future Group’s Chawla said launch of international foods is also contributing to this trend. This includes packaged cheese, international pasta and brands like Choco Pie among biscuits and Ferrero Rocher in chocolates that are resulting in faster value growth than volume. Overall, modern trade is proving more profitable for marketers because profit margin is higher on premium products and large packets.

     

    Meanwhile, mobile phone and durable makers too report higher sale realisation in large chains due to rising demand for premium products. Research in Motion (RIM), makers of the BlackBerry smartphones, said Indian consumers are upgrading from feature mobile phones to smartphones. “This is boosting the average selling price of the handset market, even though overall demand is yet to pick up,” RIM India Managing Director Sunil Dutt said. He estimates that the smartphones market is growing 60-70 per cent a year in the country, while feature phones at 10-15 per cent.

     

    Panasonic India Managing Director Manish Sharma said: “Consumers are increasingly going for large screen televisions, which is pushing up value sales.” The average selling price of the company’s flat panel TV business has gone up by more than 5 per cent in six months.

     

    Korean brand Samsung too says sales of its high-end split ACs, frost-free refrigerators and smartphones are growing faster than lower-end products.

     

    Source: The Economic Times
    Copyright © 2012, Bennett, Coleman & Co. Ltd. All Rights Reserved